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This article participates on the following special index pages:
New Constitution-making process - Index of articles
Presidential
power and Zimbabwe's draft Constitution
Derek Matyszak, Research and Advocacy Unit (RAU)
March
2013
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The position
and powers of the President under the constitution
have been a matter of some controversy since the introduction of
an executive presidency by way of a constitutional amendment in
1987. It was a prominent issue in the constitutional referendum
in 2000 (excessive presidential power has been cited as a key factor
leading to the rejection of the proposed constitution in that referendum);
it was a major sticking point in negotiations
leading to the constitutional
amendment (No. 19) which established the current Inclusive Government;
and it was a focal point in negotiations
around the present
draft. The ZANU PF negotiators argued for a powerful executive
presidency, while the MDC formations, though accepting an executive
presidency, argued that Parliament ought to exercise some powers
concurrently with the President to check and balance executive authority.
As will be seen in the outline which follows, it is the ZANU PF
approach which has largely prevailed.
The
Post of President
a) Qualifications
The person occupying
this post is the Head of State and Government and the Commander-in-Chief
of the Defence Forces, and receives such salary, allowances, and
pension as may be set by an Act of Parliament. To qualify as an
aspirant to this position, a person must be a citizen of Zimbabwe
by birth or descent, have attained the age of forty years, and be
ordinarily resident in Zimbabwe. These provisions are repeated in
the draft constitution and supplemented by two additional requirements.
One is that the aspirant must be a registered voter; the other is
that the prospective candidate must not have already held office
as President under the constitution for two terms (section 91).
The question of term
limits for state Presidents is controversial. On the one hand it
is argued that term limits restrict democratic choice and may be
against the clear wishes of an electorate which may want a highly
popular and exceptionally competent President continue in office.
On the other hand, proponents believe that the longer a person remains
in office as president, the greater the danger that the incumbent
will use the considerable powers vested in this post to entrench
him or herself in the position through the development of a web
of patronage and other abuses of power. The essence of the rule
of law is that good governance is determined more by the constitutional
machinery in place than the nature of the person who pulls the levers.
The draft constitution
proposes term limits only for a person who has held office as president
“under this constitution” for two terms. The reasoning
behind term limits is unaffected by the constitution under which
they are served. It is clear that the clause has been drafted specifically
to allow the current president, Robert Mugabe, to stand in the next
election, even though, having been head of state for over 30 years,
the reasoning behind terms limits applies a fortiori to him. Since
constitutions are usually intended to last for generations, it is
generally considered to be unwise to craft a document around the
needs of a specific individual. The explanation offered by the drafters
is that Mugabe was accommodated because the law ought not to operate
retroactively to exclude him from standing as president in the next
election. However, this is to distort what is meant by the general
rule against the retroactive operation of the law.
The rule against
retroactivity is to prevent the application of a law to events that
took place before the law was enacted. Hence the law would be retroactive
in operation if the provision came into effect before the next election
and Mugabe was asked to step down as president before that election
because he does not meet the qualification requirements of a presidential
candidate set by the new constitution, and is thus held (retroactively)
disqualified as a candidate in the 2008
election. However, the proposed term limit provision would not
retroactively affect Mugabe’s qualification as a candidate
in the last election, and render his candidacy in 2008 invalid.
The provision will only affect those seeking to stand for election
as president in the next and future elections. There is nothing
retroactive about a law which sets the qualifications for candidates
in future elections, and laws setting new qualifications for people
seeking to take up particular posts are validly and frequently enacted
in all jurisdictions. Similar considerations apply to the proposal
that a person should be disqualified from standing for election
as president if over the age of 70. This suggestion likewise seems
to have been excluded from the draft to accommodate Mugabe, again
wrongly using the claim concerning retroactivity.
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