*ANC national executive committee member Tokyo Sexwale's allies say that
the former Gauteng premier is eyeing 2017, not 2012, as the year in which
he will make a bid for the ANC presidency.
*
That would make him a likely candidate for the country's presidency in 2019.

Human settlements minister in President Jacob Zuma's Cabinet, Sexwale was
recently in the spotlight in defence of the ANC Youth League and its
president Julius Malema. He turned down a request for an interview this
week.

Three close allies of Sexwale, who asked not to be named, said this week he
was hoping that the youth league would support him for the position of ANC
deputy president in Mangaung.

>From there, he would make a bid for the ANC presidency in 2017.

Sexwale has gone so far as to warn the ANC to think about the consequences
of undermining the league's influence.

"He is starting to take more risks," said an ally. "He has already taken a
risk by appointing Winnie Madikizela-Mandela as his adviser, backing
Malema, and questioning his own organisation.

"This is Tokyo's second attempt at the presidency and he knows it's a case
of do or die."

Sexwale declared his interest in leading the ANC and South Africa six
months before the ANC congress in 2007 in an interview with the BBC's *Hard
Talk*.
However, he decided to throw his weight behind Zuma late in the race
because he lacked sufficient support to win the presidency.

He has learned from the 2007 experience, said an ally.

"Unless you have an institutionalised support base, you are not going to
make it. And you have got to start the push early; you need a year or more
to campaign."

*Sexwale's impatience*
Sexwale's presidential dream could be realised come 2017. "He's rich,
meaning he won't be easily compromised by money," his ally pointed out.

Sexwale appears on the youth league's current slate as deputy president.
Kgalema Motlanthe is the preferred presidential candidate, while Sports
Minister Fikile Mbalula features as secretary general.

Those close to Sexwale said he was openly taking on Zuma because he was
becoming "impatient" with Motlanthe's silence about his intentions. "He has
already accepted that he's working for Kgalema for 2012. Kgalema can sit
back and watch as Tokyo and Zuma take on each other and benefit from that,"
said an ally.

However, some ANC members, including some in the youth league, believe he
is not presidential material.

"His problem is that he wants to play Chris Hani or Nelson Mandela. He's
not original. Politics is not a movie, where one can choose to play any
character. You must be yourself," said an ANC member with close ties to the
youth league.

A Gauteng ANC leader believes Sexwale is frustrated that some in the ANC
and government don't take him seriously as a political player.

"He is getting irritated that the other guys don't give him the respect he
deserves. He feels Zuma doesn't respect him. That's why he's fighting him
[Zuma] openly."

Some in the ANC also doubt that the youth league will continue to play the
king-making role it has in the past.

"Some younger people like his political style, but the ANC gets more
conservative as it grows older and he won't get the same support from the
party," said an ally. "I don't think the youth league will deliver [the ANC
presidency] this time around."

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