WHOSE MPs ARE THEY?
At some colourful political press
conference, Dr Thokozani Khupe, with a straight face, claimed temporary
custodianship over a party that had garnered over 2 million votes, plus 100+
MPs. This was besides the fact that she herself had garnered 45000 votes plus 2
MPs, in the same polls. Zimbabweans immediately saw her as political comic
relief and simply laughed her off. About 2 or so months later, the joke is no-longer
funny. In fact, it has become dangerously worrisome. She has gone from just
claiming to be what she isn’t, but has begun acting using powers she doesn’t have.
How does someone with 45000 votes
become leader of an institution which was a political opponent? I once told a
friend that one day, someday, when future generation go through our history and
realize what is actually happening now indeed happened, they will be convinced
that 2020 was a long movie. This has been a strange year full of political
abominations.
The Supreme Court ruling!
It is perhaps for some, convenient to
contextualize the current MDC drama by referencing to a particular ruling which
judged that the elevation of Engineer Mudzuri and Advocate Chamisa as core Vice
Presidents, and the subsequent take-over of the MDC-T party Leadership by the
latter, after the demise of Dr Tsvangirai were both unlawful. Even after
realizing that the one who by virtue of her election, and not appointment, as
Deputy President, was supposed to have taken over, the ruling recognized that
so much had happened ever since. By that material time, Dr Khupe had Acted as
President in her own MDC-T faction and taken it to a Congress which
legitimately elected her as substantive leader and successor to Tsvangirai, with
Chamisa taking his own MDC-T faction to the MDC-ALLIANCE coalition which later
on held its own Congress. One interesting thing, need I add, is that whereas
some maintain that the Chamisa Gweru Congress was actually a MDC-T 5th
Congress, what remains undisputable is that post the Congress, the Chamisa
group slowly moved away from using the “MDC-T” name. It, for the most part,
simply identified as MDC. One of the many reasons being that the “T” could no-longer
be defined. In this context, it was no-longer necessary for any court ruling to
judge that MDC-T succession was still in contention. It was only Dr Khupe, and
no-one else, who identified as MDC-T President. Even when she herself couldn’t explain
what the “T” stood for.
Anyways, as has become public
knowledge, not only has the faction which decided to implement the ruling taken
over the MDC-T Leadership, re-relegating Dr Khupe to a position she held before
her Bulawayo Congress, the faction has gone all out to try and annihilate
Chamisa and his ALLIANCE party. Firstly, they successfully reposed the iconic
MRT House, before they were then illegally awarded the PPFA money by government,
which seems to be salivating at the thought of a Chamisa-less election. The
MDC-T has now gone for the MDC-ALLIANCE’s electoral capital, i.e. its votes and
representatives. The latter is the focus of this opinion piece. Dr Khupe is now
being regarded as the President of the MDC-ALLIANCE (the very reason why she
stopped attending MDC-T events, even snubbing all MDC-ALLIANCE launch rallies,
including in Bulawayo), by virtue of being MDC-T President. Now, as the
MDC-ALLIANCE MPs and councillors recalls and replacement goes on unabated, the
big question is, whose MPs are they?
Whose MPs are they?
Some are comfortable that the MDC-T
is simply handling its internal affairs by recalling MPs and Councillors it
seconded to the MDC-ALLIANCE Coalition in 2018. However, this argument that a party owns representatives
and thus has the right and obligation to recall them is too narrow and simplistic.
This is even bigger than the MDC-T MDC-ALLIANCE fight. In fact, one would also
recall that Dr Khupe herself was once recalled by the MDC-T party. The only
difference perhaps being that her recall was a direct MDC-T affair, whereas the
shenanigans of today are based on a dubious Supreme Court judgement which has
resulted in an unnecessary conflation of two distinct institutions.
As a bit of context, Nelson Chamisa
recalled Dr Khupe in his capacity as the interim Leader of the MDC-T, a party
to which both belonged. Put differently, the MDC-T recalled Dr Khupe, one of
its legislators. The scenarios at play here, are particularly discomforting,
because it’s actually the MDC-T, recalling MPs who belong to the MDC-ALLIANCE
party. In fact, by recalling them, the MDC-T is recognizing the existence of
such a distinct party, different from their own. Regardless, the narrative that
the MDC-T not only owns the recalled MPs, and has legal basis for recalling
them is a convenient lie.
Here are four reasons why it is not
sustainable to argue that representatives belong to a party which seconded them
to the electorate, who then elected them, on the same basis and can thus willy-nilly
recall them:
i.
The by-election system
Firstly, the law that requires for
the replacement of National Assembly Members through a by-election, logically
exposes the weak narrative that MPs represent their party. If indeed people
voted for a party, then our laws would have simply allowed for their direct
replacement without a need for another mandate from the voters. Within the
period before the next election, the party would, using that logic, be allowed to
make whatever determination, using the same mandate they got from the voters.
So clearly, the assumption that voters vote for the party is defeated by the
process of replacing “recalled representative”, simply because they do not only
represent the party, but those to whom they actually got a mandate to
“represent”. In that contest, a legislation that reduces voters to by-standers,
remembering them again during a by-election, is patronizing, citizen-
disempowering and out-rightly dangerous.
ii.
Harmonized elections
Secondly, harmonized election have
exposed this shallow fallacy that the voter actually votes for a party and its
policies. If this was the case, how then does it happen that its representative
within the same constituency get different votes? It can only mean that the
average voter is interested in other things, and not just the party. In fact,
this anomaly became one of the sticking points, during the Chamisa led appeal
to the Constitutional court. The results did not tally and it did not make any
logical sense. In a harmonized poll, the voter has 3 choices to make, in one
ballot. They have to choose a President, a MP and a Councillor. These votes
should eventually sum up to a figure three, even if one or all of them are
spoiled. The ZEC pronounced votes had more figures for the Presidential
election, which meant that some votes either disappeared where they should have
appeared, or appeared where they shouldn’t have appeared.
Harmonized elections have also shown
that a voter can actually vote for candidates representing two distinct parties.
Which manifesto would they want implemented if they vote for individuals coming
from institutions with different policy positions? The point thus remains that
in our system, the voter votes for more than just a party and its policies.
iii.
The primary election system.
The inter-party political
contestation known as primary elections is another indication that the voter
does not vote for a party. Through this system, those who feel they possess
political appeal, contest for the same position in their party. They engage the
voter on the promise of what they plan to individually plan to achieve, should
they be entrusted with representation. Post this, they seek a broader mandate
from those outside their institutions. Some eventually loose. Interestingly,
some candidates, as a protest, contest against their own parent party, without rescinding
their membership of the same, with some standing as independent candidates. And
at times they win. Regardless of the eventual outcome, this system again
opposes the narrative that people vote for parties. Truth is, they vote for
people because of what they individually offer.
iv.
Which policy position gave the MDC-T
a governing mandate?
If those pushing the narrative really
believed in it, they would reflect and hide in shame. The narrative is premised
on the thinking that at the polls, the electorate votes for a particular party,
because they believe in what it represents, its manifesto for instance. Currently,
the MDC-T party is a political bastard. It’s a product of a strange political
act of immorality. If the voter in 2018 voted for the MDC-ALLIANCE, a coalition
to which the MDC-T was a member of, it would mean that they voted for the
implementation of the SMART policy. Those who didn’t want to vote for what was
in the smart policy document, alternatively voted for those who represented the
PEOPLE’S MANIFESTO policy, i.e. ZanuPF, or the BEST policy, represented by the
Dr Khupe led MDC-T party. It then follows that, once the party ceases to
represent that which gave them electoral mandate to govern public affairs, it
becomes a political deception. Now, which policy is the MDC-T representing? Is
it the MDC-ALLIANCE SMART, or the MDC-T BEST? Within the court constructed
MDC-T party, you have Hon Mashakada who was voted for, because of the MDC-
ALLIANCE SMART, and Madam Misihairambwi-Mushonga who got votes representing the
BEST manifesto. Now that they have become “one party”, which policy do they
represent? Can they choose one and disregard the other without deceiving their
particular voters?
In fact, justifying the recalls, the
MDC-T Acting Spokesperson, Mr Phugeni says: “We are recalling those who have
ceased to be members of the MDC-T. We are recalling those type of kids who look
at their neighbour and wish to have him as their father?” Using this
interesting analogue, it would be clear that the MDC-ALLIANCE kids have decided
to have Dr Khupe as their father, and not Advocate Chamisa. Anyone who will be
voted for at the MDC-T Extra-Ordinary Congress will only but become these
MDC-ALLIANCE kids’ step-step-father. Such is the madness we are experiencing in
Zimbabwean politics. In fact, Mr Kagoro put it more candidly by christening
this whole drama “a festive of absurdities”
The MDC-T post the court judgement
has shown no indication whatsoever of being part of the MDC-ALLIANCE Coalition,
whose agreement they maintain hasn’t expired. There hasn’t been any
consultation on the actions taken by the MDC-T thus far. In fact, Senator
Mwonzora even alleged that a meeting had been held with “ALLIANCE partners”, a
position embarrassingly and publicly disputed by one of the ALLIANCE Leaders,
Jacob Ngaribvume. It would seem like the MDC-T is not interested in respecting
the MDC-ALLIANCE agreement, but being the MDC-ALLIANCE, the same way the MDC-T
Standing committee has become the MDC-T National Council and the MDC-T Constitution.
It’s a balancing act of saying and acting whichever way feels convenient.
The Basis for the recalls.
Even the explanations put forward,
for the recalls, have left a lot to be desired. It is clear that it’s mere
politicking which is sadly counter-productive. Whereas it is well within their
rights to act for the benefit of their party, the MDC-T cannot be allowed to
hide in plain sight, whilst at it. This history needs to be recorded, and
eventually recounted correctly. From the recalls, certain issues have become
clear:
i.
Recalls vice-a-vies the MDC-T
Constitution
The MDC-T has stated numerously, that
it has not vindictively recalled MPs, but rather that MPs have recalled
themselves by claiming to be member of another party, besides the one which
allegedly took them to Parliament in the first place. If this constitutional
requirement was to be adhered to, in the letter and spirit of the MDC-T
constitution, then by now, the MDC-T would have recalled all, save for just
above 20 legislators. Sadly, there have been double standards instead. So many
MPs, who came from the MDC-T party which was part of the electoral agreement
have stuck with the MDC ALLIANCE party and naturally would have deserved a
recall, as per the argument. Soon after the recall of Chikangwe-Dangamvura law maker,
who doubled as MDC- ALLIANCE Manicaland Chairperson, and MDC-ALLIANCE Chief
Whip, Prosper Chapfiwa Mutseyami, the MDC-ALLIANCE replaced him with former
MDC-T Harare Province Chairperson, Eric Murai. He remains a MP for Highfield
East to this day. The man who replaced Murai as Harare Province Chairperson,
Glen Norah MP, Wellington Chikombo, Rusty Markham Harare North, James Chidhakwa
Mabvuku, among others identify as MDC-ALLIANCE MPs. The past immediate
MDC-ALLIANCE Spokesperson and Whange Central Law maker, Daniel Molokela remains
an MP and has on numerous occasions dared the MDC-T to recall him. Others such
as Chitungwiza’s Sikhala, Starman Chamisa from Mbare, Nicola Watson in Bulawayo
Central, James Sithole Makokoba, Costa Machingauta in Budiriro, and Madam Karenyi-Kore,
MDC-ALLIANCE Vice President, remain legislators, even after having been “forwarded
to the ALLIANCE by the MDC-T party”.
Clearly, the fear is that once
everyone associating with Chamisa is recalled, the MDC-T would be left with no
basis for arguing that it is actually the main opposition party. Interestingly,
one would expect them to alternatively argue that they are part of the main
opposition coalition, as per their ALLIANCE agreement argument, as the MDC-T
only got just above 45000 votes in 2018. It would also be interesting to see
the consequences, should MDC-ALLIANCE MPs all resign en mass opposed to waiting
to be recalled.
The MDC-T plan, away from the
constitutionalism excuse, was clearly aimed at using recalls to corner MDC-ALLIANCE
MPs into submission, by deliberately removing the National Assembly Chief Whip,
the party Chairperson, the Senate Chief Whip and the party Secretary General. But
how do you corner someone standing in a circle?
ii.
Cometh December cometh by-elections
The MDC-T looks neither interested,
nor ready for a political contention with the Chamisa group. Perhaps this is
too much to ask for a party that has failed to run a simple internal election.
Through the expected, yet strange claim to being the MDC-ALLIANCE, the MDC-T is
exposing its lacks of political identity to mount a successful fight. You can’t
claim to be itching for a conversation with a man whose tongue you’re attempting
to cut off. By claiming to be the MDC-ALLIANCE, the MDC-T is simply exposing
their fears. If the MDC-ALLIANCE is a party, how then can the MDC-T be two
parties at the same time? If the MDC-ALLIANCE is a coalition, who are the other
coalition partners?
Sometimes an attack is simply defence
in disguise. The plan is simply to push and hope on a Chamisa-less election, or
one with a completely new Chamisa led party, where they would benefit from
anti-ZanuPF protest votes. After all, there isn’t a single leader in the MDC-T
with a measurable political clout. In the Standing Committee, not even one of
them got into the National Assembly through a direct election. The SG,
Chairperson, and Deputy are all Senate political appointees. The party Spokesperson
and Organizing Secretary both are not MPs. Their current Acting President only
managed 45000 votes out of a possible 5 million. To make matters worse,
yesteryear coalition partners like the ZCTU have distanced themselves from this
faction.
iii.
And what is this party called
anyways?
Another question exposed by this
circus has to be on the actual identity of the party which now claims ownership
over these legislators. This party identifies itself as MDC-Tsvangirai. In the
same breath, it identifies itself as just MDC. The reason for this can be
traced to the MDC split of 2005 where Prof Ncube registered first, as the MDC
party. Alternatively, Tsvangirai had to “rebrand” and form the MDC-T party. But
interestingly, those who claim both membership and ownership of this party,
claim that the “T” was simply an election trade name to differentiate
themselves from the Ncube led MDC party. Logic then follows that the “T” is
simply for electoral purposes, and not the actual identity of the party. Yet it
is shot down by the fact that what was originally supposed to be temporary
addition of the “T”, has stubbornly remained, 15 years later. In fact, in the
MDC-ALLIANCE coalition, what was supposed to be the MDC party, signed in as
MDC-T party. It wouldn’t make sense to identify through an electoral vehicle,
yet the MDC-A name served the same purpose. It should have been the MDC, being
a member of the MDC-A electoral vehicle, if indeed it was just an electoral
vehicle. Truth of the matter however is, the MDC of Tsvangirai is a new party
formed in 2005. All its documents post 2005, even at their Congresses post 2005,
show that the “T” became part of the party’s actual trade name, outside the
elections.
But why is this point even important?
Well, it exposes the heist currently underway. The MDC- simply wants to be
everything. It has no alternative message to offer the electorate, serve for a scorched
earth policy aimed at dismantling the Chamisa group.
Conclusion
Clearly, the actions of the MDC-T
party are dirty political games conveniently characterized as a new democratic
political culture. They find resonance with ZanuPF for they have a common
agenda. As already stated, the MDC-T itself has become a political bastard. It’s a product of a politically immoral
procreation happy hour. Those who formed the MDC of 1999 would find it
impossible to relate to this Zanu-lite creature. Equally important is the fact that
the law which allows for recalls is undemocratic and disempowering. Sadly
however, it is likely to remain. The only amendments perhaps will be on the replacement
criteria, as has been suggested by some in ZanuPF. The law turns little men
into political heavyweights. Imagine the nerve of the MDC-T Leadership. They
are just but a group of political rejects who sat inside Harvest House one
fateful morning with each raising a hand to which position they wanted. They have
now used their intra-party arrangements to undo what many stood in long queues
for. Their own intra-party mandate long expired. But they do not care. In fact,
because they are running out of time, the idea is to make maximum damage. After
all, the core of them feel that Chamisa owes them a lot and could have shielded
them from political contestations which relegated them to party portfolio secretaries.
Such is the behaviour of self-styled modern day constitutionalist and
democrats.
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