Democratic Alliance Afrikaans: Demokratiese Alliansie | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | DA |
Federal Leader | John Steenhuisen |
Federal Chairperson | Ivan Meyer |
Deputy Federal Chairpersons | JP Smith Solly Malatsi Anton Bredell |
Federal Council Chairperson | Helen Zille[7] |
Deputy Federal Council Chairpersons | Ashor Sarupen Annelie Lotriet Thomas Walters |
Founded | 24 June 2000 |
Preceded by | Democratic Party New National Party Federal Alliance |
Student wing | Democratic Alliance Students Organisation[1] |
Youth wing | DA Youth[2] |
Women's wing | DA Women’s Network[3] |
Overseas wing | DA Abroad[4] |
Ideology | |
Political position | Centre[A] |
International affiliation | Liberal International |
Continental affiliation | Africa Liberal Network |
Colours | Blue |
Slogan | Freedom, Fairness, Opportunity and Diversity |
National Assembly | 87 / 400 |
NCOP | 21 / 90 |
Pan African Parliament | 1 / 5 |
SADC Parliamentary Forum | 1 / 6 |
Provincial Legislatures | 89 / 487 |
Cape Town City Council | 135 / 231 |
Website | |
da.org.za | |
^ A: It is attributed to both centre-left and centre-right policies and is often described with either label. |
The Democratic Alliance (DA) is a South African political party which is a part of the current South African Government of National Unity (GNU). The party has been the second-largest in South Africa since its foundation in 2000. The party is broadly centrist,[8][9] and has been attributed both centre-left[10] and centre-right[11][12][13] policies. It is a member of Liberal International and the Africa Liberal Network. The DA traces its roots to the founding of the anti-apartheid Progressive Party in 1959, with many mergers and name changes between that time and the present. The DA has a variety of ideologically liberal[14] tendencies, including neoliberalism,[15] social liberalism,[16] classical liberalism,[16] and conservative liberalism.[17][18] The party draws its support predominantly from Afrikaans and English speakers, people aged over 35, and white South Africans, as well as the Indian and Coloured communities.[19][20]
The current leader of the party is John Steenhuisen, who was announced as the new leader on 1 November 2020 after the party's Federal Congress. He had previously acted as the interim leader of the party from November 2019 to November 2020.[21] Helen Zille is chairperson of both the Federal Council and the Federal Executive, the highest decision-making structures of the party.[22]
In aftermath of the 2024 general election, the DA entered into a ruling grand coalition with the African National Congress (ANC) and various other parties, called a government of national unity, formed between ten parties with jointly 287 seats in the National Assembly of South Africa (72%).[23][24] The DA also governs several major metropolitan municipalities and has governed the Western Cape, one of South Africa's nine provinces, since the 2009 general election.
As a political force the Afrikaans community in the 2019 general election principally supported two political parties at a national level, the centrist Democratic Alliance and the conservative Freedom Front Plus (Saba 2019).
Zille...is seen as representing a conservative-liberal grouping within the DA.