Zille pledges to close rich-poor gap

564 24/11/2012Leader Helen Ville and other members dance in a stage in 2012 DA Federal congress at birchwood hotel in Boksburg yesterday, The Leader Helen Ville after she addressed the federation in the first day. Picture: Motshwari Mofokeng

564 24/11/2012Leader Helen Ville and other members dance in a stage in 2012 DA Federal congress at birchwood hotel in Boksburg yesterday, The Leader Helen Ville after she addressed the federation in the first day. Picture: Motshwari Mofokeng

Published Nov 26, 2012

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Johannesburg - In what could be seen as an attempt to address perceptions that the DA was lily-white and protected the privileges of the minorities at the expense of blacks, party leader Helen Zille has promised to reduce inequality between the rich and the poor, and “beat” poverty.

The re-elected DA leader used her opening address to the party’s federal congress in Boksburg at the weekend to allay the fears of black voters and make a case that her party was ready to govern inclusively, if given a chance.

Admitting that the gap between the rich and poor was “much too wide”, Zille promised sweeping changes and a different approach to improve the socio-economic conditions of underprivileged people.

In a fiery 30-minute speech, the Western Cape premier vehemently denied that the DA was racist and a home for people “who think that life was better under apartheid”.

“The DA is not a party for racists. It is not a party for sexists, xenophobes or homophobes. It is not a party for people who think that life was better under apartheid. And it is not a white party,” Zille insisted. She said party members who were not committed to reconciliation, redress, delivery, diversity and non-racialism had “no place” in the DA.

This came as internal surveys commissioned by the DA revealed that potential black members rejected the party because they perceived it as too white and feared it could take them back to apartheid, according to party sources.

Party insiders told The Star last month that former DA strategist Ryan Coetzee had left for the UK’s Liberal Democrat party because he felt the current leadership paid lip service to his strategies to transform the party and bring black leaders on board. Zille and Coetzee have denied these allegations.

Zille again took her fight to the ruling ANC, highlighting the DA’s service delivery record and denouncing inadequate basic services, corruption, crime, unemployment and the looting of public money by some ANC politicians.

Maintaining that people who were oppressed by apartheid remained so because the 1994 watershed elections only brought the “promise” of freedom, Zille said: “But freedom means nothing if you cannot find a job… Our children have no textbooks … Gives politicians licence to steal money”.

She said because of poverty and a lack of education needed “to open the door of opportunity”, many people could not use that freedom.

“And the gap between the rich and the poor is much too wide. We are working every day to close this gap, to educate our kids and create jobs so we can beat poverty,” added Zille.

However, she dismissed as a “myth” accusations that the DA-run Cape Town was more unequal than other South African cities. Most DA members shared Zille’s vision for an “open opportunity society”.

A confident Zille vowed to build a “non-racial centre” of SA politics. Comprising people who were committed to the constitution despite their divided past, that centre would rule the country “sooner” than many people thought.

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