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Zim elections: Can the MDC still win
Jason Moyo, Mail and Guardian (SA)
January 25,
2013
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-01-25-zim-elections-can-the-mdc-still-win
Morgan Tsvangirai's
party must recapture the 2008 zeitgeist and combat voter disillusionment
to dominate the upcoming poll, writes Jason Moyo.
A new constitution
for Zimbabwe has been agreed
on and now parties are looking to the elections.
So, what does
Morgan Tsvangirai have to do to win this time?
His biggest
task will be to reignite the fizz of 2008, which has died down over
disappointments in his party's performance in government and his
personal scandals. But there is hope for him yet.
This week, analyst
Lance Mambondiani asked in an opinion piece: "Is it possible
that we are experiencing a shift in the maturity of the voter, in
which politicians are held to account based on their policies rather
than their rhetoric?"
Yes, but not
enough. And as long as candidate quality and policy are still taken
as secondary to removing President Robert Mugabe, Tsvangirai has
a chance. His party can only win by targeting that "anyone
but Mugabe" vote that has carried it for years.
The options
on offer are stark: on the one hand, it's a choice between Mugabe
and Tsvangirai. The alternative is simply not bothering to vote
at all, an increasingly appealing prospect for many.
Mugabe will
run on his black-empowerment drive, promising rural communities
near mining operations shares in the mines. Tsvangirai's own economic
policy, known by the acronym Juice, is vague at best. But lack of
clear policy is not new to the Movement for Democratic Change and
has never stood in its way before.
The MDC's major
struggle will be recreating its vibrant March
2008 campaign. The country's economic collapse made Tsvangirai's
"change" platform far more appealing than Mugabe's "100%
empowerment" refrain. Tsvangirai ran a well-funded campaign,
addressing thousands of red-card-waving supporters.
Young people
who had previously stayed away from politics came out to vote for
the first time. There was a zest in the air, a great expectation
that this time change was, indeed, coming.
In an unprecedented
turn of events, the MDC was able to campaign freely in the rural
areas. Having long been cordoned off by Zanu-PF militants, rural
voters flocked to MDC rallies.
The results
showed: Zanu-PF lost its parliamentary majority for the first time
ever and Tsvangirai won more votes than Mugabe, although not enough
to avoid the violent run-off that would follow.
Tsvangirai's
challenges
Now, besides
the mechanisms still needed to make the election a fair race, rediscovering
its 2008 form is what the MDC needs the most.
The events of
the past five years have broken voters' resolve: the violent
2008 election aftermath, the mind-numbing talks on the formation
of the unity government and then its failure to bring about reform.
Although the
economic growth of recent years is stalling, it is not as bad as
it was in 2008, when hyper-inflation and food shortages bred deep
resentment of Mugabe and drove desperate voters to the polls.
Tsvangirai will
need to capitalise on Zanu-PF rhetoric that the party will revive
the Zimbabwe dollar if it wins. The "Zim-dollar era" is
a dark one for many and the MDC will need to play on those fears.
Tsvangirai's
personal scandals do not help. Those controversies showed that he,
too, had built his own Mugabe-esque base of fanatical supporters.
It wasn't his fault, his lieutenants said - it was all some dark
conspiracy.
The scandals
disillusioned many. The erosion in Tsvangirai's support may not
translate to backing for Mugabe or other rivals, but may simply
keep people away from the polls.
In the previous
election, many voters simply put an X against the name of any MDC
candidate on the ballot. Nobody cared who the candidate was. But
those voters now feel let down by corruption and lack of service
delivery by urban councils run by the MDC.
There
is little enthusiasm for the forthcoming election, which, including
two referendums, will be the country's eighth poll in 13 years.
United
opposition unlikely
A coalition
against Mugabe would seem an obvious option, but it is unlikely.
The bitterness
between Tsvangirai and Welshman Ncube, leader of the smaller MDC
faction, runs deep. In 2007, an attempt to forge an alliance failed,
partly because the parties could not agree on who would get certain
positions in government if they won.
In his autobiography,
At the Deep End, Tsvangirai said Ncube and his backers never had
any clout. They "were simply riding on my popularity, in the
forlorn hope that part of it would rub off on to them". Many
Tsvangirai supporters agree.
The two men
trade frequent barbs in public, many of the insults eyeroll-inducing
in their pettiness.
Tsvangirai recently
dismissed Ncube as a "village politician", to which Ncube
retorted that allowing Tsvangirai to lead would be like giving a
cyclist a bus to drive.
So with no strong
policy platform and little chance of an alliance, the only real
game the MDC can play is the same one it has played before. The
old "change" mantra is really all the MDC has - and it
will be tougher to convince voters this time around.
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