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South Africans head to polls. After 30 years, has Mandela’s party lost its luster?

On a crisp autumn morning in April 1994, Margaret and Veronica Genge stepped out of their stout brick house in the Soweto neighborhood of Dube, and walked into the future.

Mother and daughter left home as second-class citizens of a country that had been ruled by white people for three centuries. They returned a few hours later as voters in the election that would sweep that old world away.

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Thirty years ago, South Africa’s first free elections brought Nelson Mandela to power. At this week’s polls, scandals and inefficiency could cost his ANC party its three-decades-old majority in Parliament.

Like most of the 20 million South Africans who cast their ballots, the Genges voted for the African National Congress (ANC), the organization that had led the anti-apartheid movement.

Thirty years later, South Africans are voting again this week, in an election that could mark another turning point. For the first time ever, the ANC’s share of the national vote may dip below 50%, forcing the ruling party to share power with the opposition. 

The excitement that fizzed around the 1994 vote is long gone. In its place is a sense of betrayal, shared by millions.

“All my life I was an ANC supporter because I thought they were going to do better for all of us,” says Margaret Genge, who is now 70 years old. But “I’ve given up on the ANC,” she adds. “They expect us to keep supporting them forever, and then they give us nothing in return.”

On a crisp autumn morning in April 1994, Margaret and Veronica Genge stepped out of their stout brick house in the Soweto neighborhood of Dube, and walked into the future.

History rarely snaps neatly in half, with a clear “before” and “after,” but in South Africa, at that particular moment, it did.

Mother and daughter left home still second-class citizens of a country that had been ruled by white people for three centuries. They returned a few hours later as voters in the election that, within a week, would sweep that old world away.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Thirty years ago, South Africa’s first free elections brought Nelson Mandela to power. At this week’s polls, scandals and inefficiency could cost his ANC party its three-decades-old majority in Parliament.

Like most of the 20 million South Africans who cast their ballots during those electrifying days, the Genges voted for the African National Congress (ANC), the organization that had led the anti-apartheid movement.

Denis Farrell/AP/File

People line up outside a polling station to cast their votes in South Africa’s first all-race elections 30 years ago in Soweto, outside Johannesburg, April 27, 1994.

Thirty years later, South Africans are voting again this week, in an election that marks another turning point in the young country’s history. For the first time ever, the ANC’s share of the national vote may dip below 50%, forcing the ruling party to share power with the opposition. 

This time around, three generations of Genges will cast their ballots – Margaret, her four children, and her 19-year-old granddaughter. But the excitement that fizzed around the 1994 vote is long gone.

In its place is a sense of betrayal, shared by millions.

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