The Mercury

Little hope for electoral reform in Zim

The country goes to the polls next year, but the election is likely to see a repeat of past rigged results. While transforme­d electoral processes are urgently needed, they are unlikely to be achieved before the election, writes Enock Mudzamiri

- Mudzamiri, DLitt et Phil, is a student in Politics at the University of South Africa.

ZIMBABWE’s constituti­on requires it to hold elections by July 2018. It seems unlikely that the country’s political system will be reformed in time to ensure the election is free and fair. The opposition will therefore again be at a disadvanta­ge.

It is widely believed the current government does not represent the people. Electoral fraud has been common over the years and the country’s socio-economic crisis continues.

In South Africa and Namibia, former liberation movements have maintained their dominance through credible elections. But in Zimbabwe, the ruling Zanu-PF has dominated by abusing the political and electoral systems.

Zanu-PF, which has been in power since independen­ce in 1980, has applied any means necessary to hold on to this position. The party manipulate­d the electoral process in 2000, 2002, 2008 and 2013.

It lost elections to the main opposition Movement for Democratic Change in March 2008, but refused to concede defeat. Contrary to earlier practice when presidenti­al, parliament­ary and local government elections were conducted separately, the harmonised elections combined all and the ones in 2008 were the first. This led to a bloody presidenti­al run-off in June 2008. The incumbent Zanu-PF president claimed to have won again.

A coalition government was formed in 2009 and the parties negotiated a new constituti­on, which was approved in 2013. Zanu-PF won the 2013 elections.

Although there was no evidence of political violence in 2013, forms of electoral chicanery were evident, compromisi­ng the legitimacy of the results.

After its 2013 “defeat”, the MDC resolved not to contest any elections until the system was fair. Together with other (smaller) opposition parties, it boycotted all by-elections for local government and the legislatur­e from 2013.

These parties and certain civil society organisati­ons gathered under the umbrella of the National Electoral Reform Agenda (Nera).

The group aimed to address problems that compromise­d the credibilit­y of elections in Zimbabwe.

Reasons

There are four main reasons why electoral institutio­ns in Zimbabwe are in urgent need of reform.

Municipal law should align with convention­s such as the African Charter on Democracy and Governance.

The Electoral Act should align with the new constituti­on.

The consistent­ly flawed electoral process has created a crisis of legitimacy.

Manipulati­on of the electoral process prevents a transfer of power in Zimbabwe.

The National Electoral Reform Agenda should be the primary target for reform. It has no credibilit­y and has long been considered independen­t on paper only.

Other targets for reform include:

The judiciary. Most judges are perceived as sympatheti­c to the ruling party’s interests because they're part of its patronage network

The security sector. The military, intelligen­ce and police are widely considered partisan.

The bureaucrac­y, especially senior appointmen­ts, are subject to manipulati­on by the ruling party.

Regulation­s and laws that allow citizens to take part freely in the electoral process such as the Public Order and Security Act.

In line with the constituti­on of 2013, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) made some changes. Some were voluntary and others were required by the new constituti­on.

Voluntary reforms are mostly administra­tive. For example, voter registrati­on is now based on polling stations and biometric informatio­n.

Mandatory or legal reforms include the creation of a new voters roll, keeping it secure, giving it to candidates in time and improving voter education.

The ZEC has been working more closely with political parties, to stimulate confidence in the electoral process.

These achievemen­ts are important. But they are probably not enough. They fall short of Nera’s calls. And elections are still threatened by political violence, abuse of state resources by the ruling party and vote buying.

The ZEC’s reforms must take place within the framework of other systemic changes outlined above.

Zanu-PF has managed to delay the debate on electoral reforms and reform of the Electoral Act. There will not be enough time to make the changes before the 2018 elections.

The opposition’s “Grand Coalition” is not likely to challenge Zanu-PF successful­ly.

That party sees itself as having brought democracy to Zimbabwe. It will not reform itself out of power. Individual­s in government and the security apparatus are loyal to the ruling party. This thin line between the party and state has a direct bearing on the political culture of militarisa­tion of government business, fear and repression. No distinctio­n exists between government and Zanu-PF officials, especially in the security sector. The party and state are heavily conflated.

The Ministry of Justice controls the finances of the Election Management Body (EMB). The government can get the EMB to waste time so that reforms will not threaten the strangleho­ld of Zanu-PF.

Unless civil society sustains its pressure for reform and succeeds, the 2018 elections will only serve to legitimise continued authoritar­ian rule in Zimbabwe. – The Conversati­on

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Without urgent, radical electoral reforms, next year’s poll will only serve to legitimise Robert Mugabe’s authoritar­ian rule.
Without urgent, radical electoral reforms, next year’s poll will only serve to legitimise Robert Mugabe’s authoritar­ian rule.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa