The ANC is a Criminal Enterprise


The ANC is a Criminal Enterprise


By Noko Maleka | Insight Jozi News



South Africa is a country blessed with potential, yet crippled by leadership failures. This truth was laid bare once again when political analyst and author, Prince Mashele, appeared on the State of the Nation podcast with Mike Sham. His words were not coated in diplomacy, but charged with the urgency of a citizen who has had enough of watching his country drift under the weight of incompetence.


Mashele’s criticism comes hot on the heels of his now-viral interview on the Sizwe Mpofu-Walsh Show, which attracted over a million views. Clearly, South Africans are listening, because he is saying what many are thinking but few dare to articulate: the ANC has lost all credibility, and President Cyril Ramaphosa is a man completely out of his depth in the highest office of the land.


A Circus Called “National Dialogue”


In the podcast, Mashele tore into the much-publicised “national dialogue” initiated by the ANC, dismissing it as nothing more than a political circus. Instead of engaging meaningfully with the crisis of unemployment, collapsing state institutions, and a faltering economy, he argued that the ANC was staging yet another empty performance. “It is not a dialogue—it is a show,” Mashele declared, underscoring the disconnection between government theatrics and the lived reality of ordinary South Africans.


Ramaphosa’s Irony of Wealth and Poverty


Perhaps the sharpest dagger came when Mashele took aim at Ramaphosa’s public musings on inequality. The President recently asked South Africans to reflect on why some people are rich while others are poor. Mashele’s response was scathing: “How dare Ramaphosa pose that question, when he himself is one of the richest men in the country?”


It was not merely a rhetorical jab—it was a moral indictment. For Mashele, Ramaphosa represents the very embodiment of South Africa’s contradictions: a leader who speaks about poverty from the comfort of his fortune, while failing to create policies that address the structural inequalities deepening the gap between rich and poor.


The ANC: From Liberation Movement to Criminal Enterprise


In perhaps the boldest statement of the conversation, Mashele described the ANC as nothing short of a criminal enterprise. His reasoning was simple: a party that presides over state capture, looting, cadre deployment, and the deliberate hollowing out of government institutions cannot be described otherwise.


This is not the ANC of liberation glory. It is a party that has cannibalised the state and betrayed the very people it once vowed to liberate. For Mashele, the ANC is no longer an organisation of visionaries; it is a network of opportunists feeding on the country’s resources while preaching empty slogans to the masses.


Why His Voice Matters


Prince Mashele has become one of the sharpest political commentators in modern South Africa, not because he speaks politely, but because he speaks plainly. His message resonates because the frustration of citizens has reached boiling point. When his interviews go viral, it’s not just entertainment—it’s a reflection of how deeply the public craves accountability and truth in a time of national despair.


South Africa stands at a crossroads. The ANC may continue to brand itself as the custodian of democracy, but voices like Mashele’s force us to confront a painful question: what happens when the custodian becomes the criminal?

https://youtu.be/FmZykqcW844?si=87O-UuLRYXnNndSF

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