Cyril Ramaphosa

president of South Africa
print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

Quick Facts
In full:
Matamela Cyril Ramaphosa
Born:
November 17, 1952, Johannesburg, South Africa
Title / Office:
president (2018-), South Africa
Political Affiliation:
African National Congress

News

Opposition parties ask South Africa's top court to revive impeachment hearings for the president Nov. 26, 2024, 4:00 AM ET (ABC News (U.S.))
PM Wong meets South African President Cyril Ramaphosa Nov. 18, 2024, 6:40 AM ET (Straits Times)
Prince William meets President Ramaphosa on South Africa trip Nov. 5, 2024, 3:23 AM ET (The Star)

Cyril Ramaphosa (born November 17, 1952, Johannesburg, South Africa) is a South African activist, businessman, and politician widely credited for his role in the 1990s in the negotiations that ended South Africa’s racially discriminatory policy of apartheid and that ushered in a new era of nonracial government. He has been president of South Africa since 2018 and of the African National Congress (ANC), the ruling party, since 2017.

Early years, education, and activism

Ramaphosa was born to Samuel and Erdmuth Ramaphosa during South Africa’s racially discriminatory apartheid era. He spent his early years in Western Native Township in the Transvaal (now in Gauteng) province. In 1962 his family was forced to move to Soweto, a township just outside Johannesburg. He began attending the University of the North (now the University of Limpopo) in 1972, where he studied law. Religion, being important to Ramaphosa, led to him being heavily involved in the Student Christian Movement at both high school and university. While at the University of the North, he also joined the South African Student Organisation and engaged in activism. Ramaphosa was arrested in 1974 after organizing and attending a rally celebrating the fall of the colonial administration and the victory of Frelimo rebels in neighboring Mozambique. For 11 months he was held in solitary confinement. After his release in September 1975, he continued to be involved in activism, becoming active in the Black People’s Convention. In the months after the start of the Soweto Uprising (June 1976), Ramaphosa was again arrested and was kept in solitary confinement for six months before being released in February 1977. After several years of part-time studies and part-time work as a law clerk, Ramaphosa earned a B.Proc. degree from the University of South Africa (UNISA) in 1981.

Involvement with unions, the ANC, and politics

Soon after earning his degree, Ramaphosa was hired as a legal adviser for the Council of Unions of South Africa (CUSA). He was asked by CUSA to help establish the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), and, upon its creation in 1982, he became general secretary, a position he held until 1991. Ramaphosa honed his organizational and leadership skills in this position as he focused on improving the working conditions and wages of Black miners. While working at the NUM, he helped form the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), a federation of trade unions, in 1985. He also oversaw the 1987 NUM strike, which at the time was the largest and longest-running strike in the history of South Africa’s mining industry. Although NUM did not receive the wage increase and other concessions they were striking for, the strike itself was viewed as a success for demonstrating the organizational might of the union and for laying the path for future negotiations and gains. The event also enhanced Ramaphosa’s reputation as a negotiator.

South Africa
More From Britannica
South Africa: Zuma’s resignation

As legislated apartheid began to unravel in the early 1990s, the ANC, a Black nationalist organization that had been banned in 1960 by the white minority government, was unbanned in 1990. The following year Ramaphosa was elected to serve as the ANC’s secretary general as well as to sit on the ANC’s influential National Executive Committee (NEC). With his years of negotiating experience from union work, he was tapped to be the ANC’s chief negotiator in multiparty discussions for the country’s transition from apartheid to multiracial democracy.

The country’s first nonracial democratic elections were held in 1994 and saw Black nationalist Nelson Mandela become the country’s first Black president. Though Ramaphosa was well positioned to be chosen as Mandela’s deputy president, that post ultimately went to Thabo Mbeki, with Ramaphosa becoming a member of the National Assembly. From 1994 to 1996 he served as chairman of the Constitutional Assembly, which drafted the country’s new constitution. For his work on the widely acclaimed constitution, Ramaphosa was honored with a prestigious South African award, the Order of the Baobab in Silver, in 2009. After his work was completed on that task in 1996, he resigned from the National Assembly and from his post as secretary general of the ANC. However, he continued to be a member of the party and kept his spot on the NEC.

Business endeavors

After leaving politics, Ramaphosa focused on his business aspirations. He started out at New African Investments Ltd. (NAIL), where he was deputy executive chairman. In 2001 he founded the Shanduka Group, an investment firm which grew to have holdings in multiple business sectors, such as mining, property, finance, and fast-food franchises. He also served on the boards of many South African businesses. In time, his endeavors made him one of the country’s wealthiest businessmen. In 2004 he established the Shanduka Foundation, which provided education and business opportunities in order to foster social and economic development in the country; it was renamed the Cyril Ramaphosa Foundation in 2015.

Return to politics

In December 2012 Ramaphosa was elected deputy president of the ANC at the party’s leadership conference to serve under Jacob Zuma, who was president of the ANC as well as of South Africa. After Zuma was reelected president in May 2014, he appointed Ramaphosa as deputy president of the country. To avoid conflicts of interest, Ramaphosa stepped down from many corporate positions he held and divested from his business interests.

Get Unlimited Access
Try Britannica Premium for free and discover more.

The ANC’s next leadership conference was held in December 2017. Zuma, who was beleaguered by scandal, did not stand for another term as party president. Ramaphosa, campaigning on a platform of fighting corruption and promoting economic growth, was narrowly elected president of the ANC. His ascent to party president put him in position to be chosen as the next president of the country. Strengthened by his victory, Ramaphosa and his supporters in the ANC began to actively maneuver for the scandal-ridden Zuma to step down as president of South Africa—a delicate task, given that Zuma still had much support within the party. Their efforts culminated on February 13, 2018, when the ANC announced that it was recalling Zuma from the presidency. Though Zuma was initially defiant, he did resign the next day. As deputy president, Ramaphosa automatically became the country’s acting president upon Zuma’s resignation; on February 15 he was formally elected to the post by the National Assembly and was sworn in.

Presidency

As president of South Africa, Ramaphosa faced entrenched challenges that could not be quickly resolved, such as fixing the causes of ongoing power shortages and eliminating the corruption rooted in so many sectors and which the electorate had come to associate with the ANC. He and his administration made some positive strides on the latter front, ordering investigations into corruption allegations at two government-controlled businesses (one of which was ESKOM, the troubled electricity utility) as well as establishing a special tribunal that would handle corruption cases in an expedient manner and reclaim public funds that had been stolen.

Ramaphosa faced additional challenges because of a sizable faction within his own party that opposed some of his policies; because of this, he had to accept some policy positions he previously had not agreed with, such as those relating to managing the issue of land reform to address the persistent racial disparity in land ownership in the country. Ramaphosa had long extolled a more moderate approach to redistributing land, but he now committed to the more extreme approach supported by the Zuma faction of the ANC as well as a populist ANC splinter group, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF): expropriating land, without compensation to the owners, so that it could be redistributed to Black South Africans.

South Africa’s next national election was held in May 2019. The ANC won the most votes, though it was by the party’s slimmest margin of victory since taking power. Ramaphosa was elected president in the National Assembly, and he was sworn in for his first full term on May 25. His new cabinet, announced in the following days, was noteworthy for having women appointed to half of the posts, resulting in the first gender-balanced cabinet in South African history.

The next year South Africa, like much of the world, was hit with the COVID-19 pandemic, depressing the already struggling economy. It also stressed the country’s health-care system and highlighted the entrenched inequality lingering from the apartheid era. Ramaphosa declared a state of disaster in March 2020; he would not lift it until April 2022. Initially, his management of the crisis was generally applauded, though he was criticized as the pandemic dragged on and frustrations with the restrictive preventive measures and a faltering economy grew.

“Farmgate” scandal

In June 2022 Ramaphosa was accused of criminal conduct in a complaint filed by Arthur Fraser, a Zuma ally and previous head of the country’s State Security Agency. He alleged that Ramaphosa had covered up a theft in 2020 of at least $4 million in foreign money that had been kept in a couch at Phala Phala, Ramaphosa’s game farm, as well as had kidnapped and bribed the robbery suspects. The allegedly large amount of foreign currency and the manner in which it was stored raised questions regarding the origin of the money and whether it had been properly declared by Ramaphosa.

Ramaphosa denied any wrongdoing in the matter. Regarding the theft, he said that a smaller amount of money had been stolen when he was not present at the farm and that he reported the theft once he was made aware of it. He asserted that the stolen money was from the sale of game and not any nefarious activity. Details provided by Ramaphosa and his staff surrounding the incident were murky, though, and at times appeared contradictory, and the appearance of impropriety grew. Multiple government agencies, including the Office of the Public Protector (national ombudsman) and the South African Reserve Bank (SARB), opened investigations into the matter, which had become known as “Farmgate.”

The scandal was a blow to Ramaphosa’s anti-corruption reputation, and it had some calling for his resignation. In September 2022 a Section 89 investigation was opened in the National Assembly to determine whether impeachment proceedings against the president were warranted. The Section 89 Panel Report, submitted to the National Assembly on November 30, found that Ramaphosa might be guilty of having violated the country’s constitution in his actions surrounding the “Farmgate” scandal; he rejected the findings and proclaimed his innocence. The National Assembly met on December 13 to discuss the report’s findings and decide whether impeachment proceedings should be initiated against him. But the ANC, the largest party in the body, had instructed its members to reject the call for an impeachment inquiry, so it was no surprise when the majority of the National Assembly voted against it. Days later Ramaphosa was reelected president of the ANC at the party’s leadership conference.

In March 2023 the preliminary findings of the public protector’s investigation were leaked. They indicated that no evidence of wrongdoing by Ramaphosa had been found. The official investigation report, released on June 30, 2023, confirmed that Ramaphosa had been cleared of wrongdoing by the public protector. SARB’s investigation report, dated August 2023, focused on whether he had violated Exchange Control Regulation 6(1), which stipulated, “Every person resident in the Republic who becomes entitled to sell or to procure the sale of any foreign currency, shall within thirty days after becoming so entitled, make or cause to be made, a declaration in writing of such foreign currency to the Treasury or to an authorised dealer.” The report included a statement from the identified buyer of the game, who referred to the money as a security deposit and said delivery of the animals had not occurred for reasons that included the COVID-19 pandemic. SARB found that Ramaphosa had not violated Exchange Control Regulation 6(1) because the money was stolen before the sale was finalized. SARB’s investigation and findings were derided by many, including members of the Democratic Alliance (DA) and other political parties, who described them with phrases such as “a whitewash,” “a cover-up,” and “unadulterated claptrap.”

The 30th anniversary of the ANC taking power and the 2024 elections

Ramaphosa and the ANC prepared for provincial and national elections, scheduled for May 29, 2024. Although 2024 was celebrated for marking the 30th anniversary of the ANC taking power in the country’s first postapartheid elections, it also appeared that the party was, for the first time, in danger of not winning an outright majority of the National Assembly seats, owing to reasons that included voter frustrations over the quality of life under the ANC-led government. The party’s decreasing support meant that it might need to form a coalition with at least one other party to govern or that it could perhaps be unseated by a different coalition, jeopardizing the possibility of another presidential term for Ramaphosa. The ANC and Ramaphosa were also on guard against losing support to a new party, the uMkhonto weSizwe Party (MK Party), which Zuma had allied himself with, pointedly saying that although he was not leaving the ANC, he could not campaign for the ANC under Ramaphosa in the upcoming elections.

Predictions that the ANC would not win a majority of the vote were confirmed when results of the May 29 election showed that the party’s share of the vote was only about 40 percent, though it did win more votes than any of the other parties. The MK Party did indeed appear to have captured some of the ANC’s traditional base, winning about 14 percent of the vote. Ramaphosa and the ANC discussed options for a coalition government with at least one other party, but when those options proved to be problematic, they instead opted to form a government of national unity (GNU) and invited all parties to enter into talks to participate in it. The DA, which had served as the official opposition to the ANC for more than two decades and placed second in the election with almost 22 percent of the vote, was the first party to sign the GNU’s statement of intent agreement, with others soon following. The EFF and MK Party were notably absent from the GNU, with the former instead opting to create the Progressive Caucus, a group of parties to serve as the opposition in the National Assembly, and the latter stating it would not work with the ANC unless Ramaphosa was removed as president, a provision which the ANC rejected. Ramaphosa was reelected as president in the National Assembly on June 14; he was inaugurated for his second term on June 19.

Amy McKenna