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Local
government elections and the Zimbabwe voter
Eldred Masunungure
November
10, 2006
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=438
University of Zimbabwe political
studies lecturer Eldred Masunungure says MDC must go back to the
drawing board if it is to win back the confidence of the people
Two contending theses stand in opposition
to each other in trying to explain the contours and dynamics of
electoral politics in Zimbabwe.
One distinguished school of thought
has it that Zimbabwean politics is all or largely about ethnicity
and ethnic struggles.
The foremost authority on this was
the late Professor Masipula Sithole who used the ethnicity framework
to account for the dynamics of nationalist politics in his seminal
work appropriately entitled: Zimbabwe: Struggles within the Struggle.
At the time of his untimely death,
I know he was preparing a sequel to this on Zimbabwe’s struggles
after the struggle.
The other and recent explanation is
the rural-urban argument according to which ethnicity, even if it
were salient at one point, has lost its explanatory potency.
In its place is the rural-urban divide.
The post-2000 binary division of the
Zimbabwean electorate into rural and urban is now legendary. This
spatial partition corresponds almost neatly to the twofold polarisation
of political society in the country.
ZANU PF rules the roost in the rural
areas while its eternal rival, the Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC), holds sway in the urban areas.
The rural local government polls served
to confirm the unrivalled hegemony of the ruling ZANU PF and the
feeble and shallow presence of the opposition formations in rural
Zimbabwe.
Previous national elections have equally
affirmed the MDC’s supremacy in the country’s urban centres. Virtually
all post-2000 elections have also served to demonstrate the hypnotic
hold of the opposition forces in the three Matabeleland provinces,
again seemingly confirming the regional/ethnic argument about the
enduring salience of primordial considerations in voting behaviour.
The Rural District Council (RDC) and
previous national elections also betray Zimbabwe’s fragmented political
culture.
Further, the last rural elections have
provided more ammunition for the ‘voter apathy’ thesis, a thesis
that mistakenly argues that voters shun the polls because they are
not interested.
I contest this thesis and interpretation
of voter ‘apathy’.
What are the facts about the last slate
of elections? The Table below is based on a computation of the results
as published in the various media.
Results
of RDC Elections
| |
ZANU-PF |
Won
by MDC |
| |
Unopposed
|
Electoral
victory |
|
| Midlands |
70
|
117 |
8 |
| Manicaland
|
23
|
171 |
15 |
| Mat. North |
33 |
84 |
33 |
| Mat. South |
33 |
80 |
19 |
| Mash East |
82 |
90 |
|
| Mash Central |
81 |
53 |
1(unopposed) |
| Mash West |
89 |
40 |
2 |
| Masvingo |
63 |
130 |
4 |
| Total |
482 |
765 |
82 |
Source: The Herald (1/11/06)
and Zimbabwe Independent (3/11/06).
Uncontested
Seats: The
first level of analysis naturally focuses on the seats won unopposed.
ZANU PF won nearly 40 percent of its 1 247 seats unopposed.
Surely there must be something
fundamentally wrong about the electoral process and those who participate
in it. Could it be that the MDC was disorganised and therefore failed
to field candidates in more than one third of the wards in the 59
RDCs?
Or were there ‘intervening’ variables
that tilted the scales in ZANU PF’s favour? If the former, then
woe betide the MDC for it represents a fatal indictment of its electoral
(and political) incompetence.
The 482 seats were won unopposed at
the end of nomination on 20 September 2006.
Predictably, the ‘winning’ party was
ecstatic with ZANU PF, through its president, Robert Mugabe declaring
that the party was in an unchallenged political position: "We
are in a strong position because the other parties have lost confidence
in themselves and they are desperate. They know the people don’t
like them by and large."
President Mugabe then ‘advised’ the
opposition to work hard to win the confidence of Zimbabweans. But
did the opposition surrender the 482 wards on a silver platter?
The two MDC factions cried foul after
‘failing’ to nominate candidates in these wards, claiming that ZANU
PF played ‘polytricks’ with the electoral procedures one of which
involved roping in ‘traditional’ authorities to provide or rather
deny aspiring candidates ‘clearance’ letters to verify that the
candidates were bona fide residents of the wards.
ZANU PF naturally pleads ‘not guilty’
to the charge and points at the MDC’s ignorance of electoral procedures,
a position that is supported by the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission.
Even if the MDC claim is correct, it
begs the question of where its ‘intelligence’ arm was when all these
‘goings on’ were taking place or being mooted, or does it not have
any. Is it not supposed to sniff and ferret out intelligence information
on such ‘plots’?
Whatever the validity of the ‘polytricks’
accusation, my informed guess is that the governing party would
have genuinely and competitively romped to victory in more than
90 percent of the affected wards.
It would also have had the golden opportunity
of testing its real strength in the wards and that of its rivals.
If the allegation is valid, then ZANU PF self-destructively denied
itself this vital piece of information.
In short, it was neither necessary
nor compulsory for the ruling party to go this extra mile. By so
doing, it simply betrays its allergy to competitive elections and
confirms the residual grip of the one-party mentality.
Contested Seats: The two factions of
the MDC only managed to capture 81 (less than 10 percent) of the
contested seats but taken as a whole, they won a paltry 7 percent
of the total wards.
This is dismal performance by any standard
irrespective of the circumstances.
It is thus difficult to appreciate
the jubilation expressed by the Tsvangirai-led MDC spokesman, Nelson
Chamisa who reportedly remarked: "While we are certainly disappointed
by the Kadoma loss, we are nonetheless ecstatic that we managed
to win some wards in the rural areas" and that "now we
have pockets of councillors in and around Zimbabwe."
An aspiring governing party should
never celebrate winning just "pockets" of wards particularly
after fielding as many as 680 candidates and winning in only 40
wards (a 6 percent success rate).
Eleven of the seats were actually won
in one RDC, Binga. Later, Chamisa was close the mark when he commented
that "Apathy won the polls because the electorate no longer
has confidence in the electoral system and its outcome."
Commentaries on the outcome of the
local government elections have ranged from harsh to pessimistic
with The Herald editorial (04/11/06) dismissing the MDC factions
as "a bunch of immature political upstarts who have no vision
to take this country to the Promised Land" and ‘advising’ the
two MDC factions to "just shut up!"
The Zimbabwe Independent offered a
pessimistic diagnosis: "Results of rural district council elections
held last weekend have illustrated that opposition parties still
have an uphill task to weaken the chokehold ZANU PF has on rural
voters. Statistics also paint a picture of an opposition struggling
to convince rural voters to take them seriously as a challenger
to ZANU PF."
Meanwhile, in urban Kadoma, the MDC
was also trounced in a low voter turnout. Incumbent Mayor Fani Phiri
of the ruling ZANU PF attracted 4 614 votes against the 2 491 for
his MDC challenger, Jonas Ndenda.
With only just over 7 000 voters bothering
to go to the ballot box out of a registered voter population of
42 000 (i.e. only about 17 percent voter turnout) then surely there
is something gravely wrong. The crucial question then is: what is
it that is wrong?
Towards an Explanation: The first and
most common ‘explanation’ is that of voter apathy. This is the orthodox
explanation and the line of argument taken by Ellen Kandororo-Dingani
in her contribution entitled "Voter apathy dilutes value of
democracy" in the Zimbabwe Independent (3/11/06).
This was a critical expose more of
what is wrong with the institutional and legal framework governing
elections than an insight into the thinking processes going on in
the voter’s mind.
The problem with voter apathy arguments
is that they fail to distinguish, as Professor Sithole did, between
voter apathy and voter boycott.
Apathy means lack of interest or concern;
it means indifference bordering on the "I don’t care".
Thus defined, "voter apathy" means lack of interest or
concern by the voter about how he/she is governed.
It is indifference to how and who conducts
public affairs. To this extent, Zimbabweans are like ‘sleeping dogs’!
A "stay away", on the other
hand, is a "boycott"; it is a clear but unspoken statement
or an expression of disapproval; it is a deliberate political statement.
Defined in this way, in a voter stay
away, the voter is protesting against something in the electoral
process, particularly it’s legitimacy, and efficacy - whether the
voter can change anything through the electoral process.
In a boycott or stay away, the citizen
is communicating something to authorities; it is a deviant or perhaps
unorthodox way of speaking truth to power.
I submit that what happened in Kadoma
and the RDC elections was more of a voter ‘boycott’ than voter ‘apathy’.
I maintain that Zimbabweans – both elite and masses - are rational
political actors that know which side of their bread is buttered.
Voter apathy suggests some fatalism
that then clouds one’s logic and rationality. In other, words, an
apathetic voter unconsciously does not vote. On the other hand,
a poll boycotter consciously and therefore rationally decides not
to vote after engaging in cost-benefit analysis of the act of voting.
If, in his/her calculation, it does
not pay to vote, the prospective voter does other ‘productive’ things
but does so knowingly. Enough on this.
The second possibility that accounts
for the low voter turnout is that the Kadoma and RDC elections were
not regarded, by the discerning multitude of voters, as ‘critical
elections.’
Critical elections are those that produce
major or fundamental shifts in policy and therefore where, citizens,
through the electoral process, produce fundamental changes in public
policy.
From this standpoint, the Kadoma and
RDC elections did not pass the ‘critical elections’ acid test. Nothing
dramatic or spectacular could be expected from those elections,
the rational voter concluded, and accordingly abstained from voting.
The third possibility is more complex
but crucial in explaining the MDC’s dismal performance, especially
in Kadoma. A political party can be said to be composed of two groups
of supporters: active or core party supporters; and passive party
supporters.
Their propensity to vote can be speculated
to take the following lines: core supporters will almost always
vote and take part in campaigning for that vote; passive supporters
will sometimes vote but rarely take part in electoral campaigns.
Passive supporters are a group in transition
and potentially very malleable i.e. their allegiances are unstable.
Depending on a particular configuration of events, passive party
supporters can either ‘graduate’ into its core supporters or even
slide into passive party opponents.
I would suggest that the trick lies
in the mix of the political stratum that a party is able to capture.
Ideally, and at a minimum, any party should be able to maintain
its base of core supporters while also retaining and/or enlarging
the frontier of its passive supporters.
A party should start to be deeply worried
when its core support base is thinning while its passive supporters
are also melting away. I suspect that this is what is happening
to the MDC.
Where are the MDC’s hard core supporters,
that is, those who support the party through thick and thin and
"till death do us part"? A low voter turnout is essentially
a battle between the core supporters of the competing parties or
candidates.
The Kadoma elections clearly reveal
that the MDC’s core supporters are dwindling; they are melting away.
This suggests an unstable or shifting core supporters’ base while
that of the ruling party remains intact or stable.
What appears to be happening is that
the MDC’s core supporters have transmuted into either passive supporters
or parochials or even passive opponents. If this is the case, then
the MDC surely has a case to answer.
What accounts for this transformation?
What is the MDC not doing that allows this attitudinal metamorphosis
in allegiances? Is the party sleeping on the job? If the latter,
what accounts for this delinquency?
Are its supporters taking the exit
option and if so, why? Let me pursue the latter question.
I see two dimensions of the exit option,
both arising from a rational calculation by the Zimbabwean voter.
The first is psychological and it entails the psychological ‘migration’
of the voter from being an active or core supporter to become a
passive supporter and from being a passive supporter to a parochial.
The golden moment for the MDC (1999-2002)
was when multitudes of passive supporters became active supporters.
Circumstantial evidence suggests that the reverse process is taking
place.
If indeed this is so, then again the
MDC has a case to answer for ‘allowing’ this transmutation to proceed
unhindered. Why is it ‘allowing’ this ‘support drain’?
The second dimension of the voter’s
exit option is physical and involves the MDC supporters physically
leaving their constituency. Though there is no hard, systematic
evidence, anecdotal evidence indicates that the typical MDC supporter
is a highly mobile person, almost always ‘thinking’ of leaving his/her
place of abode for ‘greener’ pastures, often outside the country.
The typical MDC supporter was originally
a middle class person who possessed less of the material property
and more of intellectual property. This supporter could easily ‘persuade’
himself/herself to physically migrate with his/her intellectual
property and without risking loss of much material property.
In short, the MDC supporter has nothing
or little to lose by taking the physical exit option. In the context
of the on-going economic meltdown, the incentive to stay is very
low, if what you possess is more of intellectual than material property.
This is for the simple reason that
the hyperinflationary economic environment results in a staggering
devaluation of intellectual property in the open market while simultaneously
overvaluing material property.
The intellectual property owners have
little stake in remaining in the country and no doubt largely explains
the country’s brain drain. These people are or were more likely
to be the MDC’s support base.
The import of this is that the physical
exit option, courtesy of the rapid devaluation of intellectual property
(itself courtesy of the deepening economic malaise) represents a
grave threat to the support base of the MDC in the short and medium
term.
Further, it is my submission that the
physical exit option is a predominantly urban phenomenon while the
psychological exit option is more of a rural tendency.
In the rural areas, the ruling party
is able (albeit with increasing difficulty) to maintain its core
and passive support base partly (if not largely) via the patronage
governing modality in the form of food aid, heavily subsidised grain
sales, food for work, land resettlement and provision of other valued
services like agricultural inputs (fertiliser, maize seed, etc).
Under such circumstances, even the
hardcore MDC person is tempted to psychologically either desert
the party (in typical rational response to the first law of survival
– self preservation) or migrate from active to passive support.
Either way, the MDC suffers, more fatally
so in the first scenario. The difficulty the MDC faces is its incapacity
to socially reproduce its active support base, especially in the
rural areas.
In short, while the MDC is losing its
core support base, ZANU PF has been able to retain its own. In Kadoma,
the MDC’s core supporters (who are more inclined to vote) are now
in the minority.
The MDC support base is now overwhelmingly
composed of passive supporters (who are less inclined to vote) who
were either once active supporters or have no incentive to be active
supporters.
And to the extent that passive supporters
vote only sometimes and not always, this is a big electoral loss
for the party. Here lies the challenge for the MDC and its allies.
What strategies and tactics will arouse
(or rather re-arouse) the passive supporters to take part in the
electoral race? Though the ruling party may face the same problem,
it is of a lower magnitude in that it has managed, through fair
and foul means, to keep its active support base.
Overall, in the interests of electoral
democratic development, both the MDC and the ruling ZANU PF – and
indeed civic society – must craft appropriate and effective arousal
strategies and techniques to excite the Zimbabwean masses in things
political.
Otherwise, Zimbabweans are in danger
of becoming less and less of political animals and more and more
of politically parochial animals.
*Eldred Masunungure is a lecturer
in the Department of Politics and Administrative Studies at the
University
of Zimbabwe.
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