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Appointed
governors an anachronism in modern democratic society
Nhlanhla
Mpofu
February 24, 2012
The recent move
by the incumbent governor of Masvingo, Titus Maluleke to ban
twenty-nine non-governmental organizations (NGO) has brought to
the fore the contentious issue of elected governors, their powers
and mandate together with their relevance to the current political
discourse and status quo. The move has illuminated upon the abuse
of power by appointed governors to further individual agendas and
the political interest of political parties. It has further resuscitated
the call by the majority of Zimbabweans that the new constitution
must establish and entrench the office of elected governors. This
article therefore serves to provide insight into the dynamics and
discourse behind having elected instead of appointed governors.
Current democratic
practice, regionally and internationally detects that public officials
such as parliamentarians, senators and governors be directly elected
into office through periodic free and fair elections. Proponents
of elected governors allege that appointed governors do not represent
the people but their allegiance is to the President, and the political
party, that put them in office. For instance, the move by Governor
Maluleke, which has no legal backing or legislative precedent, is
the act of an overzealous party appointee trying to fulfill the
wishes expressed by his political party, ZANU-PF, at last year-s
Annual conference in Bulawayo. The conference swore to abolish or
close down non-governmental organizations that did not tow the party
line or subscribe to the ZANU-PF way of doing things. Unfortunately
for the people of Masvingo province, the organizations "banned"
by Governor Maluleke are humanitarian agencies that have been providing
food aid and attendant services to citizens in one of Zimbabwe-s
driest regions.
Also it has to be pointed out that a governor appointed by the President
of a centralized state like Zimbabwe will often be divorced from
the experiences and concerns of local communities while the needs
and demands of the President, to the appointed governor, often mirror
those of the Presidency rather than local people who he/she is supposed
to serve. For instance, at the height of the economic depression
of the past decade, in 2008, the people of Bulawayo vehemently refused
to allow ZINWA to take over water supply and management in Bulawayo.
This was after realizing that ZINWA had failed to adequately provide
safe water to some cities leading to a cholera pandemic. Shockingly,
the resident Governor of Bulawayo, Cain.G.N.Mathema, against the
wishes of the residents of Bulawayo and blind to the mechanizations
and failure of ZINWA, was calling for the takeover of water supply
and management by the national body already proven inefficient.
The legislative
branch, notably Parliament,
cannot withdraw confidence from any governor or veto the Presidential
appointment. At the same time, the appointment of governors unilaterally
by the President leaves room for the manipulation of the governor-s
office to counter the dominance of divergent political parties as
is the case with the appointment of governors for Bulawayo and Harare.
Realizing the loss of faith and support among the urban population
of the two major cities, the President appointed provincial governors
to the two new provinces, a scenario that has led to duplicity of
roles with the Mayors of these respective towns.
Appointed governors
have served to deter democratic development in the sense that their
administration of the province lacks the legitimacy and credibility
for public officials who are in office via popular election. Staunch
party supporters who unsuccessfully attempt to be elected into office,
risking being stranded on political sidelines are often brought
back into the fray by appointing them as Governors. For instance,
Cain Mathema was overwhelmingly rejected by the people of Tsholotsho
during the plebiscite of 2000 yet he was imposed on the people of
Bulawayo as the resident governor, a position he holds despite ZANU-PF-s
glaring lack of support. Such illegitimacy has been compounded by
the continued insistence of the President of unilaterally appointing
governors outside the letter, spirit and stipulations of Amendment
19 and the Global
Political Agreement. The schoolboy bully manner in which the
governors are appointed to their posts has thus come to alienate
them from the people.
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