$Unique_ID{how02351} $Pretitle{} $Title{Impressions Of South Africa Chapter XXIV - Politics In The Two British Colonies} $Subtitle{} $Author{Bryce, James} $Affiliation{} $Subject{cape dutch english colony british colonies questions south government natal} $Date{1897} $Log{} Title: Impressions Of South Africa Book: Part IV - Some South African Questions Author: Bryce, James Date: 1897 Chapter XXIV - Politics In The Two British Colonies The circumstances of the two South African colonies are so dissimilar from those of the British colonies in North America and in Australasia as to have impressed upon their politics a very different character. I do not propose to describe the present political situation, for it may have changed before these pages are published. It is only of the permanent causes which give their color to the public life and political issues of the country that I shall speak, and that concisely. The frame of government is, in Cape Colony as well as in Natal, essentially the same as in the other self-governing British colonies. There is a governor, appointed by the home government, and responsible to it only, who plays the part which belongs to the Crown in Great Britain. He is the nominal head of the executive, summoning and proroguing the legislature, appointing and dismissing ministers, and exercising, upon the advice of his ministers, the prerogative of pardon. There is a cabinet consisting of the heads of the chief administrative departments, who are the practical executive of the Colony, and are responsible to the legislature, in which they sit, and at whose pleasure they hold their offices. There is a legislature consisting of two houses - an Assembly and a Legislative Council. In Cape Colony (for of the arrangements in Natal I have spoken in a previous chapter) both houses are elected on the same franchise, - a low one, - and every citizen is eligible for membership in either; but the districts for the election of members of the Council are much larger, and therefore fewer, than those for the Assembly, so the former body is a small and the latter a comparatively numerous one. The rights and powers of both houses are theoretically the same, save that money bills originate in the Assembly; but the Assembly is far more powerful, for the ministry holds office only so long as it has the support of a majority in that body, whereas it need not regard a hostile vote in the Council. Ministers have the right of speaking in both houses, but can, of course, vote only in the one of which they are members by popular election. If there happens not to be a minister who has a seat in the Council (as is the case at present), it is usual for the cabinet to allot one to be present in and look after that chamber for the day. This cabinet system, as it is called, works pretty smoothly, on lines similar to that English original whence it is copied. The most interesting peculiarity is the Cape method of forming the smaller house. In England the Upper House is composed of hereditary members; in the Canadian Confederation, of members nominated for life - both of them systems which are quite indefensible in theory. Here, however, we find the same plan as that which prevails in the States of the North American Union, all of which have senates elected on the same franchise, and for the same term, as the larger house, but in more extensive districts, so as to make the number of members of the second chamber smaller. Regarding the merits of the Cape scheme I heard different views expressed. Nobody seemed opposed in principle to the division of the legislature into two houses, but many condemned the existing Council as being usually composed of second-rate men, and apt to be obstructive in its tendencies. Others thought that the Council was a useful part of the scheme of government, because it interposed some delay in legislation and gave time for reflection and further debate. One point came out pretty clearly. No difficulty seems to arise from having two popularly elected houses equally entitled to control the administration, for custom has settled that the Assembly or larger house is that whose vote determines the life of a ministry. But it follows from this circumstance that all the most able and ambitious men desire a seat in the more powerful chamber, leaving the smaller house to those of less mark. This is the exact reverse of what has happened in the United States, where a seat in the Senate is more desired than one in the House; but it is a natural result of the diverse arrangements of the two countries, for in the federal government the Senate has some powers which the House of Representatives does not enjoy, while in the several States of the Union, although the powers of the two houses are almost the same, the smaller number of each Senate secures for each Senator somewhat greater importance than a member of the larger body enjoys. The Cape Colony plan of letting a minister speak in both houses works very well, and may deserve to be imitated in England, where the fact that the head of a department can explain his policy only to his own House has sometimes caused inconvenience. So much for the machinery. Now let us note the chief points in which the circumstances of Cape Colony and of Natal (for in these respects both colonies are alike) differ from those of the other self-governing colonies of Britain. The population is not homogeneous as regards race, but consists of two stocks, English and Dutch. These stocks are not, as in Canada, locally separate, but dwell intermixed, though the Dutch element predominates in the western province and in the interior generally, the English in the eastern province and at the Kimberley diamond-fields. The population is homogeneous as regards religion, for nearly all are Protestants, and Protestants of much the same type. Race difference has fortunately not been complicated, as in Canada, by ecclesiastical antagonisms. The population is homogeneous as respects material interests, for it is wholly agricultural and pastoral, except a few merchants and artisans in the seaports, and a few miners at Kimberley and in Namaqualand. Four fifths of it are practically rural, for the interests of the small towns are identical with those of the surrounding country. The population is not only rural, but scattered more thinly over a vast area than in any other British colony, except northwestern Canada and parts of Australasia. In Natal there are only about two white men to the square mile, and in Cape Colony less than two. Nor is this sparseness incidental, as in North America, to the early days of settlement. It is due to a physical condition, - the thinness of the pasture, - which is likely to continue. Below the white citizens, who are the ruling race, there lies a thick stratum of colored population, numerically larger, and likely to remain so, because it performs all the unskilled labor of the country. Here is a condition which, though present in some of the Southern States of America, is fortunately absent from all the self-governing colonies of Britain, and indeed caused Jamaica to be, some time ago, withdrawn from that category. The conjunction of these circumstances marks off South Africa as a very peculiar country, where we may expect to find a correspondingly peculiar political situation. Comparing it to other states, we may say that the Cape and Natal resemble Canada in the fact that there are two European races present, and resemble the Southern States of America in having a large mass of colored people beneath the whites. But South Africa is in other respects unlike both, and although situated in the southern hemisphere, it does not resemble Australia. Now let us see how these circumstances have determined the political issues that have arisen in Cape Colony. Certain issues are absent which exist not only in Europe and the United States, but also in Australia and in Canada. There is no antagonism of rich and poor, because there are very few poor and still fewer rich. There is no workingman's or labor party, because so few white men are employed in handicrafts. There is no socialist movement, nor is any likely to arise, because the mass of workers, to whom elsewhere socialism addresses itself, is mainly composed of black people, and no white would dream of collectivism for the benefit of blacks. Thus the whole group of labor questions, which bulks so largely in modern industrial states, is practically absent, and replaced by a different set of class questions, to be presently mentioned. There is no regularly organized Protectionist party, nor is the protection of native industry a living issue of the first magnitude. The farmers and ranchmen of Cape Colony no doubt desire to have a tariff on food-stuffs that will help them to keep up prices, and they have got one. But it is not a very high tariff, and as direct taxation is difficult to raise in a new country with a scattered population, the existing tariff, which averages twelve and a half per cent. ad valorem, may be defended as needed, at least to a large extent, for the purposes of revenue. Natal has a lower tariff, and is more favorable in principle to free-trade doctrine. Manufactures have been so sparingly developed in both colonies that neither employers nor workmen have begun to call for high duties against foreign goods. Here, therefore, is another field of policy, important in North America and in Australia, which has given rise to little controversy in South Africa. As there is no established church, and nearly all the people are Protestants, there are no ecclesiastical questions, nor is the progress of education let and hindered by the claims of sects to have their respective creeds taught at the expense of the state. Neither are there any land questions, such as those which have arisen in Australia, for there has been land enough for those who want to have it, while few agricultural immigrants arrive to increase the demand. Moreover, though the landed estates are large, their owners are not rich, and excite no envy by their possession of a profitable monopoly. If any controversy regarding natural resources arises, it will probably turn on the taxation of minerals. Some have suggested that the state should appropriate to itself a substantial share of the profits made out of the diamond and other mines, and the fact that most of those profits are sent home to shareholders in Europe might be expected to make the suggestion popular. Nevertheless, the suggestion has not, so far, "caught on," to use a familiar expression, partly, perhaps, because Cape Colony, drawing sufficient income from its tariff and its railways, has not found it necessary to hunt for other sources of revenue. Lastly, there are no constitutional questions. The suffrage is so wide as to admit nearly all the whites, and there is, of course, no desire to go lower and admit more blacks. The machinery of government is deemed satisfactory; at any rate, one hears of no proposals to change it, and, as will be seen presently, there is not in either colony a wish to alter the relations now subsisting between it and the mother country. The reader may suppose that since all these grounds of controversy, familiar to Europe, and some of them now unhappily familiar to the new democracies also, are absent, South Africa enjoys the political tranquillity of a country where there are no factions, and the only question is how to find the men most able to promote that economic development which all unite in desiring. This is by no means the case. In South Africa the part filled elsewhere by constitutional questions, and industrial questions, and ecclesiastical questions, and currency questions, is filled by race questions and color questions. Color questions have been discussed in a previous chapter. They turn not, as in the Southern States of America, upon the political rights of the black man (for on this subject the ruling whites are in both colonies unanimous), but upon land rights and the regulation of native labor. They are not at this moment actual and pungent issues, but they are in the background of every one's mind, and the attitude of each man to them goes far to determine his political sympathies. One cannot say that there exist pro-native or anti-native parties, but the Dutch are by tradition more disposed than the English to treat the native severely and, as they express it, keep him in his place. It is always by Englishmen that the advocacy of the native case is undertaken, yet many Englishmen share the Dutch feeling. In Natal both races are equally anti-Indian. The race question among the whites, that is to say, the rivalry of Dutch and English, would raise no practical issue were Cape Colony an island in the ocean, for there is complete political and social equality between the two stocks, and the material interests of the Dutch farmer are the same as those of his English neighbor. It is the existence of a contiguous foreign state, the South African Republic, that sharpens Dutch feeling. The Boers who remained in Cape Colony and in Natal have always retained their sentiment of kinship with those who went out in the Great Trek of 1836, or who moved northward from Natal into the Transvaal after the annexation of Natal in 1842. Many of them are connected by family ties with the inhabitants of the two republics, and are proud of the achievements of their kinsfolk against Dingaan and Mosilikatze, and of the courage displayed at Laing's Nek and Majuba Hill against the British. They resent keenly any attempt to trench upon the independence of the Transvaal, while most of the English do not conceal their wish to bring that state into a South African Confederation, if possible under the British flag. The ministries and legislatures of the two British colonies, it need hardly be said, have no official relations with the two Dutch republics, because, according to the constitution of the British empire, such relations, like all other foreign relations, belong to the Crown, and the Crown is advised by the British cabinet at home. In South Africa the Crown is represented for the purpose of these relations by the High Commissioner, who is not responsible in any way to the colonial legislatures, and is not even required to consult the colonial cabinet, for his functions as High Commissioner for South Africa are deemed to be distinct from those which he has as Governor of Cape Colony. Matters touching the two republics and their relation to the two colonies are, accordingly, entirely outside the sphere of action of the colonial legislatures, which have, in strict theory, no right to pass resolutions regarding them. In point of fact, however, the Cape Assembly frequently does debate and pass resolutions on these matters; nor is this practice disapproved, for, as the sentiments of the Colony are an important factor in determining the action of the home government, it is well that the British cabinet and the High Commissioner should possess such a means of gaging those sentiments. The same thing happens with regard to any other question between Britain and a foreign power which affects the two colonies. Questions with Germany or Portugal, questions as to the acquisition of territory in South Central Africa, would also be discussed in the colonial legislatures, just as those of Australia some years ago complained warmly of the action of France in the New Hebrides. And thus it comes to pass that though the governments and legislatures of the colonies have in strictness nothing to do with foreign policy, foreign policy has had much to do with the formation of parties at the Cape. Now as to the parties themselves. Hitherto I have spoken of Natal and the Cape together, because their conditions are generally similar, though the Dutch element is far stronger in the latter than in the former. In what follows I speak of the Cape only, for political parties have not had time to grow up in Natal, where responsible government dates from 1893. In the earlier days of the Cape legislature parties were not strongly marked, though they tended to coincide with the race distinction between Dutch and English, because the western province was chiefly Dutch, and the eastern chiefly English, and there was a certain rivalry or antagonism between these two main divisions of the country. The Dutch element was, moreover, wholly agricultural and pastoral, the English partly mercantile; so, when any issue arose between these two interests, it generally corresponded with the division of races. Political organization was chiefly in English hands, because the colonial Dutch had not possessed representative government, whereas the English brought their home habits with them. However, down till 1880 parties remained in an amorphous or fluid condition, being largely affected by the influence of individual leaders; and the Dutch section of the electorate was hardly conscious of its strength. In the end of that year, the rising in the Transvaal, and the war of independence which followed, powerfully stimulated Dutch feeling, and led to the formation of the Africander Bond, a league or association appealing nominally to African, but practically to Boer, patriotism. It was not anti-English in the sense of hostility to the British connection, any more than was the French party in Lower Canada at the same time, but it was based not only on the solidarity of the Boer race over all South Africa, but also on the doctrine that Africanders must think of Africa first, and see that the country was governed in accordance with local sentiment rather than on British lines or with a view to British interests. Being Dutch, the Bond became naturally the rural or agricultural and pastoral party, and therewith inclined to a protective tariff and to stringent legislation in native matters. Such anti-English tint as this association originally wore tended to fade when the Transvaal troubles receded into the distance, and when it was perceived that the British government became more and more disposed to leave the Colony to manage its own affairs. And this was still more the case after the rise to power of Mr. Cecil Rhodes, who, while receiving the support of the Bond and the Dutch party generally, was known to be also a strong imperialist, eager to extend the range of British power over the continent. At the same time the attachment of the colonial Dutch to the Transvaal cooled down under the unfriendly policy of President Kruger, whose government imposed heavy import duties on their food-stuffs, and denied to their youth the opportunities of obtaining posts in the service of the South African Republic, preferring to fetch Dutch-speaking men from Holland, when it could have had plenty of capable people from the Cape who spoke the tongue and knew the ways of the country. Thus the embers of Dutch and English and antagonism seemed to be growing cold when they were suddenly fanned again into a flame by the fresh Transvaal troubles of December, 1895, which caused the resignation of Mr. Rhodes, and the severance from him of his Dutch supporters. Too little time has elapsed since those events to make it possible to predict how parties may reshape themselves, nor is it any part of my plan to deal with current politics. Feeling still runs high, but it has not gone so far as to interrupt the previously friendly social relations of the races, and there are good grounds for hoping that within a few months or years mutual confidence will be restored. So far as I could ascertain, both local government and central government are in the two colonies pure and honest. The judiciary is above all suspicion. The civil service is managed on English principles, there being no elective offices, and nothing resembling what is called the "caucus system" seems to have grown up. There are in the Cape legislature some few members supposed to be "low-toned" and open to influence by the prospect of material gain, but, though I heard of occasional jobbing, I heard of nothing amounting to corruption. Elections are said to be free from bribery, but as they have seldom excited any keen interest, this point of superiority to most countries need not be ascribed to moral causes. Reviewing the course of Cape politics during the thirty years of responsible government, that course appears smooth when compared with the parallel current of events in the Australian colonies. There have been few constitutional crises, and no exciting struggles over purely domestic issues. This is due not merely to the absence of certain causes of strife, but also to the temper of the people, and their thin dispersion over a vast territory. In large town populations, excitement grows by the sympathy of numbers; out in South Africa it is hard, except in five or six places, to gather a public meeting of even three hundred citizens. The Dutch are tardy, cautious, and reserved. The doggedness of their ancestors who resisted Philip II of Spain lives in them still. They have a slow, tenacious intensity, like that of a forest fire, which smolders long among the prostrate trunks before it bursts into flame. But they are, except when deeply stirred, conservative and slow to move. They dislike change so much as to be unwilling to change their representatives or their ministers. A Cape statesman told me that the Dutch members of the Assembly would often say to him: "We think you wrong in this instance, and we are going to vote against you, but we don't want to turn you out; stay on in office as before." So President Kruger observed to me, in commenting on the frequent changes of government in England: "When we have found an ox who makes a good leader of the team, we keep him there, instead of shifting the cattle about in the hope of finding a better one"; and in saying this he expressed the feelings and habits of his race. To an Englishman they seem to want that interest in politics for its own sake which marks not only the English (and still more the Irish) at home, but also the English stock in North America and Australia. But this very fact makes them all the more fierce and stubborn when some issue arises which stirs their inmost mind, and it is a fact to be remembered by those who have to govern them. The things they care most about are their religion, their race ascendancy over the blacks, and their Dutch-African nationality as represented by their kinsfolk in the two republics. The first of these has never been tampered with; the two latter have been at the bottom of all the serious difficulties that have arisen between them and the English. That which at this moment excites them and forms the crucial issue in Cape politics is the strained condition of things which exists in the Transvaal. I propose in the following chapter to explain how that condition came about, and to sketch its salient features.