The African National Congress (ANC), the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), and the South African Communist Party form the Tripartite Alliance (SACP). The ANC has a majority in South Africa’s parliament, whereas the SACP and COSATU have not participated in any democratic elections in the country.
The Alliance was formed in 1990, following Nelson Mandela’s release. The movements opposed to the apartheid government’s rule over white minorities. The Revolutionary Alliance and simply the Alliance are other names for the Tripartite Alliance.
The Alliance, which is running a single election campaign under the banner of the African National Congress, is made up of the ANC, the Congress of South African Trade Unions, and the South African Communist Party. The South African National Civic Organisation was also added to the team in late 1993.
Although its historical and ideological roots can be traced back to the 1950s, with the Congress Alliance, which brought together the ANC and its coloured, Indian, and white equivalents, the Alliance is still active today due to a fortunate convergence of current political objectives. The ANC requires organizational skills, financial backing, and membership in the country’s main trade union federation. The SACP has many of its greatest strategists and election prospects, and the party’s reputation for militancy has given it a strong basis in the ANC’s constituency.
Cosatu requires a political organization capable of winning elections to the constituent assembly and effectively representing its interests in government.
Because the SACP does not have enough popular support to be a major political force on its own, it must remain in partnership with its more powerful allies and try to persuade them to include its political and social goals in their agendas.
Whatever critics may wish, the Alliance is unlikely to disintegrate as long as its members are able to rally the majority of South Africans behind them.