Home South African Hlaudi Motsoeneng aims to govern Free State

Hlaudi Motsoeneng aims to govern Free State

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African Content Movement (ACM) president Hlaudi Motsoeneng said the Free State has always been the party’s stronghold.

ACM leader Hlaudi Motsoeneng. File picture: Siphelele Dludla, ANA

By Sipho Jack

BLOEMFONTEIN – African Content Movement (ACM) president Hlaudi Motsoeneng said his party had met the IEC’s party deadline.

Speaking to Independent Media, Motsoeneng said he was ready for May 29th, adding that his party’s election machinery was well oiled.

“We are ready as the organisation to contest the elections and to serve the people of Free Sate. I believe we are going to be victorious in this election.

We have learnt a lot since the 2019 national elections, we now know what to do and what not to do in these elections,” he said.

Motsoeneng said Free Staters were hungry for fresh blood with fresh ideas that would make them realise new possibilities.

“Our province is full of potholes, lack of water and the level of unemployment is staggering. The people have lost hope in the ruling party, and they are now ready for ACM. Our people know what the ACM can do for them, and it’s not a party of many words but a party of action”.

Motsoeneng said he believed that if the numbers his organisation was pulling at rallies was anything to go by, the party would send shockwaves across the country.

The ACM leader sad he was happy with how the organisation was gaining momentum in the Free State.

Motsoeneng said the idea of rebuilding the party from the ground up proved to be working for the movement.

When the party contested in 2019, it did not receive enough votes to secure a seat in the General Assembly.

Motsoeneng attributed that to the party’s inability to organise and form proper structures.

He, however, said he was now confident that the party would perform much better than it did in the 2019 elections.

The ACM leader said the Free State has always been the party’s stronghold, particularly his hometown of Phuthaditjhaba.

Phuthaditjhaba falls under Thabo Mofutsanyane Region, one of the biggest regions in the province.

Motsoeneng’s party received the people’s vote of confidence when it garnered two seats in the Maluti-a-Phofung municipal local council in the 2019 local elections.

The party is currently heading up a position of municipal public accounts committee which defeated the DA on the ballot with a tally of 33 votes to five to claim the position previously held by the EFF.

It won’t be a smooth sailing for the Motsoeneng, as he will be contesting against former premier and chairperson of the ANC in the Province, Ace Magashule’s African Congress for Transformation movement (ACT).

The former ANC secretary-general also hails from the Free State.

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