More than 25 million South Africans — including a “born free” generation electing a government for the first time — are expected to vote in the country’s fifth all-race general election Wednesday.
Twenty years after South Africans of all colours wowed the world by voting to end centuries of racist rule, they will turn out to 22,263 polling centres to elect a new set of lawmakers and in turn a president.
As in 1994 and each subsequent election, the African National Congress is expected to win handily.
The party’s electoral pitch has relied heavily on past glories and on the outpouring of grief over the death of its former leader Nelson Mandela to shore up support.
“Do it for Madiba, Vote ANC!” read one prominent campaign poster, referring to the late statesman by his clan name.
But many commentators have billed this election as the last to be dominated by South Africa’s post-apartheid past.
Much will depend on turnout and on how the roughly one million South Africans who never knew apartheid will cast their ballots.
Polls show many are disaffected with the country’s current crop of leaders and are willing to consider the opposition Democratic Alliance or left-wing firebrand Julius Malema.
“Every party has its pros and its cons, so I need to just take some time and think about what is relevant to me,” said young voter Mealyn Joyce.
“I’m not voting on a historical basis, I’m voting on what I think I need as a young person.”
The ANC is still expected to win more than 60 percent of the popular vote, returning President Jacob Zuma for a second five year term.
But it is also likely to see its share of the vote slide for a second successive election amid a slew of corruption scandals and rampant unemployment.
The opposition Democratic Alliance is expected to do well in urban areas and push its share of the vote above 20 percent.
– Protests and violence –
The build-up to election day has been marked by protests, allegations of censorship by state broadcaster SABC and one case of ballot papers being found at an ANC activist’s home.
But according to Lizette Lancaster of the Institute of Security Studies the election will be free and fair.
“From about October we recorded 78 incidents of election related incidents and protests, about two-third escalated into violence,” she said.
“I think the police are well equipped to deal with tomorrow, I think we will see a very strong security presence at the polling stations around the hotspots.”
Police said they will send at least one officer to every polling station and 1,850 army troops have also been deployed across the country.
Already an estimated 400,000 voters have cast early ballots, including some on the east coast who braved high winds that blew over tents erected for the vote.
Some 12,000 marked ballots have been delivered by courier from voting stations overseas.
But the bulk of the voting will begin at 0700am local time (0500 GMT) on Wednesday and end roughly 14 hours later.
President Zuma, who has become a lightning rod for anger over corruption and mismanagement will vote at his Nkandala homestead in rural KwaZulu-Natal.
Nkandala itself has featured prominently in the election campaign after it emerged that Zuma’s administration spent $23 million of taxpayers cash on “upgrades” that include a swimming pool, amphitheatre, helipad, private clinic and cattle kraal.
Opposition leader Helen Zille will vote in Cape Town.
While some early tallies may trickle in on Wednesday evening, the full result is not likely to be known before Friday.