Political opposition and the challenges of a dominant party system: The democratic alliance in South Africa |
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Authors: | Neil Southern |
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Affiliation: | Department of Politics , Sheffield Hallam University , UK |
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Abstract: | The African National Congress enjoys a position of leviathan-like dominance in South Africa. In official opposition stands the Democratic Alliance whose support has risen considerably since South Africa's first democratic elections in 1994. The white electorate strongly favours the party over its main rival, the Freedom Front Plus. The coloured community in the Western Cape has also given the Democratic Alliance its support. Although the party has done well in attracting the support of ethnic minority groups it has not been so successful among the African electorate. In accounting for the success of the Democratic Alliance this article considers three themes: firstly, the reasons why white voters, especially Afrikaners, shifted their support to the party; secondly, the brand of South African patriotism now used by the party to promote the primacy of a non-racial South African identity; and finally, the party's understanding of political opposition and the obstacles that exist to it making further electoral progress. |
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Keywords: | South Africa Democratic Alliance dominant party system voting behaviour post-settlement |
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