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South Africa’s ruling ANC loses majority in country’s most sweeping political shift in 30 years

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South Africa’s ruling ANC loses majority in country’s most sweeping political shift in 30 years

Voters during the South Africa General Elections on May 29, 2024 in Johannesburg, South Africa. 

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South Africa’s governing African National Congress lost its parliamentary majority of 30 years, in the country’s most sweeping political shift since the end of the apartheid.

Popular support for the ANC during the May 29 vote came in at 40%, with the Democratic Alliance (DA) at 21.8%, and the Marxist Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) clinching 9.5%, according to the country’s electoral commission with 99.9% of the votes counted. The six-months-old uMkhonto weSizwe party of the country’s former president Jacob Zuma, established in December, clinched 14.6% of votes.

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