Frans Baleni Explained

Office:4th General Secretary of the National Union of Mineworkers
Predecessor:Gwede Mantashe
Successor:David Sipunzi
Termend:2015
Termstart:2006
Birth Name:Msokoli Frans Baleni
Birth Date:1959 or 1960 (age 63 or 64)
Nationality:South African
Otherparty:South African Communist Party
Birth Place:Orange Free State, South Africa

Msokoli Frans Baleni (born 1959 or 1960)[1] is a South African businessman and former trade unionist who was general secretary of the National Union of Mineworkers between 2006 and 2015. Since 2007, he has been a member of the Central Committee of the South African Communist Party.[2] [3]

Early life

Baleni was born in the Free State and attended high school in the Eastern Cape on a bursary, until he moved back to the Free State in 1979 when his political activity had attracted the attention of Eastern Cape police. Between 1979 and 1988, he worked as a gold miner in Welkom, Free State, at an Anglo American (then AngloGold) mine.[4] [5]

1982–2015: Trade union career

He was a founding member of the National Union of Mineworkers in 1982,[6] [7] [8] and the next year was elected a shaft shop steward at Western Holdings mine in Welkom. He was a strike leader, and one of the youngest negotiators, during the August 1987 national mining strike, the largest in the NUM's history.[9] By 1993, he was head of the organising department, and was later the chief education officer.[10] In 2006, he succeeded Gwede Mantashe as general secretary of NUM, by then the biggest union in the country and the most powerful affiliate of the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu). He was elected unopposed after the other contestant, Archie Phalane, was disqualified on a technicality,[11] and he was thought to have the support of Mantashe, who has been described as his mentor.[10] [12] He was general secretary between 2006 and 2015, gaining re-election in both 2009 and 2012.

NUM decline

He presided over a period of declining influence and membership at the NUM, particularly in the platinum belt in the north-east of the country. Although one factor was the general decline of the South African mining sector, the NUM also lost influence to the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (Amcu), founded in 2001 and now a major force in the platinum mines. In 2012 and 2013, conflict between the NUM and Amcu led to violence in Rustenberg, North West province, both among Lonmin miners and among Anglo American Platinum miners.[13] [14] After the Marikana massacre, when police shot and killed miners in an Amcu-led wildcat strike at the Lonmin mine, Baleni defended the police's actions.[15]

Among other things, the NUM was criticised for its and Baleni's perceived closeness to mining bosses and to the government,[16] to the extent that critics nicknamed the union the "National Union of Management." Stephen Grootes writes that Baleni "almost epitomised 'union establishment,'"[17] and, similarly, Raphaël Botiveau says he "embodies the ideal type of the 'trade union executive.'" Botiveau also claims that he subscribed to "a version of communist ideology that is characterised by the exercise of tight control over the organisation." In 2012, there was a minor scandal when his salary was leaked to the Mail & Guardian, which identified him as "one of the highest-paid unionists in South Africa."[18] [19] [20]

Politics

Baleni, and the NUM under his leadership, have been criticised for their perceived preoccupation with a political agenda, at the expense of attention to labour grievances.[21] [22] [23] This criticism related to Tripartite Alliance politics as well as to inter-union rivalries. Baleni was reportedly close to his predecessor, Mantashe, who by then was secretary general of the ruling African National Congress (ANC), and he was allied to the South African Communist Party under Blade Nzimande – he had been elected to its Central Committee months after he was elected general secretary.[24] [25] [26] In Cosatu, he was seen as allied with Cosatu president S'dumo Dlamini,[16] [25] [27] who in turn was a key ally of eventual national president Jacob Zuma.[28] Indeed, Baleni himself has been described as "a leading figure" in Zuma's campaign for re-election as ANC president ahead of the ANC's 2012 Mangaung conference.[29] He was seen as "a key player in leading the offensive" against Cosatu general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi and the National Union of Metalworkers (Numsa) when they were expelled from Cosatu in 2014 and 2015 respectively.[30] [31] He also had an antagonistic relationship with Julius Malema, the former president of the ANC Youth League.[32] [33] [34]

Although Baleni supports state intervention in strategic economic sectors, he is opposed to nationalising the mines – according to the Mail & Guardian, on "pragmatic" grounds.[35] He has not taken up political leadership positions outside the NUM, except in the SACP. He declined an ANC nomination for a seat in the National Assembly of Parliament in 2009.[36] In 2011, he was rumoured to be a potential candidate for the next general secretary of COSATU, when Vavi was believed to be stepping down, although left-wing critics objected to his perceived sympathy for the government's economic policies.

Ousting

Baleni was removed as general secretary in June 2015, when the Free State regional secretary, David Sipunzi, narrowly beat him in a vote: Baleni won 345 votes and Sipunzi 357.[37] The result of the vote was described as unexpected,[38] and local commentators viewed it as reflecting a shift of momentous significance, with journalist Max du Preez calling it "a political earthquake."[16] [17] According to a leftist source, it was a "heavy blow" to the right wing of the union and of Cosatu.[39] The Mail & Guardian said that the election "threatened to split the union."[40]

Local commentators believed that the expulsion of Vavi and Numsa had been the decisive issue in the leadership contest – Sipunzi was notably more sympathetic towards them than Baleni. Forbes saw Baleni's perceived closeness with the mining companies as another crucial issue, quipping, "Apparently, many in NUM felt the gentlemanly Baleni may have been too gentlemanly in dealing with the mining bosses."[41]

Career in public entities

After losing the 2015 election, Baleni retired from union work. In December 2018, President Cyril Ramaphosa appointed him to the Eskom sustainability task team, which reviewed the turnaround plan and long-term strategy of the public power utility.[42] [6] In October 2019, he was appointed chairperson of the board of PetroSA, the state-owned oil and gas company, where he is implementing a corporate turnaround,[6] [43] [44] and he was appointed to the board of the Public Investment Corporation, the state-owned asset manager, in November 2021.[45] He has also been on the board, at one point as deputy chairperson,[46] of the state-owned Development Bank of Southern Africa.[18]

He is viewed as a political supporter of Ramaphosa (also a former NUM general secretary).[47] [48]

Personal life

He is married to Phindile Baleni, an admitted attorney who was appointed South Africa's first female director-general in the presidency in March 2021 and who was previously director-general in the office of David Makhura, the Gauteng premier.[49] [50] As of 2018, he lived in Boksburg, Gauteng.[51]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bishop. Chris. 2017-08-10. 'I Said Kill Me, They Said Cheers!'. 2022-01-16. Forbes Africa. en.
  2. Web site: Current Central Committee. 2022-01-16. South African Communist Party (SACP).
  3. Web site: Previous Central Committee Members. 2022-01-16. South African Communist Party (SACP).
  4. Web site: Baleni. Frans. 2018-09-17. 4IR: A chance or curse for labour. 2022-01-16. University of Johannesburg. en-ZA.
  5. Web site: Speaker details: Frans Baleni. 2022-01-16. Eventscloud.
  6. Web site: Marrian. Natasha. 2020-03-12. Frans Baleni, chair of the board of PetroSA. 2022-01-16. Business Day. en-ZA.
  7. Web site: Serrao. Angelique. 2014-06-09. Doing it for love at R77 000 a month. 2022-01-16. The Star.
  8. Web site: Sosibo. Kwanele. 2012-10-26. NUM stands fast on shifting ground. 2022-01-16. The Mail & Guardian. en-ZA.
  9. Web site: Nicolson. Greg. 2015-06-07. NUM: The end of The Age of Frans Baleni. 2022-01-16. Daily Maverick. en.
  10. Book: Botiveau, Raphaël. Taking Control of NUM: The Rise of the Communist Faction. Taking Control of NUM. 2017. Organise or Die?. 245–272. Wits University Press. 10.18772/12017122040.14. 10.18772/12017122040.14. 978-1-77614-204-0. 2022-01-16.
  11. Web site: Marinovich. Greg. 2012-08-17. Beyond the chaos at Marikana: The search for the real issues. 2022-01-16. Daily Maverick. en.
  12. Web site: Matlala. George. 2012-05-02. Battle looms over NUM leadership. 2022-01-16. IOL. en.
  13. Web site: Marinovich. Greg. 2012-10-27. War: Cosatu vs Amplats strikers. Battlefield: Rustenburg.. 2022-01-16. Daily Maverick. en.
  14. Web site: Hlongwane. Sipho. 2013-02-20. Rustenburg: AMCU and NUM call a truce – for now. 2022-01-16. Daily Maverick. en.
  15. News: Polgreen. Lydia. 2012-08-16. Mine Strike Mayhem Stuns South Africa as Police Open Fire. en-US. The New York Times. 2022-01-16. 0362-4331.
  16. Web site: Du Preez. Max. 2015-06-09. Baleni's defeat a political earthquake for ANC. 2022-01-16. News24. en-US.
  17. Web site: Grootes. Stephen. 2015-06-07. Where to next, NUM/Cosatu?. 2022-01-16. Daily Maverick. en.
  18. Web site: Letsoalo. Matuma. 2012-05-31. NUM plans disciplinary action over Baleni salary leak. 2022-01-16. The Mail & Guardian. en-ZA.
  19. Web site: Marinovich. Greg. 2013-04-24. Conflict of Interest, Inc: Mining unions' leaders were representing their members while in corporations' pay. 2022-01-16. Daily Maverick. en.
  20. Web site: Letsoalo. Matuma. 2012-05-18. Uproar over unionist's huge salary hike just 'a campaign'. 2022-01-16. The Mail & Guardian. en-ZA.
  21. Web site: Patel. Khadija. 2012-10-03. Cosatu and the NUM fight back. Sort of.. 2022-01-16. Daily Maverick. en.
  22. Web site: Munusamy. Ranjeni. 2013-01-17. NUM, the incredible vanishing union; Cosatu in the danger zone. 2022-01-16. Daily Maverick. en.
  23. Web site: Patel. Khadija. 2012-09-05. NUM – Rich history, unforgiving present. 2022-01-16. Daily Maverick. en.
  24. Botiveau. Raphaël. 2013. Longevity of the Tripartite Alliance: the post-Mangaung sequence. Review of African Political Economy. 40. 138. 620–627. 10.1080/03056244.2013.854042. 24858284. 154036197. 0305-6244.
  25. Web site: Letsoalo. Matuma. 2012-03-23. Unionists to choose sides. 2022-01-16. The Mail & Guardian. en-ZA.
  26. Web site: Letsoalo. Matuma. 2011-07-08. Jimmying up the battle for succession. 2022-01-16. The Mail & Guardian. en-ZA.
  27. Web site: 2015-06-06. New NUM leaders 'have a mountain to climb'. 2022-01-16. The Mail & Guardian. en-ZA.
  28. Web site: Mkentane. Luyolo. 2017-06-02. S'dumo Dlamini dumps Zuma. 2022-01-16. IOL. en.
  29. Book: Bezuidenhout, Andries. Labour Beyond Cosatu: Mapping the rupture in South Africa's labour landscape. 2017. Wits University Press. 978-1-77614-053-4. Labour Beyond Cosatu, Other Federations and Independent Unions. 217–234. 10.18772/22017070534.17. 10.18772/22017070534.
  30. Web site: Evans. Sarah. 2014-11-09. 'The fight is not over' - Numsa to fight Cosatu expulsion. 2022-01-16. The Mail & Guardian. en-ZA.
  31. Book: Bezuidenhout, Andries. Labour Beyond Cosatu: Mapping the rupture in South Africa's labour landscape. 2017. Wits University Press. 978-1-77614-053-4. Democracy and the Rupture in South Africa’s Labour Landscape. 1–17. 10.18772/22017070534.6. 10.18772/22017070534.
  32. Web site: 2012-09-11. Strike until NUM leaders step down, Malema tells SA's miners. 2022-01-16. The Mail & Guardian. en-ZA.
  33. Web site: Masondo. Sipho. 2011-11-15. NUM nails Malema for his playboy lifestyle. 2022-01-16. Sunday Times. en-ZA.
  34. Web site: Prinsloo. Loni. 2012-10-14. NUM blames Malema for wildcat strikes. 2022-01-16. Business Day. en-ZA.
  35. Web site: Malala. Justice. 2012-08-17. The Marikana action is a strike by the poor against the state and the haves. 2022-01-16. the Guardian. en.
  36. Web site: Letsoalo. Matuma. 2009-02-09. Top lefties snub ANC jobs. 2022-01-16. The Mail & Guardian. en-ZA.
  37. Web site: 2015-06-06. Baleni bids farewell to NUM. 2022-01-16. News24. en-US.
  38. Web site: Munusamy. Ranjeni. 2015-06-09. Power games: Upheaval in the labour movement reverberates through Alliance. 2022-01-16. Daily Maverick. en.
  39. Web site: Morken. Ben. 2015-06-08. South Africa: Frans Baleni kicked out! A heavy defeat for the COSATU and NUM right wing. 2022-01-16. In Defence of Marxism. en-gb.
  40. Web site: Whittles. Govan. 2018-05-25. Faction-riven and bleeding, NUM turns on itself. 2022-01-16. The Mail & Guardian. en-ZA.
  41. News: 2015-08-01. Can The Deer Stare Down The Headlights?. Forbes. 2022-01-16.
  42. Web site: 2018-12-14. These are the 8 members of Ramaphosa's Eskom task team. 2022-01-16. IOL. en.
  43. Web site: Frans Baleni, PetroSA. 2022-01-16. Bloomberg.
  44. Web site: Quintal. Genevieve. 2019-10-21. Frans Baleni to lead new PetroSA board. 2022-01-16. Business Day. en-ZA.
  45. Web site: Ginindza. Banele. 2021-11-05. Labour representation on the new PIC board hailed as positive. 2022-01-16. IOL. en.
  46. Web site: 2013-09-29. Union bosses scoring as directors of SOE boards. 2022-01-16. Daily Maverick. en.
  47. Web site: Marrian. Natasha. 2020-10-08. PROFILE: Is Phindile Baleni Cyril's next DG?. 2022-01-16. Business Day. en-ZA.
  48. Web site: Mahlakoana. Theto. 2019-05-25. Frans Baleni hails Ramaphosa as strategic visionary. 2022-01-16. EWN. en.
  49. Web site: Khoza. Amanda. 2021-03-21. SA's first female director-general in the presidency appointed. 2022-01-16. Sunday Times. en-ZA.
  50. Web site: Khoza. Amanda. 2021-04-11. 'They think I'm soft, but these teeth ... they bite': Phindile Baleni. 2022-01-16. Sunday Times. en-ZA.
  51. Web site: Sibeko. Ntombikayise. 2018-05-01. Frans Baleni provides insight on the importance of Workers Day. 2022-01-16. Boksburg Advertiser. en-US.