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  • 2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles


  • Dinner anyone?
    Albert Gumbo
    April 11, 2008

    Gridlock. The future of Zimbabwe and her politics is in deadly gridlock. Press conference after press conference has not yielded the result. It is perhaps time to enter in to the realm of influence and diplomacy away from away from innuendo and rumour and blood hungry reporters.

    It is an apt moment, I would suggest, to look to another moment in history when the unity of another country was threatened by a different type of gridlock. Joseph J. Ellis, the author of Founding Brothers narrates such a moment. The context is a fledgling American nation with a fledgling government.

    One day in mid-July 1790 Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of State in George Washington-s cabinet encounters Alexander Hamilton, Secretary of Treasury. "Hamilton was not his customarily confident and resplendent self. Jefferson thought he looked 'sombre, haggard, and dejected beyond comparison.- ( . . . ) He was, at least as Jefferson described him, a beaten man. While they stood in the street outside Washington-s residence, Hamilton confided that his entire financial plan for the recovery of public credit, which he had submitted to Congress in January, was trapped within a congressional gridlock. Southern congressmen, led by James Madison, had managed to block approval of one key provision of the Hamilton proposal, the assumption of state debts by the federal government, thereby scuttling the whole Hamiltonian scheme for fiscal reform. Hamilton was simultaneously fatalistic and melodramatic. If his financial plan were rejected, as now seemed certain, then 'he could be of no use and was determined to resign.- And without his plan and his leadership- these two items seemed inextricably connected in his own mind- the government and inevitably the national union itself must collapse."

    Zimbabwe is in a similar context. Words like "precipice" "revolution" and "tipping point" (you gotta love these speech writers!) have been thrown around. Personally, I do not think there is a threat to the integrity of the nation but we are not a la une of the world-s headlines for nothing!

    Back to the new nation that was the United States of America back in 1790. "Jefferson suggested that perhaps he could help. 'On considering the situation of things,- he recalled, 'I thought the first step towards some conciliation of views would be to bring Mr Madison and Colo Hamilton to a friendly discussion of the subject.- Though he was still suffering from the lingering vestiges of a migraine headache that had lasted for over a month, and though he had only recently moved in to his new quarters at 57 Maiden Lane in New York City, Jefferson offered to host a private dinner party where the main players could meet alone to see if the intractable political obstacles (my emphasis) might melt away under the more benign influences of wine and gentlemanly conversation."

    'They came. I opened up the subject to them, acknowledged that my situation had not permitted me to understand it sufficiently but encourage them to consider the thing together. They did so. It ended in Mr Madison-s acquiescence in a proposition that the question (i.e. assumption of the state debts) should be brought again before the house by the way of amendment from the Senate, that he would not vote for it, nor entirely withdraw his opposition, yet he would not be strenuous, but leave it to its fate. It was observed, I forget by which of them, that as the pill would be a bitter one to the Southern states, something should be done to soothe them; and the removal of the seat of government to the Patowmac was a just measure, and would probably be a popular one with them, and would be a proper one to follow the assumption.-

    In other words, Jefferson brokered a political bargain of decidedly far reaching significance: Madison agreed to permit the core provision of Hamilton-s fiscal programme to pass; and in return Hamilton agreed to use his influence to assure the permanent residence of the national capital would be on the Potomac River. If true, this true deserves to rank alongside the Missouri Compromise and the Compromise of 1850 as one of the landmark accommodations in American politics. And, without much question, what we might call The Compromise of 1790 would top the list as the most meaningful dinner party in American history."

    The infant state of America which has become the world-s superpower was saved on more than one instance by private rather than public negotiation. To put the "Great" back in to Zimbabwe, it is perhaps time, that we consider this option. I am sure this is taking place already but only Zimbabweans have the best interest of Zimbabwe at heart. I hope there are private dinner parties taking place in the leafy suburbs of Harare. It is called "lighting a candle, instead of cursing the darkness." A friend of mine told me, "Character is what you do when no one is watching."

    Who are the larger than life and selfless characters out there, close to the centres of power? Your defining moment has come. Seize it!

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