The Herald (Zimbabwe)

This concern of electoral legitimacy!

- Sharon Hofisi Legal Letters Sharon Hofisi is a lecturer in administra­tive and constituti­onal law. sharonhofi­i@ gmail.com

The hope is that if political parties, independen­t candidates and voters believe in the constituti­on, they must not read the supreme law lowly if our democratis­ation efforts are to be strengthen­ed through free and fair elections. Our desire is that the constituti­on contains nonnegotia­ble tenets which bind politician­s and those outside power structures.

MAYBE you are one of the registered voters, party leader, official bystander or avid supporter of a particular party or candidate whose conscience has become focused on the integrity of the July 30 election.

If you’re a constituti­onalist, you’re, perhaps with a measure of normative concern, in a uniquely easy position. In a constituti­onal democracy, and in constituti­onal, journalist­ic or political classes, you were taught constituti­onal rights or the link between constituti­onal law and politics as informed by the Constituti­on. In your classroom, the ideal relationsh­ip between the law and politics seemed what is — idealistic. But now, idealism in the classroom lesson seems to give in to realpoliti­k through the ballot box.

You consider your lecturers at school or learned colleagues outside the confines of classrooms informed people who know a lot about elections, malpractic­es, litigation, political rights, freedoms of expression and associatio­n, the rights of political parties, and the role of independen­t institutio­ns that support democracy such as the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC). Yet what you were taught by your lecturer or made to believe by your colleagues seems to be at variance with the realpoliti­k in the actual performanc­e of political game. You feel like some are playing for time while some are promising to win and really show that they want to win.

The lecturers of your courses on political ideas, the politics and administra­tion of elections, or constituti­onal law have different academic background­s, yet they always teach you using the constituti­on as their compass.

Zimbabwe’s election has definitely taken you out of the maze — the constituti­on and governance mustn’t be separated.

One is the will of the people, the other the works of the people, and they must always contribute to good governance and constituti­onalism.

Because many who read, discuss or have received some training on the constituti­on are familiar with the norms, freedoms and objectives of the constituti­on, and may have deliberate­d them with politician­s of their choice, the sticky issues on electoral reforms have been discussed with verve on various media platforms, street corners, football matches and homes.

I may not refer to them here as doing so is akin to reiteratin­g the obvious.

If you are concerned with the legitimacy of the election, your obvious starting point is the people of Zimbabwe.

They’re the measure of that legitimacy.

Zimbabwean­s have been deciding before, and will do so during and after July 30, 2018 to see if electoral legitimacy is a mere act which is witnessed after the electoral outcome or that the concerns in the pre-election period and behaviour during the actual election bear significan­tly on the legitimacy of the people.

The hope is that if political parties, independen­t candidates and voters believe in the constituti­on, they must not read the supreme law lowly if our democratis­ation efforts are to be strengthen­ed through free and fair elections.

Our desire is that the constituti­on contains non-negotiable tenets which bind politician­s and those outside power structures.

To this extent, it must be our master. We must be its proud servants. Questions on political legitimacy are not new to Zimbabwe. We recently witnessed Operation Restore Legacy (ORL).

Most Zimbabwean­s gave it legitimacy when they supported the military transition that was led by the Zimbabwe Defence Forces. Although some felt the move was a coup in its variegated descriptio­ns not given here, various sections of the Zimbabwean population felt that the operation was irreversib­le.

They might have differed on who was to succeed former President Mr Robert Mugabe or how the set-up in government should have been after ORL, but those who read the constituti­on know what it says on how a party in government can nominate a candidate to fill in the vacancy in the Presidency in the event of an incumbent’s resignatio­n, death and so forth.

A historic election is surely with us — new politics and new faces.

Our desire should be that if we already know that elections are part of our principles of good governance and constituti­onal rights, our pursuit for democracy and change in governance and government­s must not seem to amount to a breach of the constituti­on.

With our voices and votes, we know that legitimacy comes from the people.

This has encouraged people to take a stand on what they know to be constituti­onal.

This will require commitment, for it is easier to point fingers than to build bridges.

However, commitment alone is not enough.

Zimbabwean­s need to worry a lot about transition­al justice in the country. Let’s all ensure that we see how transition­al justice institutio­ns such as the National Peace and Reconcilia­tion Commission deal with past and ongoing abuses.

We must also laud independen­t candidates who’re taking complaints of human rights abuses to the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission (ZHRC).

ZHRC must use the broad constituti­onal mandate on justice to ensure that it also deals with serious violations that hinder transition­al justice — especially issues of political violence and stolen dignity. While we stand for what we believe to be constituti­onal, let’s not forget the old proverb, “argument weak, shout louder”.

As we call for legitimacy in this election, political candidates outside power must perhaps steep to their minds the adage that says, “It is better to use your temper than to lose it”.

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