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Zimbabwe's Elections 2013 - Index of Articles
Sham
or not, election flaws unlikely to unseat Mugabe
Brian
Raftopoulos
August 08, 2013
http://theconversation.com/sham-or-not-election-flaws-unlikely-to-unseat-mugabe-16737
The recent
elections in Zimbabwe were always likely to be problematic.
Despite the hope of former South African president Thabo Mbeki in
2007 that his mediation efforts would lead to an vote that was “conducted
in a manner that will make it impossible for any honest person in
Zimbabwe to question the legitimacy of their outcomes,” this
was the case neither in the 2008 nor the 2013 elections.
In the run up to the
latest elections there were several issues that militated against
a generally acceptable outcome. These ranged from Zanu-PF’s
persistent obstruction and widely reported problems around voters'
registration and the voters' roll, to the persistent, though reduced,
tensions over the sanctions conditions imposed on the Mugabe regime
by the West from the early 2000s.
A combination of Zanu-PF’s
ruthlessness in dealing with opposition parties, the allure of employment
opportunities, the shrinking social base of the opposition and the
limits of Southern African Development Community’s response
to a recalcitrant Mugabe regime, all constrained threats from the
now factionalised Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) of mass action
against yet another stolen election.
Zanu-PF
‘victory’ dwarfs 2009
Thus the results
of the recent elections were only a surprise to the extent that
Zanu-PF’s “victory” was so overwhelming. In the
March
2008 election Mugabe received 45% of the presidential vote while
his party won 99 parliamentary seats, while in the same election
Morgan Tsvangirai received 48% of the presidential vote and his
party 100 seats. In 2013 Mugabe’s share of the presidential
vote leaped to 61% while that of Tsvangirai plunged to 33%, with
their parties receiving 159 and 49 parliamentary seats respectively.
How did this happen?
It is still too early to make a thorough assessment of the 2013
elections. However, some general remarks can be proffered. Firstly
there is little doubt that Zanu-PF’s deliberate obstruction
in fully implementing the reform measures, in particular changes
to the security sector, made it difficult for the MDCs to fully
exploit any political spaces that may have opened up under such
reforms.
But it cannot be denied
that the performance of the MDCs left much to be desired, and their
lack of political co-ordination allowed Mugabe to weaken their effectiveness
and exploit the differences between the two factions.
The legacy of the violence
of 2008 also appears to have played a role - while the run up was
peaceful this time around, memories of violence combined with verbal
threats could have been sufficient to intimidate voters into not
voting for the opposition in 2013. Zanu’s coercive power over
who has access to council flats and vending stands could also have
influenced voting.
Mugabe
power base remains strong
Having said all that,
it is also clear that Mugabe and his party retain a substantial
social base. Even when Mugabe and Zanu-PF lost the March 2008 elections,
as the figures above show, the percentage differences were small,
though of major significance. Moreover the shape of Zimbabwe’s
political economy has changed substantially in the 2000s since the
major transformation on the land.
The deconstruction of
former white-owned, large-scale commercial farms and their replacement
by a preponderance of small farm holders has radically changed the
social and political relations in these areas. The new forms in
which Zanu-PF and the state have penetrated these new social relations
have affected the forms of Zanu-PF dominance in these areas. The
rapid expansion of small-scale, “informal” mining companies
has also brought a larger number of workers into the fold of Zanu-PF’s
accumulation and patronage network.
When these factors are
combined with the greater political cohesion of Mugabe’s party
since the divisions that marked its campaign in 2008 – and
the resonance of its messaging around empowerment and indigenisation
particularly amongst the youth, it is apparent that there are multiple
reasons for the political resurgence of Mugabe and his party.
The divisions that have
emerged over the “freeness and fairness” of this election
at national and international levels have, once again, drawn a line
between African and Western government responses to the Mugabe regime.
This is a terrain that Mugabe has exploited effectively in the past
and will no doubt continue to do so.
However, the SADC is
desperate to draw a line under the longstanding Zimbabwe problem
and in its pursuit of stability in the regional and protection of
national sovereignty, it has opted for a minimally acceptable election
in which the absence of large-scale violence appears to have been
the most important litmus test for a credible ballot.
Tsvangirai and his party
have challenged the results of the elections, calling it a “sham”.
It is highly unlikely that a legal challenge will alter the results,
and there is little doubt that Mugabe and his party will move ahead
for a further five years with little hindrance from the SADC. It
remains to be seen how soon the EU and the US will begin a full
re-engagement with Mugabe.
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