As we commemorate the 103rd anniversary of the South African Communist Party (SACP), we honour our long-standing commitment to socialism and our unwavering dedication to advance the interests of the working class. This milestone is an opportunity to reflect on our proud history. It is an opportunity to reaffirm our strategic priorities and tasks, as we continue to advance the struggle to take our democracy to greater heights and achieve a breakthrough to a socialist future.
Our legacy, strategic focus and tactical tasks
Over the past century, the SACP has consistently upheld its role as a vanguard for socialism in South Africa. Our historical contributions are numerous and significant. The SACP has been at the forefront of theoretical and practical advances in pursuit of our National Democratic Revolution and socialism.
As the Communist Party, we were the first to adopt democratic majority rule as the way forward for our country. We were the first to embark on the struggle to establish South Africa as a democratic republic with equal rights for all, regardless of race, ethnic group and gender. At the centre of this struggle, we anchored our strategic objective to achieve liberation and complete social emancipation. This struggle involved, and continues to involve, advancing a revolution against the racist, sexist, oppressive, and exploitative capitalist system. Our goal was and remains clear. That is, to achieve a transition to a socialist society in which all forms of oppression, domination, exploitation, inequality, deprivation, impoverishment and poverty stemming from the capitalist system will be eliminated, altogether with the system itself.
As the Communist Party, we were the first political organisation in South Africa to be formed with a non-racial mission. Our commitment to non-racialism has been unwavering, laying the foundation for a society that values equality and dignity for all. The SACP has played a crucial role in building a progressive women’s and youth movements, seeking their empowerment to actively participate in the struggle for freedom and democratic transformation and development.
As communists, we have been integral to a democratic and militant trade union movement. We have a proud history of fostering trade unionism, advancing for workers’ rights and worker empowerment, and promoting community activism. We were and are still guided by the principle that every communist should be a community activist, and a most advanced and resolute working-class cadre. This legacy dates back to the founding of the Communist Party.
Today, our trade union movement faces the strategic responsibilities to unite workers across sectors and federations, reassert democratic worker control and strengthen workers’ power. The Communist Party will continue to be on the side of the workers as they organise and resist neo-liberal structuring, including casualisation, labour brokering and austerity measures, and as the workers organise and defend the national minimum wage, seek its improvements and pursue a living wage. We will strive to link this workplace or economic struggle with the broader working-class community struggle. Together, we need to build a robust, democratic and militant progressive trade union movement capable of addressing the structural and cyclical issues facing workers today.
Today, it is essential to develop a thriving local, community and popular democracy, including various forms of active participatory democracy, for the working class to assume a leading role in democratic transformation and development, rather than passive yet impatient “clients” awaiting top-down, state delivery. Social and economic programmes must make citizenship for all, especially the workers, unemployed and poor, a substantial reality. Otherwise, our electoral democracy will become irrelevant.
The Communist Party played a vital role in the formation of Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK), the people’s liberation army, contributing to the armed struggle against apartheid. The so-called MK Party is an impostor organisation. It has served as a fifth column, against the ANC and our ANC-led Alliance electoral strategy. In this way, the MKP has effectively served the imperialist-sponsored anti-ANC regime change agenda, contributing to bringing the ANC under 50 per cent. Today, we continue to support efforts to protect the legacy of the MK from the renegades and counterrevolutionaries who have stolen its name, symbols and heritage.
The SACP has been instrumental in the political education of generations of activists and cadres within our broader democratic movement, ensuring a well-informed and ideologically grounded base of support. Today, this role of the Communist Party is more relevant than ever, to ensure that quantitative growth in membership is accompanied by and translates into qualitative growth.
Our legacy is also marked by the sacrifices we have made, including the ultimate sacrifice by many of our comrades. We honour our martyrs who laid down their lives in the struggle for democracy and freedom. Outstanding South African communists, including Joe Slovo, Chris Hani, Ruth First, Moses Kotane, and JB Marks exemplify the courage and dedication that have defined our Party's history. Their contributions and sacrifices continue to inspire us in our ongoing struggle for justice and equality.
It is now essential that we continue to grow the Communist Party, reflecting our enduring relevance and the trust that the working-class places in our leadership. We remain committed to deepen our engagement with communities and strengthen our organisational capacity to lead the struggle for socialism in South Africa.
Tackling the cost-of-living crisis
Working-class households across the country are in dire situations. In communities like Khayelitsha, people face widespread potholes, squatter camps, non-functional street lights and criminal activities, like extortion, drugs, robbery and theft. The absence of access roads and frequent electricity outages due to vandalism of transmission boxes by criminals exacerbate the already difficult living conditions.
Youth unemployment and the shortage of nurses, medical doctors and specialists at the Khayelitsha District Hospital further compound the daily struggles of our people, with many falling victim to floods and other preventable disasters. This grim reality is a stark reminder of the urgent need for a comprehensive approach to tackle these issues which makes the cost of living very high.
Today, the cost-of-living crisis is an urgent issue affecting millions of South Africans, hitting hard on the workers and poor, and increasingly on the middle-income sections as well. To alleviate this burden and ensure a more equitable society, we must take decisive actions across multiple fronts. The SACP says, let us:
Prioritise food security
Protect and expand subsidised basic services
Strengthen public healthcare services
Fight for a living wage for all workers
workers and their families.
Introduce the universal basic income grant
Advance the right to work for all
Regulate rental prices
Advancing National Health Insurance
NHI has now passed the parliamentary stage after many years of struggle to ensure that this major transformative policy becomes law. It has been years of struggle against neo-liberal forces and others who prioritise profits over people’s well-being. These forces and their political representatives and agents want to retain the current two-tier health system characterised by inequality, gatekeeping and exclusion – healthcare for the rich and healthcare for the poor.
We now have the law. It is time to implement the NHI programme!
It is very clear that over the next five years, class battle lines will be drawn. The forces that prioritise profits over health are deploying all manner of resources, including legal warfare, to delay or even block the implementation of NHI.
Without any meaningful reorganisation of healthcare resources from the grip of the for-profit health sector, there can be no hope for universal health coverage in this country.
It is in this regard that we welcome calls for a people’s front – the Friends of the NHI Campaign – for the defence and advance the cause of NHI implementation. This campaign will work with the trade union movement, women and youth organisations, progressive professionals, people’s health organisations, small and large businesses, and more. This will also involve promoting popular education about NHI, amongst the workers and our communities. We call on all progressive forces to join this Campaign.
We are fully aware that NHI implementation is a process, rather than implementation at a stroke. Over the next five years, the SACP, progressive trade unions, working with a range of social forces, will strive to achieve implementation of the following priorities:
Access to good health is a fundamental human right, just as access to water and food are universal human rights. However, these rights are daily violated by capitalists and neo-liberals around the world, who also influence treasuries.
Internationally, in Gaza, Palestine, the genocide and other atrocious acts by the apartheid Israeli settler regime deprive the people of basic health services, exacerbating the humanitarian crisis. The SACP stands in solidarity with the people of Palestine and condemns these violations of human rights.
Fighting against neo-liberal policies, including austerity
Addressing the ever-rising cost of living cannot be accomplished under conditions of neo-liberal policies, including austerity measures imposed on the working class through budget cuts on social and economic development imperatives. The consequences of such policies are visible every day: overcrowded schools, clinics without medical doctors, other healthcare professionals and support staff, unemployed medical doctors, pharmacists and other healthcare professionals, and failing provision of government services, especially, but not only, at the local government level.
We reiterate our long-held position. Our fiscal and monetary policies must change. As they stand, these policies are not favourable for the policy commitments we have made in the ANC’s 2024 May elections manifesto, the economic and social challenges facing this country. This is why we must, among others, anchor the struggle to overcome the broader cost-of-living crisis and ensure NHI implementation as part and parcel of the wider struggle against neo-liberal policies and its austerity agenda.
Deepening financial sector transformation
The SACP reiterates its call for a radical transformation of the financial sector. Deepening the transformation of the financial sector is a strategic necessity for achieving democratic transformation and development in our country. The SACP remains committed to achieve financial sector transformation to end financial exploitation and build a financial system that truly serves the people. This transformation will lay the foundation for a people’s economy that prioritises human development and collective prosperity.
The SACP says, we must:
Transformation of the financial sector, including addressing the problem of high interest rates, will lay the foundation for a people’s economy that prioritises human development and collective prosperity.
The 2024 elections outcomes: A major setback
Our May 2024 elections have significantly altered the political landscape of South Africa. From the perspective of the SACP, the loss of over 50 per cent majority status, a decline down to 40 per cent plus some insignificant fraction, is a major setback for our ANC-led movement and progressive politics in general. Also, the results reflected the lowest voter turnout from our historical working-class support since 1994 – over 11 million registered voters (who are overwhelmingly from working households in townships and villages) did not go out and vote. This reflects a growing disillusionment with the status quo and a yearning for substantial change in the face of mass poverty and high unemployment and income and wealth inequalities.
In other words, the outcomes of the May 2024 electoral politics reflect the crisis of working-class representation, among others, in the policy space, as a result of the rise to dominance of a reformist agenda, including neo-liberalism. The SACP programme, titled the South African Struggle for Socialism, analyses the rise of this reformist agenda, tracing it back, at least, to the early 1990s. The working class needs to unite to roll back this agenda and its influence. This is one of the key tasks facing the popular left front and the powerful, socialist movement of the workers and poor, which the SACP seeks to build as part of its programme to forge maximum working-class unity based on a revolutionary programme.
As the SACP, we acknowledge the challenges posed by the May 2024 elections results and the necessity for a strategic response to address the evolving needs of the working class. We are preparing a critical, constructive collective appreciation not only of the present, but also of the past three decades of our state of national democracy to draw lessons for the strategic tasks that we are facing.
Our May 2024 elections took place in a global context where we see the rise of right-wing forces. This has bolstered counter-revolutionary forces not only in our country but also in other countries. Counter-revolution refers to the actions and strategies employed to undermine and reverse revolutionary gains, often through economic, political, and or military means.
Venezuelan elections
We welcome the electoral outcome in favour of the 25-year-old socialist movement in Venezuela, otherwise known as the Bolivarian Revolution. The decisive vote for the incumbent President Nicolás Maduro in recent elections, is a vote for the continuation of the Bolivarian revolutionary process, which has faced extensive US-imposed unilateral coercive measures that amount to political and economic warfare. This warfare has been a key component of the imperialist United States’ counter-revolutionary strategy to induce regime change by crippling the Venezuelan economy and turning the people against their own government. In this election, as in previous elections, they have been defeated.
Government of National Unity
In light of our 2024 election outcomes, the SACP takes a critical but non-oppositionist stance towards the now-assembled Government of National Unity (GNU). However, we reserve our right to oppose, act and mobilise against any rightward shift in policy, which could find its way into government via the GNU composition. While the idea of a GNU is often presented as a means to foster stability and unity, its composition includes right-wing parties of the bosses and the historically privileged elitist sections of our society. This could countervail purposeful stability and unity, with negative implications for the working class. Our critical stance is based on several key considerations:
The wealth of society must serve the needs of all its members
For the SACP, this struggle is not just about addressing immediate needs but about challenging the very foundations of capitalist-dominated society and building a progressive and socialist future. As communists, we believe that the wealth of society should be used to meet the needs of all its members, not just a privileged few. The fight against the high cost of living, and for NHI, is a fight for a society where everyone has access to the resources they need to live a dignified life. It is a fight for a world where the fruits of our labour are shared equitably, and where the well-being of the many takes precedence over the profits of the few.
Building a strong Party: The role of districts
Our districts play a pivotal role in carrying out key tasks and building a strong party. Districts must:
On this 103rd anniversary of the SACP, let us build a powerful, socialist movement of the workers and poor and forge a popular left front.
Let us unite and wage a relentless struggle for a national democratic and socialist transformation of society. Only then can we vanquish the cost-of-living crisis, end the unequal health system, and build a future where food poverty is a relic of the past and every person can live in dignity and security.
In celebrating our 103rd anniversary, we reaffirm our dedication to these principles and strategic priorities. The SACP continues to be a leading force in the quest for a just and equitable society, guided by our enduring values and vision for a better future.
International solidarity
The SACP stands for peace on our continent, Africa, and integrated development.
We pledge our international solidarity with the people of Swaziland struggling for democracy, the people of Western Sahara against occupation by the imperialist-backed Morocco, and the people of Cuba against the United State-led imperialist aggression, economic, financial, trade, investment blockade and occupation of Guantanamo Bay.
We strongly condemn the apartheid Israeli settler regime for its colonial occupation and expropriation of Palestinian lands and for its genocide on Palestinian people and other atrocious activities and violation of human rights. The SACP stands with the people of Palestine for the freedom of historical Palestine and pledges its solidarity with the people of Syria and others in West Asia against attacks by the United States-backed apartheid Israeli settler regime.
We stand with the people of Bolivia and Nicaragua and others in South America and the Caribbeans against the imperialist United States-led aggression and machination.
We pledge our solidarity with the Kurds, call for clarity on the whereabouts and release of Abdullah Öcalan and strongly condemn United States imperialist machination in the Kurdish Question.
The SACP says:
Tackle the cost-of-living crisis. Implement the NHI now!
Let us unite and combat corruption wherever and however it rears its ugly head!
Socialism is the Future – Build it Now!
Put People Before Profit!