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| #Post#: 129-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Cape Indepenedence [Vid 01] | |
| By: Hawk Date: June 11, 2018, 1:44 pm | |
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| https://youtu.be/60jdjFTjPMc | |
| The People of the Cape are Gatvol of the Communist Targeting of | |
| the ANC & EFF .. along with their Racist attitudes towards the | |
| minorities in SA, who are actually the Majority in the Cape. The | |
| Cape was an Independent Country before the British forced it to | |
| become the Union of SA in 1910. We have our own history and | |
| culture... and we are going back to non-racialism. You can read | |
| here more on Cape History | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Qualified_Franchise | |
| Cape Qualified Franchise | |
| The Cape Qualified Franchise was the system of non-racial | |
| franchise that was adhered to in the Cape Colony, and in the | |
| Cape Province in the early years of the Union of South Africa. | |
| Qualifications for the right to vote at parliamentary elections | |
| were applied equally to all men, regardless of race. | |
| This local system of multi-racial suffrage was later gradually | |
| restricted, and eventually abolished, under various National | |
| Party and United Party governments. In 1930 white women were | |
| enfranchised, and in 1931 property qualifications for white | |
| voters were removed. In 1936 black voters were then removed from | |
| the common voters' rolls and allowed only to elect separate | |
| members in 1936, and subsequently denied all representation in | |
| the House of Assembly in 1960. Coloured voters similarly | |
| followed in 1958 and 1970, respectively. | |
| Representative government (1853) | |
| The Cape Qualified Franchise first appeared in 1853, when the | |
| Cape Colony received representative government and elected its | |
| first parliament. This was done without regard to race, and a | |
| non-racial voters roll became part of the Cape's 1853 | |
| Constitution. | |
| There were a range of motivations for the creation of this early | |
| non-racial political system. Many powerful members of the Cape's | |
| political elite in the 1850s, leaders such as John Fairbairn, | |
| Saul Solomon, John Molteno and William Porter, genuinely seemed | |
| to believe that it was the only fair way to run a society, and | |
| that racial distinctions counted as unjust discrimination. In | |
| 1838, it had already been ruled in the Cape Colony that the law | |
| was not to discriminate on the basis of race or colour. On the | |
| other hand, there was an additional pragmatic motivation, in | |
| that enfranchising the non-white population was seen as a way to | |
| bring peace to the Cape's frontier and social harmony to its | |
| cities. As such, political inclusiveness was also seen as a way | |
| of pre-empting and forestalling black resistance in the future. | |
| When queried by worried white voters on the issue of black | |
| citizens voting, William Porter, the Cape attorney-general | |
| famously responded: | |
| Why should you fear the exercise of franchise? This is a | |
| delicate question but it must be touched upon. I do not hesitate | |
| to say that I would rather meet the Hottentot at the hustings, | |
| voting for his representative, than in the wilds with his gun | |
| upon his shoulder. Is it not better to disarm them by granting | |
| them the privileges of the constitution? If you now blast all | |
| their hopes and tell them they shall not fight their battles | |
| constitutionally, do not you yourselves apply to them the | |
| stimulus to fight their battles unconstitutionally? (quoted in | |
| Simons and Simons, 1983: 23) | |
| A minimum property ownership of �25 qualified the male Cape | |
| citizen to vote or to stand in parliament. As this included all | |
| forms of property ownership, including traditional African | |
| communal land tenure, it was very low, relative to the suffrage | |
| qualifications that applied elsewhere in the world at the time. | |
| In fact, it was widely considered to be excessively low, and | |
| there were several political movements that tried to have it | |
| raised. The system was known as the "�25 vote". Decades later, | |
| literacy was added as an additional criterion to qualify for | |
| suffrage. The existence of voter qualifications was a standard | |
| feature of early democracies, and women's suffrage was virtually | |
| unknown in the world at the time. However while the Cape shared | |
| these restrictive features, its explicitly colour-blind | |
| political system was unusually inclusive. | |
| Responsible Government (1872) | |
| In spite of its elected legislature, the Cape was still under | |
| the direct control of a British Governor, until 1872, when the | |
| country attained "Responsible Government" under the leadership | |
| of its first Prime Minister, John Molteno. This act brought all | |
| three branches of the state's government under local control, | |
| made the Executive democratically accountable (or "responsible" | |
| as it was known), and thus gave the Cape Colony a degree of | |
| independence from Britain. It also stimulated a new political | |
| awareness among Cape residents of all backgrounds, with the most | |
| notable immediate growth being in Black political consciousness. | |
| The new ministry held the non-racial nature of its institutions | |
| to be one of its core ideals, and enshrined it into its new | |
| constitution. The commitment to treat Black African and Coloured | |
| people as "fellow subjects with white men" was explicitly | |
| reaffirmed by the new government, which struck down opposition | |
| motions to restrict voting qualifications in 1874, and again in | |
| 1878. Campaigns also began in the Eastern Cape frontier region, | |
| to register the rural Xhosa peasant farmers as voters, with | |
| early, mission-educated Xhosa activists at the forefront. | |
| Educational associations and Xhosa language political newspapers | |
| such as Isigidimi sama-Xosa were founded, which assisted with | |
| political mobilisation. Overall the Cape's Black electorate grew | |
| rapidly during the 1870s, especially in urban areas. In | |
| addition, traditional Xhosa forms of communal land tenure were | |
| fully recognised by the Cape government. This made the parties | |
| in such traditional property arrangements fully eligible as | |
| voters. Consequently, the first Black African political | |
| groupings such as Imbumba yama Nyama ("Unity is Strength") also | |
| had their origins in this era. | |
| This renewed commitment to non-racial government was not | |
| unopposed. Some English settlers in the Eastern Cape felt | |
| threatened by it, and their parliamentary representatives, such | |
| as John Paterson and Gordon Sprigg, consequently pushed for the | |
| disenfranchising of their Xhosa neighbours. This British Eastern | |
| Cape political alliance gradually became the pro-imperialist | |
| "Progressive Party", which later came to power under Cecil | |
| Rhodes and Jameson. In addition, the predominantly | |
| Afrikaans-speaking Western Cape began to see the birth of rural | |
| Cape Dutch groups such as "Onze Jan" Hofmeyr�s Afrikaner Bond | |
| which also had mixed opinions about African franchise. Right | |
| wing media outlets such as the Zingari and the Lantern began the | |
| habit of disparagingly labeling MLAs who were elected by the | |
| Cape Coloured electorate as "Malays", regardless of their own | |
| ethnicity. | |
| However the Western Cape's predominantly English-speaking | |
| political elite was still strongly in favour of the "�25 vote", | |
| with many liberals such as Saul Solomon even supporting its | |
| expansion into total universal franchise. This liberal Cape Town | |
| elite was the origin of what became known as the "Cape Liberal | |
| Tradition" and also formed the core of the later South African | |
| Party. | |
| Follow the Link for much more on.... WIKIPEDIA | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Qualified_Franchise | |
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