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South Africa heads for a coalition government. Why that’s a win for its democracy.

When the Electoral Commission of South Africa announced the official results of the country’s election on Sunday evening, it marked a seismic shift in the country’s political landscape. 

The ruling party, the African National Congress, had lost its majority.

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After a historic election, South Africa will be governed by a coalition for the first time since the end of apartheid in 1994. Experts see that as a major moment in the young democracy’s coming of age.

Although the ANC still received the highest count of any party in the race – just over 40% – this result was unprecedented. The ANC came to power in the country’s first democratic elections in April 1994, and the party has never gotten less than an absolute majority of the vote in any national election since.

Now, for the first time, South Africa will be ruled by a coalition government, which many political experts consider a pivotal moment in the young democracy’s “consolidation,” or coming of age. Equally encouraging, they say, is the fact that the ANC accepted the results without a fight.

South Africans have greeted the results with both excitement and trepidation, because much still depends on the coalition negotiations now taking place behind closed doors. Which opposition parties the ANC chooses to govern beside will have a major impact on the country’s future. 

The group gathered around the small TV in an abandoned Cape Town hospital on Sunday evening crackled with nervous energy. They had squeezed into one of the old patient wards, now the bedroom of a woman named Zubeida Brown, to watch the official announcement of the results of South Africa’s May 29 election.

Already, the outcome was clear: The country’s ruling party, the African National Congress, had lost its parliamentary majority for the first time in history. But as dramatic music swelled from the TV and an election official announced the final vote tally, one woman in the room, Faghmeeda Ling, sighed. “I wonder if we will see any change now,” she says. 

Indeed, it was a moment of deep uncertainty. Although the ANC still received the highest count of any party in the race – just over 40% – the result marked a seismic shift in South Africa’s political landscape. The ANC, which led the anti-apartheid movement, came to power in the country’s first democratic elections in April 1994, and the party has never gotten less than an absolute majority of the vote in any national election since.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

After a historic election, South Africa will be governed by a coalition for the first time since the end of apartheid in 1994. Experts see that as a major moment in the young democracy’s coming of age.

Now, for the first time, South Africa will be ruled by a coalition government, which many political experts consider a pivotal moment in the young democracy’s “consolidation,” or coming of age. Equally encouraging, they say, is the fact that the ANC accepted the results without a fight.

Emilio Morenatti/AP

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa speaks during the announcement of the country’s election results in Johannesburg June 2, 2024.

“It’s clear that there’s not going to be massive undemocratic actions and pushback, like in many other countries” after a liberation movement loses its hold on power, says Melanie Verwoerd, a former ANC member of Parliament and political analyst. 

For Ms. Ling, like for many other South Africans, the moment was deeply symbolic – but also unsettling. She is one of the leaders of a community of about 1,000 people squatting in the rundown hospital complex because they cannot find an affordable place to live in Cape Town.

“We have had many empty promises,” from the ANC government over the years, she says. But now, after hearing the results, she felt equally unsure what the future would bring. 

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