The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Mberengwa North voters get praise

- Munyaradzi Musiiwa Midlands Correspond­ent

ZANU-PF Mberengwa North National Assembly member-elect Cde Tafanana Zhou is ecstatic after the constituen­cy delivered a record widest margin for the presidenti­al vote in the entire Midlands province.

Mberengwa North had the widest margin for both the parliament­ary and presidenti­al votes in the province.

President-elect Mnangagwa garnered 18 392 votes in the constituen­cy, while his nearest rival Mr Nelson Chamisa had a paltry 3 449 votes.

Cde Zhou expressed gratitude to the electorate in his constituen­cy for uniformly voting for both the President and himself.

“I feel very much motivated to continue serving the party and my constituen­cy diligently,” he said. “People in the constituen­cy, including myself are very loyal to the party, hence they had a uniform vote.

“The constituen­cy had the widest margin for both the parliament­ary and presidenti­al vote. We had a margin of about 15 000 which is the highest in the province.”

President-elect Mnangagwa’s former constituen­cy, Chirumhanz­u-Zibagwe was second in the Midlands with a margin of close to 13 000 votes.

President-elect Mnangagwa had 19 866 votes in the constituen­cy, while Mr Chamisa had 7 106.

In some constituen­cies in the province, a Zanu-PF MP would win, but the President would lose.

For instance in Gokwe Central, President-elect Mnangagwa had 11 263 votes, while Mr Chamisa had 11 588.

In the Midlands province, President-elect Mnangagwa had a total of 324 274 votes while Mr Chamisa had 216 022.

Zanu-PF Midlands provincial chairperso­n Engineer Daniel McKenzie Ncube said although the party won in the province, he expected it to do better.

“We had 26 constituen­cies before the elections and now we have 22, which means we didn’t do quite well since we wanted all the constituen­cies in the province,” he said. “We lost two constituen­cies in Kwekwe, one Redcliff, two in Gweru, and Chiwundura.

“But, we are going to rise to the challenge and work towards retaining the lost constituen­cies.”

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