The Standard (Zimbabwe)

CCC moves to consolidat­e support base

- BY NQOBANI NDLOVU

Buoyed by its impressive showing in last week’s by-election, opposition leader Nelson Chamisa’s Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) is stepping up its campaigns in rural areas, long perceived to be Zanu PF stronghold­s, ahead of the 2023 elections.

Chamisa’s CCC won 19 of the available 28 parliament­ary seats while Zanu PF got the remainder, including two that they grabbed from the opposition — Epworth and Mutasa South.

Douglas Mwonzora’s MDC T failed to get any seat.

The by-elections were viewed as the barometer to gauge popularity ahead of the 2023 general elections where Chamisa will likely square off with President Emmerson Mnangagwa who won the 2018 presidenti­al election by a narrow margin.

Both Zanu PF and CCC are celebratin­g their performanc­e in the by-elections, with the ruling party saying the result narrowed the opposition’s popularity in its stronghold­s such as Binga North constituen­cy.

CCC’s Prince Dubeko-Sibanda won Binga North with 10 130 votes, defeating Kudakwashe Mavula Munsaka of Zanu PF who came second with 7971 votes.

In 2018, Dube-Sibanda got 18 428 votes against Zanu PF’s 7 751.

In a post Cabinet briefing last week, the government stopped short of saying Binga and other rural areas were now a priority for Zanu PF.

But CCC interim secretary-general Charton Hwende said the opposition party was also turning its eye on the rural vote with a basket of interventi­ons including drilling boreholes in each of the country’s rural wards.

“The president (Chamisa) embarked on a tour of all the rural areas where he met Zimbabwean­s before we formed CCC. Our rural penetratio­n program is a continuati­on of what the president started,” Hwende told The Standard yesterday.

“Rural areas are key for the CCC, this is where most of the electoral violations take place. That’s where headmen and chiefs force people to vote for Zanu PF. So it is our duty as a party to ensure we have a strong presence in the rural areas.|”

In 2021, Chamisa visited rural areas under the meet the people tours but his entourage and supporters were attacked on several occasions by suspected Zanu PF supporters.

The violence claimed the life of MDC Alliance activist Nyasha Zhambe of Gutu, Masvingo.

According to a Zanu PF central committee report by the security department adopted at the party's conference held in Bindura last year, the ruling party was worried by Chamisa’s inroads in rural areas.

“This is meant to penetrate the ruling party’s rural areas, they will manage to mobilise substantia­l support from the rural areas, and this will brighten their chances of winning the presidenti­al vote,” the central committee report read in part.

Zanu PF spokespers­on Christophe­r Mutsvangwa said he was in a meeting when contacted for comment. Party secretary for administra­tion Obert Mpofu said Mutsvangwa was the best person to comment.

But Hwende said the opposition party would be “leaving no village unturned.”

“We are also urging our supporters that every weekend they visit their rural areas and be with the people there to understand how they live, to campaign and sell the CCC message,” he said.

“Operation Handei Kumusha is ongoing and all our party cadres are deployed in villages throughout the country, leaving no village unturned. We are under 12 months before the next election. It is now full throttle campaignin­g throughout the country and fundraisin­g is also ongoing driven by the citizens themselves.”

Analyst Effie Ncube said the rural electorate was key when Zimbabwe goes for elections in 2023.

“Whoever wins it with an overwhelmi­ng majority is going to most likely be the next president of the country and the party that is going to win the rural constituen­cy is going to be the majority party in parliament,” Ncube said yesterday.

“You cannot win the parliament­ary majority without winning the rural constituen­cies. The distributi­on of the constituen­cies is such that you definitely need to win the majority if not all the rural constituen­cies and also at a presidenti­al level you need the numbers from the rural areas, no doubt about it. That will be the key decider of the 2023 election.”

 ?? ?? Citizens Coalition for Change leader Nelson Chamisa
Citizens Coalition for Change leader Nelson Chamisa

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