2006 South African municipal elections

1 March 2006

All seats to the municipalities of South Africa
  First party Second party
 
Leader Thabo Mbeki Tony Leon
Party ANC Democratic Alliance
Last election 59.39% 22.12%
Popular vote 12,783,813 3,203,896
Percentage 64.82% 16.24%
Swing Increase 5.43% Decrease 5.88%

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi Patricia de Lille
Party IFP ID
Last election 9.14% did not contest
Popular vote 1,484,621 422,607
Percentage 7.53% 2.14%
Swing Decrease 1.61% Increase 2.14% (new)

Municipal elections were held in South Africa on 1 March 2006, to elect members to the local governing councils in the municipalities of South Africa. The municipalities form the local government of South Africa and are subdivisions of the provinces, thus making them responsible for local service delivery, such as electricity, water and fire services.

All major political parties, excepting the SACP who are members of the Tripartite alliance, fielded candidates in the election. The expected winner, the African National Congress (ANC) won the majority of seats nationwide, with 66.3% of the vote.[1] These elections were seen as a test of the ANC, after some discontent with the speed of the delivery of new services at the municipal level in South Africa. The official opposition, the Democratic Alliance (DA) took 14.8% of votes nationwide,[1] placing them in second overall. The Zulu-based Inkatha Freedom Party took 8.1% of the vote,[1] or third place, while the new party formed under the leadership of Patricia de Lille, the Independent Democrats took 2.0%, placing them fourth of all major political parties.[1]

However, because rural electors have an additional vote compared to urban voters (for district council), a fairer representation of popular party support is given by the percentage of proportional representation votes (excluding district council votes and ward votes) i.e. African National Congress (ANC) with 65.7% of the vote, the Democratic Alliance (DA) with 16.3% of votes nationwide, Inkatha Freedom Party with 7.6% of the vote and 2.2% for the Independent Democrats.

Campaign

The campaign focused around the delivery of services, particularly to townships after 12 years of democracy in the country. Riots and large-scale protests had broken out before the elections in certain townships around the country. All parties promised to speed up delivery of services. In Durban the shack dwellers' movement Abahlali baseMjondolo boycotted the elections under the slogan 'No Land! No House! No Vote!'

Results

The ANC won a majority in most of the councils of Northern Cape Province, North West Province, Gauteng Province, Mpumalanga Province, Limpopo Province and Eastern Cape Province.

The DA won the largest share of votes in the City of Cape Town but did not achieve a majority, and hence was not able to form a government on its own. The DA mayoral candidate Helen Zille formed the city government and was elected mayor with the support of numerous minority parties. This was achieved in spite of the Independent Democrats siding with the African National Congress. The ID subsequently joined the DA-led coalition, strengthening its majority.

The Inkatha Freedom Party won the majority in KwaZulu-Natal Province, although it lost support overall, when compared to the previous election,[2] and did not win the major economic centres in the province.

Detailed national results

Party Ward % PR* % Ward + PR % DC* % Total %
African National Congress6 314 39364.1%6 469 42065.7%12 783 81364.9%4 683 13570.8%17 466 94866.3%
Democratic Alliance1 595 74216.2%1 608 15416.3%3 203 89616.3%684 88410.3%3 888 78014.8%
Inkatha Freedom Party740 1357.5%744 4867.6%1 484 6217.5%635 5219.6%2 120 1428.1%
Independent Democrats204 8462.1%217 7612.2%422 6072.1%108 3051.6%530 9122.0%
African Christian Democratic Party122 4781.2%128 9901.3%251 4681.3%74 9181.1%326 3861.2%
United Democratic Movement100 3521.0%129 0471.3%229 3991.2%105 1051.6%334 5041.3%
Pan Africanist Congress of Azania108 7411.1%109 8161.1%218 5571.1%88 1901.3%306 7471.2%
Vryheidsfront Plus92 0390.9%93 9211.0%185 9600.9%66 2931.0%252 2531.0%
United Christian Democratic Party55 6040.6%62 4590.6%118 0630.6%60 7550.9%178 8180.7%
Minority Front42 2550.4%42 5300.4%84 7850.4%0.0%84 7850.3%
National Democratic Convention32 2500.3%35 8990.4%68 1490.4%25 3120.4%93 4610.4%
Azanian People's Organisation25 7730.3%30 3210.3%56 0940.3%18 5330.3%74 6270.3%
United Independent Front25 0720.3%31 0180.3%56 0900.3%19 4310.3%75 5210.3%
84 smaller parties133 4031.4%148 0581.5%281 4611.4%48 1970.7%329 6581.3%
Independent263 9912.7%Not applicable263 9911.3%Not applicable263 9911.0%
Total9 857 074100.0%9 851 880100.0%19 708 954100.0%6 618 579100.0%26 327 533100.0%

* PR=Proportional representation DC=District Council

Geography

A map of South Africa showing the 2006 local election results by local municipality.
  •   ANC plurality
  •   DA majority
  •   DA plurality
  •   IFP majority
  •   IFP plurality
  •   Other party plurality

The map to the right shows the winner in each of the six metropolitan municipalities, 231 local municipalities and 20 District Management Areas (DMAs) in South Africa.

  • The ANC (green) won 5 metropolitan municipalities and 198 local municipalities.
  • The IFP (red) won 26 local municipalities.
  • The DA (blue) won 1 metropolitan municipality and 6 local municipalities.
  • The Laingsburg Gemeenskaps Party (grey) won only the Laingsburg local municipality.

By Metropolitan Municipality

Nelson Mandela Bay

In the Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality, the ANC retained its majority in the metropolitan government, with Nondumiso Maphazi succeeding Nceba Faku as mayor of the municipality; Maphazi was also the first female mayor of the municipality. The ANC also captured 81 seats with 66.53 percent of the votes. The DA won 30 seats, the ID three and the other six seats were divided between smaller parties, including the FF+, ACDP, PAC and UIF.[3]

Johannesburg

In the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality, the ANC retained its majority in the metropolitan government, and incumbent executive mayor Amos Masondo was re-elected to a second six-year term. The DA contested all wards, with opposition councillor Mike Moriarty unsuccessfully challenging Masondo for mayor.

Tshwane

In the City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality, the ANC retained its majority in the metropolitan government, with former Gauteng Health MEC Gwen Ramokgope elected to succeed Smangaliso Mkhatshwa as mayor of Tshwane; Ramokgope also became the first female mayor of the municipality. Gwen was challenged by DA councillor Fred Nel for the seat.

Ekurhuleni

In the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality, the ANC retained its majority in the metropolitan government, with incumbent mayor Duma Moses Nkosi re-elected to a second term in office. He was challenged by DA councillor Eddie Taylor.

eThekwini

In the eThekwini Metropolitan Municipality, the ANC retained its majority in the metropolitan government, with Obed Mlaba being elected to a third term (his second six-year term) in office as mayor of the municipality. The ANC's mandate was increased by an estimated 115,000 votes, at the expense of the IFP, as was the case in several other parts of KwaZulu-Natal.[4]

Cape Town

In the City of Cape Town, the Democratic Alliance was the largest single party in the City Council with 90 of the 210 seats on the council, ahead of the African National Congress's 81 seats, but with no party holding a majority.[5] The African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP) with 7 councillors, drew an unlikely array of five smaller political parties together to form a king-maker block of 16 Councillors that eventually agreed to work with the DA's 90 in a multi-party government (MPG) rather than the ANC /Independent Democrats alliance. The MPG's 106 councillors agreed to elect the DA's Helen Zille as Executive Mayor, the ACDP as Executive Deputy Mayor, the Speaker post was held by the one elected councillor from the Freedom Front Plus, whilst the United Democratic Movement (1 councillor), the Universal Party (1 councillor) and the Africa Muslim Party (2 councillors) took up seats on the Mayoral Committee. This fragile MPG survived until January 2007 when the AMP was expelled from the MPG for conspiring with the ANC. The ID was drawn into the MPG when the ACDP offered up its Executive Deputy Mayors post. This brought about a stable MPG

By district

Cacadu

In the Cacadu District Municipality, the African National Congress won Makana, Kouga, Ndlambe, Camdeboo, Sunday's River Valley, Blue Crane, Kou-Kamma, Ikwezi, and Aberdeen. The Democratic Alliance won Baviaans.

Sedibeng

In the Sedibeng District Municipality, the African National Congress won Emfuleni and Lesedi. The Democratic Alliance won Midvaal.

West Coast

In the West Coast District Municipality, the African National Congress won Matzikama, Cederberg, Bergrivier, and Saldanha Bay. The Democratic Alliance won Swartland.

Overberg

In the Overberg District Municipality, the African National Congress won Theewaterskloof, Cape Agulhas, and Swellendam. The Democratic Alliance won Overstrand.

Eden

In the Eden District Municipality, the African National Congress won Kannaland, Hessequa, Knysna, Oudtshoorn, and Bitou. The Democratic Alliance won Mossel Bay and George.

Central Karoo

In the Central Karoo District Municipality, the African National Congress won Beaufort West and Prince Albert. The Laingsburg Gemeenskaps Party won Laingsburg.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Independent Electoral Commission Official Results, 2006
  2. IFP disappointed by ANC’s gains in KwaZulu-Natal Business Today, 3 March 2006
  3. "ANC dominates its spiritual home". iafrica.com. 3 March 2006. Archived from the original on 25 May 2006. Retrieved 12 March 2010.
  4. "'We will not take growing support for granted'". ANC Today. Vol. 6, no. 9. African National Congress. 10 March 2006. Archived from the original on 13 July 2009. Retrieved 12 March 2010.
  5. "Seat Calculation Summary: City of Cape Town" (PDF). Independent Electoral Commission. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 March 2006. Retrieved 15 March 2006.
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