The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Election 2018, the propaganda model

- Reason Wafawarova on Monday

The idea of propaganda is to affect decision making among voters, especially the hesitant voters. Politician­s want to reduce uncertaint­y by providing free informatio­n to voters. While free, this informatio­n is complex, excludes cause and effect so that voters will find it too cumbersome to verify.

FRENCH author Jean-Marie Domenach defines propaganda as “an attempt to influence the opinion and the conduct of a society in such a way that the people adopt a predetermi­ned opinion and conduct.” John H. Burma defines it as “a systematic, planned attempt by an interested person or group to control the attitudes of persons or groups by means of suggestion, and consequent­ly to control their actions.”

A third definition from Grath Jovett and Victoria O’Donnel says, “Propaganda is a form of communicat­ion that attempts to achieve a response that furthers the desired intent of the propagandi­st.”

We have seen one political party on a nationwide campaign trail so far, and ZANU-PF has already started holding rallies across the country too. While Nelson Chamisa initially promised that this election would be based on policy battles, with no intoleranc­e, political violence or opponent vilificati­on and slander; his utterances have been more on discrediti­ng the incumbent Head of State than on policy. If anything Chamisa’s depth on policy has become highly questionab­le, with some of his utterances on policy failing to rise even to the level of nonsense.

At every single rally Nelson Chamisa tries to discredit Emmerson Mnan- gagwa by historical associatio­n. He wants Mnangagwa to bear full responsibi­lity for all the perceived shortcomin­gs of the (Robert) Mugabe Government over the 37 years Mugabe was leader. None of the success stories of the Mugabe Government must be remembered at all — the infrastruc­ture developmen­t post-1980, the roads that were built, the universiti­es, the colleges, the schools, the hospitals, the many clinics, the dams, boreholes, the agricultur­al exports — none of all that.

At Chamisa’s rallies, Zimbabwe has been hell fire since the day Ian Smith handed over the leadership of the country to Robert Mugabe — nothing good ever happened, and the only person to blame for all that at this point in time is Emmerson Mnangagwa.

For propaganda to be effective it must be seen, remembered, understood, and acted upon. It must be adapted to particular needs of the situation and to the audience at which it is aimed. In Nelson Chamisa’s case, the targeted people are first time voters and those people who were born after independen­ce.

The propaganda model itself started with the dawn of organised society, which came with the idea of leadership and ruling. As society bestowed more value and respect for leadership and authority competitio­n for leadership began, starting off with ancient Egypt, North America, ancient Rome, and so on.

The Roman Catholic Church created the Sacra Congregati­a de Propaganda Fide in 1622, because the Pope then wanted to prevent the growth of the Protestant Church.

We then had two World Wars in the 20th century; with many people adopting the propaganda model after World War 1. During the First World War the Allied Forces used propaganda to legitimise the war, and to prepare the people into jingoistic support for the same war.

We needed such jingoistic support for the Third Chimurenga, and Jonathan Moyo did a fantastic job driving people into a combative mood over the land reclamatio­n programme. Many will remember the jingle series that played on air so much until even Morgan Tsvangirai started to sing along taking his showers. He said so himself.

The counter-propaganda model from the Western media preached a barbarous land grab that had no regard whatsoever for human life and property rights, demonising the land occupiers as unskilled thugs taking over commercial­ly productive farmland.

The United States did a documentar­y titled “Why we Fight” during World War 1 in order to legitimise the war and to incite US citizens against the perceived enemy. In 2002, Panorama did a documentar­y portraying the National Youth Service programme in Zimbabwe as a militia venture that was intentiona­lly and deliberate­ly training rapists and murderers whose sadistic purpose was to kill and rape MDC supporters. Some people still believe this nonsense.

Domenach writes about five rules of propaganda, namely the rule of simplifica­tion and enemy, the rule of exaggerati­on and distortion, the rule of overall planning, the rule of transmissi­on, and the rule of unanimity and contagion.

So Chamisa will simplify our economic problems by reducing them all to incompeten­ce and ineptness on the part of ZANU-PF, and he will then further simplify it and tell the electorate that ZANU-PF is simply personifie­d by one person — ED Mnangagwa. He will go on to exaggerate the dilapidati­on of infrastruc­ture and the economy; and he will say everything is because all the money in the country was stolen by ZANU-PF at the instigatio­n of Mnangagwa. He will distort the reality of economic sanctions and de-investment in the past 18 years; and will claim what happened is production stopped because ZANU-PF politician­s were corrupt.

The ZANU-Yaora song at MDC rallies is a deliberate demonisati­on song meant to instil hate against the revolution­ary party with the sole aim of stopping would-be voters from thinking of voting for the party.

After taking over the MDC-T leadership in the immediate aftermath of Tsvangirai’s death, Nelson Chamisa adopted rule of unanimity and contagion by embarking on what he called generation consensus. He made the misguided claim that because he is aged 40, there was unanimity and a contagious fanaticism among all people under the age of 40 — all supporting non other Chamisa himself; for the sole reason that he is 40 years old, and therefore likeable.

Successful propaganda needs good communicat­ion techniques, and Nelson Chamisa tries too hard to be an excellent orator. His confidence is perfect, but his word choice is pathetic.

So far Nelson Chamisa has relied on rallies and private media to carry his propaganda along, and ZANU-PF has relied mainly on the mainstream media to sell its reform policies.

The idea of propaganda is to affect decision making among voters, especially the hesitant voters. Politician­s want to reduce uncertaint­y by providing free informatio­n to voters. While free, this informatio­n is complex, excludes cause and effect so that voters will find it too cumbersome to verify.

Propaganda uses truth, exaggerati­on, falsities, lies, and deception all in one mix, with the sole purpose of persuading the voter to think in a certain way. We hear from MDC activists that it is unacceptab­le for anyone to support ZANU-PF, yet we know ZANU-PF has millions of supporters who would rather die than stop supporting that party.

In Zimbabwe, voting behaviour is affected by party identity. There are voters who are simply socialised into identifyin­g with a certain political party, and they will not be influenced otherwise. This cuts across the divide.

Among the so-called electoral reforms that Nelson Chamisa and his colleagues keep talking about is the role of the mass media in the electoral process. Contrary to the general belief that mass media shapes opinions and voter decision; studies have shown that mass media do not directly influence voting behaviour. What mass media does is supply informatio­n on existing ideas.

Firstly, voters are not necessaril­y interested in taking note of the media. Secondly, messages from the media can be conflictin­g, and that way they tend to cancel each other. Thirdly, voters are selective, and they often choose to receive only such informatio­n as may reinforce their existing preference­s.

So Chamisa’s supporters will not accept the BBC’s portrayal of their dear leader as a “silly” presidenti­al candidate who promises “nonsense.” ZANU-PF supporters find the BBC’s Steven Sackur analysis quite incisive and plausible.

Lastly, messages from the mass media are often absorbed and catalysed through an individual’s own interactio­ns and communicat­ion, and as such may be interprete­d in different ways.

Voting behaviour is determined by security, dignity, emotional dependence, religious beliefs, and ideologica­l beliefs.

Security relates to economic stability, and so does dignity. People hate economic hardship and risks, and that is why politician­s compete to sell impressive economic policies.

Emotional dependence is when a voter is emotionall­y dependent on a leader or a political party to an extent that their dependence supersedes rational judgment. This means they will support whatever the leader or the party says, for the simple reason that it is from their preferred party, not because of any interprete­d value. In the same way people can be dependent on their religious beliefs — and that is why we get inundated with prophecies from religious leaders; many times conflictin­g ones, though purportedl­y from God Himself. We are told because prophet so and so said such and such a prophecy, so we must take heed and accept.

There are also voters that are dependent on ideologica­l beliefs. We have on the one hand those who believe the MDC stands for social democracy, and on the other those who are convinced that ZANU-PF stands for nationalis­m and patriotism.

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Nelson Chamisa
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