Everatt, David2010-09-142010-09-141990-4-30http://hdl.handle.net/10539/8696African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented 30 April, 1990. Not to be quoted without the Author's permissionResistance politics in the 1950s was dominated by the Congress Alliance, made up of the African National Congress [ANC], the South African Indian Congress [SAIC], the Coloured People’s Congress [CPC] and the white South African Congress of Democrats [SACOD]. The Alliance mobilized people of all races against apartheid in a manner previously unseen in South African history. The internal politics of the resistance movement, however, was dominated by wide-ranging and bitter disputes over the form that racial co-operation should take. That dispute centred on the multiracial nature of the Congress Alliance - that is, an alliance of separate Congresses comprising members of a single ethnic group, coordinated at regional and national levels.enSouth Africa. Race relationsThe origins of multiracialismWorking Paper