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ZANU–PF

The Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front (ZANU–PF) is a political organisation which has been the ruling party of Zimbabwe since independence in 1980. The party was led for many years under Robert Mugabe, first as prime minister with the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) and then as president from 1987 after the merger with the Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU) and retaining the name ZANU–PF, until 2017, when he was removed as leader.

Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front
AbbreviationZANU–PF
First SecretaryEmmerson Mnangagwa
Second SecretariesConstantino Chiwenga
Kembo Mohadi
National ChairpersonOppah Muchinguri
FounderNdabaningi Sithole
Founded8 August 1963; 60 years ago (1963-08-08)
HeadquartersZANU–PF Building
Harare, Zimbabwe
Youth wingZANU–PF Youth League
Women's wingZANU–PF Women's League
IdeologyPopulism[1][2]
Anti-imperialism[3]
Pan-Africanism[3]
African nationalism[4]
Political positionBig tent[5][6]
Regional affiliationFormer Liberation Movements of Southern Africa
International affiliationNone (prev. Socialist International)
Colours       
Green, yellow, red, black
National Assembly
184 / 280
Senate
33 / 80
Party flag
Website
www.zanupf.org.zw

At the 2008 parliamentary election, the ZANU–PF lost sole control of parliament for the first time in party history and brokered a difficult power-sharing deal with the Movement for Democratic Change – Tsvangirai (MDC). ZANU-PF then won the 2013 election, gaining a two-thirds majority. The party narrowly held their super-majority in the 2018 election.

On 19 November 2017, following a coup d'état, ZANU–PF sacked Robert Mugabe as party leader, who resigned two days later, and appointed former Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa in his place.[7]

History edit

Predecessors (1955–1963) edit

The first militant African nationalist organisation in Southern Rhodesia was the City Youth League (CYL), formed in the colony's capital, Salisbury, in August 1955 by James Chikerema, Dunduzu Chisiza, George Nyandoro, and Edson Sithole.[8][9][10][11] On 12 September 1957, the CYL merged with the long-established but largely dormant Southern Rhodesia chapter of the African National Congress to form the Southern Rhodesia African National Congress (SRANC).[10][11][12][13] The new organisation adopted the CYL's principle of "one man, one vote" and elected Joshua Nkomo as its president.[11][12] The SRANC, which demanded African majority rule, gained substantial support across the country, but was banned by the Southern Rhodesian government in February 1959.[10][11][12] In turn, on 1 January 1960, the National Democratic Party (NDP) was formed.[10][11][12][14] The NDP advocated a similarly militant platform, and was similarly banned in December 1961.[10][11][12][14] In the same month, Nkomo formed the Zimbabwe African People's Union, which shared the same aims and tactics of its predecessor organisations.[10][11] In September 1962, amid growing unrest in Southern Rhodesia's major towns, ZAPU was banned and many of its leaders detained.[10][11][15] The colony's Unlawful Organisations Act was also amended in an attempt to prevent ZAPU from being reconstituted with a different name.[10]

Formation (1963) edit

African nationalist politics in Rhodesia in the 1960s were characterised by internal rivalries and disputes over strategy.[15][16] Divisions within ZAPU came to a head in April 1963 when Nkomo called a meeting of the party's executive in Dar es Salaam, where he had gone after ZAPU was banned in late 1962.[11][15][17] The main criticisms of Nkomo were directed against his initial support of Southern Rhodesia's 1961 constitution (a position he later reversed), his extensive foreign travel in pursuit of international support for the movement, and his handling of the formation of a government in exile in Tanganyika.[11][18] According to Nkomo, he had received permission to form a government in exile, but by the time the rest of ZAPU's leadership arrived in Dar es Salaam, he had changed his mind and was opposed the idea.[18] Other accounts describe a split between Nkomo, who preferred an externally-based movement, and others—including Enoch Dumbutshena and Ndabaningi Sithole—who favoured an internal struggle and pressured Nkomo to return to Rhodesia.[11][15] President Julius Nyerere told the assembled ZAPU leaders that neither he nor other African heads of state supported the idea of a government in exile and that "victory" could only be achieved within Rhodesia.[11]

 
Ndabaningi Sithole, ZANU's founding president, in 1955.

Nkomo returned to Salisbury on 2 July 1963, after which a majority of the party executive that had remained in Dar es Salaam voted to remove him as president of ZAPU.[11][15] In response, Nkomo suspended the various "rebels", including Sithole and Robert Mugabe, from the party.[11] Unable to outmaneuver Nkomo within ZAPU, his opponents decided to create their own organisation.[10] On 8 August 1963, Sithole, Herbert Chitepo, Leopold Takawira, Edgar Tekere, Henry Hamadziripi, and Mukudzei Midzi gathered at the Highfield home of Enos Nkala to form the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU).[15][18][19][20]

In response to ZANU's formation, Nkomo called a mass meeting on 10 August 1963 at Cold Comfort Farm, a multiracial cooperative outside Salisbury, where he formed a new organisation, the People's Caretaker Council (PCP), to replace ZAPU, which was still banned.[11][15][21] To preempt ZANU's growth, Nkomo took steps to solidify his hold on the masses, replacing ZAPU's existing centralised structure with a larger number of new, smaller branches.[11] In the ZAPU–ZANU split, most of Nkomo's longtime allies who had been with him since the SRANC's formation in 1957—including Jason Moyo and George Nyandoro—stayed with ZAPU, while many nationalist leaders who had come to prominence in 1960 or later—like Sithole and Mugabe—joined the new party.[17][22]

On 22 August 1963, Sithole held ZANU's first press conference, telling reporters, "When the party came to power it would repeal the Land Apportionment Act. It would also repeal the Land Husbandry Act and replace both by a new land redistribution law."[22] In addition to land reform, Sithole pledged that "A bill of rights would be entrenched in the constitution guaranteeing the rights and freedom of every citizen."[22] Sithole told the reporters that ZANU was "nonracial" and would accommodate "people who share a common destiny and democratic rule by the majority, regardless of race, colour, creed, or tribe."[22] ZANU's platform was quickly taken up by the press, and stood in contrast to ZAPU, which had not made public a comprehensive platform.[22] ZAPU responded by attacking ZANU leaders' character and ideological bona fides.[22]

Almost immediately following the split, violent clashes broke out between supporters of the rival parties in urban areas across the country.[11][15][22] At one ZANU meeting in August 1963 in Highfield, 200 supporters required the protection of Rhodesian police to hold their event, while a "milling pro-Nkomo mob of [a] thousand threatening death to the 'sellouts'" waited outside and stoned the cars of ZANU leaders Sithole and Nathan Shamuyarira as they left.[22] Nkomo's support was even stronger in the African townships of Harare and Mufakose.[22] The day after the meeting, Sithole "acknowledged [a] miscalculation of Nkomo's mass strength."[22] In Bulawayo, two houses were bombed with Molotov cocktails, and on 17 August, three policemen were injured by a stone-throwing mob of Nkomo supporters.[23] By 14 August, both Sithole and Nkomo were calling for an end the violence in the African press, to little effect.[22] Nkomo blamed the violence on ZANU supporters, arguing that his followers were using "self-defence against a group of power-hungry people who have failed to gain public support."[22] Sithole likewise claimed that his supporters were not the instigators, stating that he had "a group of well-disciplined officials who can control the youngsters."[22]

Despite facing initial backlash, ZANU did gain a following, and found particularly strong support in the eastern districts around Fort Victoria and Umtali.[17] Meanwhile, ZAPU maintained an advantage in Bulawayo and Matabeleland, and in and around the capital, Salisbury.[10][17] Though neither party's leaders belonged exclusively to one ethnic group, the division arguably had an ethnic component, with ZAPU finding disproportionate support among the Ndebele people and ZANU drawing its base largely from the Shona people.[10][17][24] Compared to ZAPU, ZANU branded itself as taking a more confrontational approach to white-minority rule, while portraying Nkomo as weak, indecisive, and insufficiently revolutionary.[24][25] ZANU messaging downplayed ethnicity as a factor in the divisions within the nationalist movement, instead highlighting strategic and ideological differences.[25] By contrast, Nkomo pointed to tribalism as the main cause of the ZAPU–ZANU split in his autobiography.[25]

Bush War/Second Chimurenga (1964–1980) edit

ZANU held its inaugural party congress in the Mkoba suburb of Gwelo from 21–23 May 1964.[24][26][27][28] There, Ndabaningi Sithole was elected as the party's first president, Leopold Takawira as vice-president, Robert Mugabe as secretary-general, Herbert Chitepo as national chairman, and Enos Nkala as treasurer.[20][26][27] In his presidential address, Sithole told the congress that ZANU "stands for democracy, socialism, nationalism, one man/one vote, freedom, pan-Africanism, non-racism, and republicanism.[24]

The Patriotic Front (PF) was formed as a political and military alliance between ZAPU and ZANU during the war against white minority rule in Rhodesia (now called Zimbabwe). The PF included the Soviet Union-backed ZAPU, which was led by Joshua Nkomo and operated mainly from Zambia, and the Chinese-backed ZANU led by Robert Mugabe, which operated mainly from neighboring Mozambique. Both movements contributed to their respective military forces. ZAPU's military wing was known as the Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army (ZIPRA) and ZANU's guerrillas were known as the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army. The objective of the PF was to overthrow the predominantly white minority government, headed by the Prime Minister Ian Smith, through political pressure and military force.[29]

Post-independence edit

Their common goal was achieved in 1980, following the Lancaster House Agreement of December 1979, when the United Kingdom granted independence to Zimbabwe following a brief period of direct British control. During the 1980 general election campaign, the PF parties competed separately as ZANU–Patriotic Front (ZANU–PF) and Patriotic Front–ZAPU (PF–ZAPU). The election was won by Mugabe and ZANU–PF, with Nkomo and his PF–ZAPU retaining a stronghold in the provinces of Matabeleland.[29]

In December 1981, agents of South Africa's apartheid government bombed party headquarters, nearly killing many senior ZANU–PF leaders, including Robert Mugabe.[30]

In December 1987, after five years of the low-level civil war known as Gukurahundi, the opposition ZAPU, led by Nkomo, was absorbed through the Unity Accord with ZANU to form an official ZANU–PF.[31]

From 1999 to 2017, Mugabe faced a major political challenge from the opposition Movement for Democratic Change. Mugabe won 56% at the presidential elections of 9–11 March 2002.

At the December 2004 five-year conference, Joice Mujuru, a Zezuru Shona like Mugabe, and whose late-husband Solomon Mujuru was the retired head of the armed forces, was elevated to the post of vice president of the party (the first woman to hold that office) at the expense of contender Emmerson Mnangagwa and his supporters; Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa and Information Minister Jonathan Moyo.[32]

The 2005 Zimbabwe parliamentary elections were held on 31 March 2005. The party won 59.6% of the popular vote and 78 out of 120 elected seats. Later that year, 26 November, it won 43 of 50 elected senators. The parliamentary election was disputed as being unfair. The leader of the opposition MDC party said, "We are deeply disturbed by the fraudulent activities we have unearthed", and various human rights groups reported that hundreds of thousands of "ghost voters" had appeared on the electoral roll of 5.8 million people.[33]

At the 2008 parliamentary election, the ZANU–PF lost its majority in parliament for the first time since independence, and held 94 seats out of the expanded 210 seats, with Sokwanele stating that this figure would have been lower had it not been for gerrymandering, electoral fraud, and widespread intimidation.[34]

 
ZANU–PF party regalia bearing the image of President Robert Mugabe in the 2008 general election.

At the 2008 presidential election, Morgan Tsvangirai, the MDC candidate, received the most votes, but did not gain an absolute majority; thus a runoff was necessary. Initial results led to MDC-T claiming the required majority. However, ballots were recounted at a National Command Centre over a period of over a month without the presence of independent observers. The election process that followed was marred by more violence against and intimidation of voters and party workers. Morgan Tsvangirai initially stated he intended to contest the second round but pulled out of the runoff saying a free and fair election was impossible in the current climate. The elections were held on 27 June with a single candidate, Robert Mugabe, who was re-elected.

Many blame ZANU–PF for neglecting to deal with Zimbabwe's problem with the mounting 2008 Zimbabwean cholera outbreak, which by the start of December 2008 had already killed between 500 and 3,000 people.[35]

Former President of South Africa Thabo Mbeki facilitated, under the auspices of Southern African Development Community (SADC), a Zimbabwean Government of National Unity between ZANU–PF, the Movement for Democratic Change – Tsvangirai and the Movement for Democratic Change – Mutambara.

Post-Mugabe transition edit

 
Robert and Grace Mugabe at a ZANU–PF rally in 2013.

In 2014, a battle between Vice President Joice Mujuru and Justice Minister Emmerson Mnangagwa, and possibly First Lady Grace Mugabe, began over the succession to President Robert Mugabe. An elective congress was scheduled for December 2014, in which ZANU–PF would elect members to fill vacancies in the central committee, politburo, and presidium, and most likely endorse the party's next candidate for president. This congress, which takes place every five years, is the most important elective organ for the party.

Although President Mugabe had not named a successor, Joice Mujuru was seen by many as the most likely candidate. She had support from both the politburo and the population at large (demonstrated by the election of her loyalists to the youth league).[36] Minister Emmerson Mnangagwa was supported by a smaller group composed mainly of senior members of the security establishment, part of ZANU–PF's parliamentary caucus, younger party members, and a few influential parts of the Zimbabwean business community. He had been with Mugabe since Zimbabwe gained independence and was regarded by many as a successor who could maintain stability after Mugabe eventually left office.[37]

Mujuru lost the succession battle with Mnangagwa after being expelled from the party in 2015[38] a new power struggle began between Mnangagwa's faction (known as Team Lacoste) and Grace Mugabe's faction (known as Generation 40 or G40) which had become violent by 2017.[39] Emmerson Mnangagwa was demoted from Minister of Justice following a cabinet reshuffle, soon after he publicly claimed that he was poisoned, in early-October 2017. On 15 November 2017, a military coup in Zimbabwe resulted in President Robert Mugabe being placed under house arrest and led to speculation over whether Grace Mugabe or Emmerson Mnangagwa would succeed him as leader of the party. Following the 2017 Zimbabwe coup, ZANU–PF voted to depose Robert Mugabe as party leader and install the banished Emmerson Mnangagwa as leader instead. Before the Zimbabwean parliament could vote to impeach Mugabe, he resigned from the presidency on 21 November 2017.[40] Mnangagwa was sworn in as the new President of the Republic of Zimbabwe on 24 November 2017.[41]

On 6 September 2019, Robert Mugabe died of cancer (according to Mnangagwa) at the age of 95.[42] He was succeeded as President by Emmerson Mnangagwa.[43]

In the March 2022 by-elections, ZANU–PF had a poor performance compared to the Citizens Coalition for Change.[44] ZANU–PF won the 2023 Zimbabwean general election.[45]

Ideology edit

Officially, ZANU–PF has a leftist ideology. The party maintains a Politburo and a Central Committee.[46]

Land redistribution edit

Mugabe pursued a more left-wing populist policy on the issue of land redistribution in 2000s, encouraging seizure of commercial farms—usually owned by Zimbabwe's white minority—"for the benefit of landless black majority".[47] The inauguration speech of President Mnangagwa threw this program's support into question since he said that the "government is committed to work on a compensation plan for former land owners."[48] The compulsory acquisition of commercial farmland without compensation was discontinued in early 2018.[49] In 2018, Mnangagwa stated that "all foreign investments will be safe in Zimbabwe" and called for "increased production and capacity and new investment in the country."[48][50]

Organisation and structure edit

The ZANU–PF constitution establishes a hierarchical party structure consisting of: (1) the National People's Congress, (2) the National People's Conference, (3) the Central Committee, (4) the National Consultative Assembly, (5) the National Assembly of the Women's League, (6) the National Assembly of the Youth League, (7) the provincial coordinating committees, (8) the provincial executive councils, (9) the district committees, (10) the branch committees, and (11) the cell/village committees.[51]

The current first secretary of ZANU–PF, reelected at the party's elective congress on 28 October 2022, is President Emmerson Mnangagwa.[52] The other three members of the party's presidium, appointed by Mnangagwa on 29 October 2022, are Second Secretaries Constantino Chiwenga and Kembo Mohadi, and National Chairperson Oppah Muchinguri.[52]

The party maintains a Women's League and Youth League.[51] A third wing, the War Veterans' League, was established in 2022 and held its inaugural conference on 9 September of that year.[52][53]

Congresses edit

  • 1st National People's Congress (December 1989)
  • 2nd National People's Congress (December 1994)
  • 3rd National People's Congress (December 1999)
  • 4th National People's Congress (December 2004)
  • Extraordinary Congress (December 2007)
  • 5th National People's Congress (December 2009)
  • 6th National People's Congress (December 2014)
  • Extraordinary Congress (12–17 December 2017)[54]
  • 7th National People's Congress (December 2022)[55]

International relations edit

 
Delegates from Zimbabwe and the ZANU–PF Youth League dance at the closing of the World Festival of Youth and Students in Johannesburg, 2010.

ZANU–PF is a member of the Former Liberation Movements of Southern Africa, an association of six socialist political parties that were involved in the nationalist and anti-colonialist movements of Southern Africa.[56][57] ZANU–PF was previously affiliated with the Socialist International (SI), having sent representatives with guest status to the SI congresses in 1980,[58] 1992,[59] and 1996,[60] and was present at the Socialist International Africa Committee meeting in Maputo, Mozambique, as recently as 1999.[61] ZANU–PF has not attended any SI congresses or meetings since, and Zimbabwe's then-leading opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change – Tsvangirai, joined the SI in 2008. The Socialist International has condemned the actions of Zimbabwe's ZANU–PF-dominated government and military.[62]

Electoral history edit

Presidential elections edit

Election Party candidate Votes Percentage Votes Percentage Result
First Round Second Round
1990 Robert Mugabe 2,026,976 83.05% Elected  Y
1996 1,404,501 92.76% Elected  Y
2002 1,685,212 56.20% Elected  Y
2008 1,079,730 43.24% 2,150,269 90.22% Elected  Y
2013 2,110,434 61.88% Elected  Y
2018 Emmerson Mnangagwa 2,460,463 51.44% Elected  Y
2023 2,350,711 52.60% Elected  Y

National Assembly elections edit

Election Party leader Votes Percentage Seats won Change Position Result
1980 Robert Mugabe 1,668,992 62.99%[n 1]
57 / 100
  57   1st Majority government
1985 2,233,320 77.19%
64 / 100
New   1st Majority government
1990 1,690,071 80.55%
117 / 120
  53   1st Supermajority government
1995 1,143,349 81.38%
118 / 120
  1   1st Supermajority government
2000 1,211,284 48.47%
62 / 120
  56   1st Majority government
2005 1,569,867 59.59%
78 / 120
  16   1st Majority government
2008 1,110,649 45.84%
99 / 210
  19   2nd ZANU PF–MDC coalition government
2013 2,116,116 63.16%
196 / 270
  97   1st Supermajority government
2018 Emmerson Mnangagwa 2,477,708 52.35%
179 / 270
  17   1st Majority government
2023 2,515,607 56.18%
177 / 280
  2   1st Majority government

Senate elections edit

Election Party leader Votes Percentage Seats won Change Position Result
2005 Robert Mugabe 449,860 73.71%
43 / 66
  43   1st Majority
2008 1,101,931 45.79%
57 / 93
  2   1st ZANU PF–MDC coalition
2013 2,120,634 64.27%
37 / 80
  20   1st Minority
2018 Emmerson Mnangagwa
34 / 80
  3   1st Minority
2023
33 / 80
  1   1st Minority

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ 63% of Common Roll votes. In the 1980 elections, two rolls of voters existed: the Common Role, which contained nonwhites and formed the vast majority of voters, and the White Roll, which contained white voters and formed a small minority of voters.

References edit

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  61. ^ "Meeting of the Socialist International Africa Committee, Maputo, Mozambique". Socialist International. September 1999. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
  62. ^ Tengely-Evans, Tomáš (15 November 2017). "Zimbabwean socialist responds to 'palace coup' facing Mugabe's regime". Socialist Worker. Retrieved 14 October 2018.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • ZANU–PF constitution

zanu, zimbabwe, african, national, union, patriotic, front, political, organisation, which, been, ruling, party, zimbabwe, since, independence, 1980, party, many, years, under, robert, mugabe, first, prime, minister, with, zimbabwe, african, national, union, z. The Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front ZANU PF is a political organisation which has been the ruling party of Zimbabwe since independence in 1980 The party was led for many years under Robert Mugabe first as prime minister with the Zimbabwe African National Union ZANU and then as president from 1987 after the merger with the Zimbabwe African People s Union ZAPU and retaining the name ZANU PF until 2017 when he was removed as leader Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic FrontAbbreviationZANU PFFirst SecretaryEmmerson MnangagwaSecond SecretariesConstantino ChiwengaKembo MohadiNational ChairpersonOppah MuchinguriFounderNdabaningi SitholeFounded8 August 1963 60 years ago 1963 08 08 HeadquartersZANU PF BuildingHarare ZimbabweYouth wingZANU PF Youth LeagueWomen s wingZANU PF Women s LeagueIdeologyPopulism 1 2 Anti imperialism 3 Pan Africanism 3 African nationalism 4 Political positionBig tent 5 6 Regional affiliationFormer Liberation Movements of Southern AfricaInternational affiliationNone prev Socialist International Colours Green yellow red blackNational Assembly184 280Senate33 80Party flagWebsitewww wbr zanupf wbr org wbr zwPolitics of ZimbabwePolitical partiesElectionsAt the 2008 parliamentary election the ZANU PF lost sole control of parliament for the first time in party history and brokered a difficult power sharing deal with the Movement for Democratic Change Tsvangirai MDC ZANU PF then won the 2013 election gaining a two thirds majority The party narrowly held their super majority in the 2018 election On 19 November 2017 following a coup d etat ZANU PF sacked Robert Mugabe as party leader who resigned two days later and appointed former Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa in his place 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Predecessors 1955 1963 1 2 Formation 1963 1 3 Bush War Second Chimurenga 1964 1980 1 4 Post independence 1 5 Post Mugabe transition 2 Ideology 2 1 Land redistribution 3 Organisation and structure 3 1 Congresses 4 International relations 5 Electoral history 5 1 Presidential elections 5 2 National Assembly elections 5 3 Senate elections 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 External linksHistory editPredecessors 1955 1963 edit The first militant African nationalist organisation in Southern Rhodesia was the City Youth League CYL formed in the colony s capital Salisbury in August 1955 by James Chikerema Dunduzu Chisiza George Nyandoro and Edson Sithole 8 9 10 11 On 12 September 1957 the CYL merged with the long established but largely dormant Southern Rhodesia chapter of the African National Congress to form the Southern Rhodesia African National Congress SRANC 10 11 12 13 The new organisation adopted the CYL s principle of one man one vote and elected Joshua Nkomo as its president 11 12 The SRANC which demanded African majority rule gained substantial support across the country but was banned by the Southern Rhodesian government in February 1959 10 11 12 In turn on 1 January 1960 the National Democratic Party NDP was formed 10 11 12 14 The NDP advocated a similarly militant platform and was similarly banned in December 1961 10 11 12 14 In the same month Nkomo formed the Zimbabwe African People s Union which shared the same aims and tactics of its predecessor organisations 10 11 In September 1962 amid growing unrest in Southern Rhodesia s major towns ZAPU was banned and many of its leaders detained 10 11 15 The colony s Unlawful Organisations Act was also amended in an attempt to prevent ZAPU from being reconstituted with a different name 10 Formation 1963 edit African nationalist politics in Rhodesia in the 1960s were characterised by internal rivalries and disputes over strategy 15 16 Divisions within ZAPU came to a head in April 1963 when Nkomo called a meeting of the party s executive in Dar es Salaam where he had gone after ZAPU was banned in late 1962 11 15 17 The main criticisms of Nkomo were directed against his initial support of Southern Rhodesia s 1961 constitution a position he later reversed his extensive foreign travel in pursuit of international support for the movement and his handling of the formation of a government in exile in Tanganyika 11 18 According to Nkomo he had received permission to form a government in exile but by the time the rest of ZAPU s leadership arrived in Dar es Salaam he had changed his mind and was opposed the idea 18 Other accounts describe a split between Nkomo who preferred an externally based movement and others including Enoch Dumbutshena and Ndabaningi Sithole who favoured an internal struggle and pressured Nkomo to return to Rhodesia 11 15 President Julius Nyerere told the assembled ZAPU leaders that neither he nor other African heads of state supported the idea of a government in exile and that victory could only be achieved within Rhodesia 11 nbsp Ndabaningi Sithole ZANU s founding president in 1955 Nkomo returned to Salisbury on 2 July 1963 after which a majority of the party executive that had remained in Dar es Salaam voted to remove him as president of ZAPU 11 15 In response Nkomo suspended the various rebels including Sithole and Robert Mugabe from the party 11 Unable to outmaneuver Nkomo within ZAPU his opponents decided to create their own organisation 10 On 8 August 1963 Sithole Herbert Chitepo Leopold Takawira Edgar Tekere Henry Hamadziripi and Mukudzei Midzi gathered at the Highfield home of Enos Nkala to form the Zimbabwe African National Union ZANU 15 18 19 20 In response to ZANU s formation Nkomo called a mass meeting on 10 August 1963 at Cold Comfort Farm a multiracial cooperative outside Salisbury where he formed a new organisation the People s Caretaker Council PCP to replace ZAPU which was still banned 11 15 21 To preempt ZANU s growth Nkomo took steps to solidify his hold on the masses replacing ZAPU s existing centralised structure with a larger number of new smaller branches 11 In the ZAPU ZANU split most of Nkomo s longtime allies who had been with him since the SRANC s formation in 1957 including Jason Moyo and George Nyandoro stayed with ZAPU while many nationalist leaders who had come to prominence in 1960 or later like Sithole and Mugabe joined the new party 17 22 On 22 August 1963 Sithole held ZANU s first press conference telling reporters When the party came to power it would repeal the Land Apportionment Act It would also repeal the Land Husbandry Act and replace both by a new land redistribution law 22 In addition to land reform Sithole pledged that A bill of rights would be entrenched in the constitution guaranteeing the rights and freedom of every citizen 22 Sithole told the reporters that ZANU was nonracial and would accommodate people who share a common destiny and democratic rule by the majority regardless of race colour creed or tribe 22 ZANU s platform was quickly taken up by the press and stood in contrast to ZAPU which had not made public a comprehensive platform 22 ZAPU responded by attacking ZANU leaders character and ideological bona fides 22 Almost immediately following the split violent clashes broke out between supporters of the rival parties in urban areas across the country 11 15 22 At one ZANU meeting in August 1963 in Highfield 200 supporters required the protection of Rhodesian police to hold their event while a milling pro Nkomo mob of a thousand threatening death to the sellouts waited outside and stoned the cars of ZANU leaders Sithole and Nathan Shamuyarira as they left 22 Nkomo s support was even stronger in the African townships of Harare and Mufakose 22 The day after the meeting Sithole acknowledged a miscalculation of Nkomo s mass strength 22 In Bulawayo two houses were bombed with Molotov cocktails and on 17 August three policemen were injured by a stone throwing mob of Nkomo supporters 23 By 14 August both Sithole and Nkomo were calling for an end the violence in the African press to little effect 22 Nkomo blamed the violence on ZANU supporters arguing that his followers were using self defence against a group of power hungry people who have failed to gain public support 22 Sithole likewise claimed that his supporters were not the instigators stating that he had a group of well disciplined officials who can control the youngsters 22 Despite facing initial backlash ZANU did gain a following and found particularly strong support in the eastern districts around Fort Victoria and Umtali 17 Meanwhile ZAPU maintained an advantage in Bulawayo and Matabeleland and in and around the capital Salisbury 10 17 Though neither party s leaders belonged exclusively to one ethnic group the division arguably had an ethnic component with ZAPU finding disproportionate support among the Ndebele people and ZANU drawing its base largely from the Shona people 10 17 24 Compared to ZAPU ZANU branded itself as taking a more confrontational approach to white minority rule while portraying Nkomo as weak indecisive and insufficiently revolutionary 24 25 ZANU messaging downplayed ethnicity as a factor in the divisions within the nationalist movement instead highlighting strategic and ideological differences 25 By contrast Nkomo pointed to tribalism as the main cause of the ZAPU ZANU split in his autobiography 25 Bush War Second Chimurenga 1964 1980 edit Main article Rhodesian Bush War ZANU held its inaugural party congress in the Mkoba suburb of Gwelo from 21 23 May 1964 24 26 27 28 There Ndabaningi Sithole was elected as the party s first president Leopold Takawira as vice president Robert Mugabe as secretary general Herbert Chitepo as national chairman and Enos Nkala as treasurer 20 26 27 In his presidential address Sithole told the congress that ZANU stands for democracy socialism nationalism one man one vote freedom pan Africanism non racism and republicanism 24 The Patriotic Front PF was formed as a political and military alliance between ZAPU and ZANU during the war against white minority rule in Rhodesia now called Zimbabwe The PF included the Soviet Union backed ZAPU which was led by Joshua Nkomo and operated mainly from Zambia and the Chinese backed ZANU led by Robert Mugabe which operated mainly from neighboring Mozambique Both movements contributed to their respective military forces ZAPU s military wing was known as the Zimbabwe People s Revolutionary Army ZIPRA and ZANU s guerrillas were known as the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army The objective of the PF was to overthrow the predominantly white minority government headed by the Prime Minister Ian Smith through political pressure and military force 29 Post independence edit Their common goal was achieved in 1980 following the Lancaster House Agreement of December 1979 when the United Kingdom granted independence to Zimbabwe following a brief period of direct British control During the 1980 general election campaign the PF parties competed separately as ZANU Patriotic Front ZANU PF and Patriotic Front ZAPU PF ZAPU The election was won by Mugabe and ZANU PF with Nkomo and his PF ZAPU retaining a stronghold in the provinces of Matabeleland 29 In December 1981 agents of South Africa s apartheid government bombed party headquarters nearly killing many senior ZANU PF leaders including Robert Mugabe 30 In December 1987 after five years of the low level civil war known as Gukurahundi the opposition ZAPU led by Nkomo was absorbed through the Unity Accord with ZANU to form an official ZANU PF 31 From 1999 to 2017 Mugabe faced a major political challenge from the opposition Movement for Democratic Change Mugabe won 56 at the presidential elections of 9 11 March 2002 At the December 2004 five year conference Joice Mujuru a Zezuru Shona like Mugabe and whose late husband Solomon Mujuru was the retired head of the armed forces was elevated to the post of vice president of the party the first woman to hold that office at the expense of contender Emmerson Mnangagwa and his supporters Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa and Information Minister Jonathan Moyo 32 The 2005 Zimbabwe parliamentary elections were held on 31 March 2005 The party won 59 6 of the popular vote and 78 out of 120 elected seats Later that year 26 November it won 43 of 50 elected senators The parliamentary election was disputed as being unfair The leader of the opposition MDC party said We are deeply disturbed by the fraudulent activities we have unearthed and various human rights groups reported that hundreds of thousands of ghost voters had appeared on the electoral roll of 5 8 million people 33 At the 2008 parliamentary election the ZANU PF lost its majority in parliament for the first time since independence and held 94 seats out of the expanded 210 seats with Sokwanele stating that this figure would have been lower had it not been for gerrymandering electoral fraud and widespread intimidation 34 nbsp ZANU PF party regalia bearing the image of President Robert Mugabe in the 2008 general election At the 2008 presidential election Morgan Tsvangirai the MDC candidate received the most votes but did not gain an absolute majority thus a runoff was necessary Initial results led to MDC T claiming the required majority However ballots were recounted at a National Command Centre over a period of over a month without the presence of independent observers The election process that followed was marred by more violence against and intimidation of voters and party workers Morgan Tsvangirai initially stated he intended to contest the second round but pulled out of the runoff saying a free and fair election was impossible in the current climate The elections were held on 27 June with a single candidate Robert Mugabe who was re elected Many blame ZANU PF for neglecting to deal with Zimbabwe s problem with the mounting 2008 Zimbabwean cholera outbreak which by the start of December 2008 had already killed between 500 and 3 000 people 35 Former President of South Africa Thabo Mbeki facilitated under the auspices of Southern African Development Community SADC a Zimbabwean Government of National Unity between ZANU PF the Movement for Democratic Change Tsvangirai and the Movement for Democratic Change Mutambara Post Mugabe transition edit nbsp Robert and Grace Mugabe at a ZANU PF rally in 2013 In 2014 a battle between Vice President Joice Mujuru and Justice Minister Emmerson Mnangagwa and possibly First Lady Grace Mugabe began over the succession to President Robert Mugabe An elective congress was scheduled for December 2014 in which ZANU PF would elect members to fill vacancies in the central committee politburo and presidium and most likely endorse the party s next candidate for president This congress which takes place every five years is the most important elective organ for the party Although President Mugabe had not named a successor Joice Mujuru was seen by many as the most likely candidate She had support from both the politburo and the population at large demonstrated by the election of her loyalists to the youth league 36 Minister Emmerson Mnangagwa was supported by a smaller group composed mainly of senior members of the security establishment part of ZANU PF s parliamentary caucus younger party members and a few influential parts of the Zimbabwean business community He had been with Mugabe since Zimbabwe gained independence and was regarded by many as a successor who could maintain stability after Mugabe eventually left office 37 Mujuru lost the succession battle with Mnangagwa after being expelled from the party in 2015 38 a new power struggle began between Mnangagwa s faction known as Team Lacoste and Grace Mugabe s faction known as Generation 40 or G40 which had become violent by 2017 39 Emmerson Mnangagwa was demoted from Minister of Justice following a cabinet reshuffle soon after he publicly claimed that he was poisoned in early October 2017 On 15 November 2017 a military coup in Zimbabwe resulted in President Robert Mugabe being placed under house arrest and led to speculation over whether Grace Mugabe or Emmerson Mnangagwa would succeed him as leader of the party Following the 2017 Zimbabwe coup ZANU PF voted to depose Robert Mugabe as party leader and install the banished Emmerson Mnangagwa as leader instead Before the Zimbabwean parliament could vote to impeach Mugabe he resigned from the presidency on 21 November 2017 40 Mnangagwa was sworn in as the new President of the Republic of Zimbabwe on 24 November 2017 41 On 6 September 2019 Robert Mugabe died of cancer according to Mnangagwa at the age of 95 42 He was succeeded as President by Emmerson Mnangagwa 43 In the March 2022 by elections ZANU PF had a poor performance compared to the Citizens Coalition for Change 44 ZANU PF won the 2023 Zimbabwean general election 45 Ideology editOfficially ZANU PF has a leftist ideology The party maintains a Politburo and a Central Committee 46 Land redistribution edit Main article Land reform in Zimbabwe Mugabe pursued a more left wing populist policy on the issue of land redistribution in 2000s encouraging seizure of commercial farms usually owned by Zimbabwe s white minority for the benefit of landless black majority 47 The inauguration speech of President Mnangagwa threw this program s support into question since he said that the government is committed to work on a compensation plan for former land owners 48 The compulsory acquisition of commercial farmland without compensation was discontinued in early 2018 49 In 2018 Mnangagwa stated that all foreign investments will be safe in Zimbabwe and called for increased production and capacity and new investment in the country 48 50 Organisation and structure editThe ZANU PF constitution establishes a hierarchical party structure consisting of 1 the National People s Congress 2 the National People s Conference 3 the Central Committee 4 the National Consultative Assembly 5 the National Assembly of the Women s League 6 the National Assembly of the Youth League 7 the provincial coordinating committees 8 the provincial executive councils 9 the district committees 10 the branch committees and 11 the cell village committees 51 The current first secretary of ZANU PF reelected at the party s elective congress on 28 October 2022 is President Emmerson Mnangagwa 52 The other three members of the party s presidium appointed by Mnangagwa on 29 October 2022 are Second Secretaries Constantino Chiwenga and Kembo Mohadi and National Chairperson Oppah Muchinguri 52 The party maintains a Women s League and Youth League 51 A third wing the War Veterans League was established in 2022 and held its inaugural conference on 9 September of that year 52 53 Congresses edit 1st National People s Congress December 1989 2nd National People s Congress December 1994 3rd National People s Congress December 1999 4th National People s Congress December 2004 Extraordinary Congress December 2007 5th National People s Congress December 2009 6th National People s Congress December 2014 Extraordinary Congress 12 17 December 2017 54 7th National People s Congress December 2022 55 International relations edit nbsp Delegates from Zimbabwe and the ZANU PF Youth League dance at the closing of the World Festival of Youth and Students in Johannesburg 2010 ZANU PF is a member of the Former Liberation Movements of Southern Africa an association of six socialist political parties that were involved in the nationalist and anti colonialist movements of Southern Africa 56 57 ZANU PF was previously affiliated with the Socialist International SI having sent representatives with guest status to the SI congresses in 1980 58 1992 59 and 1996 60 and was present at the Socialist International Africa Committee meeting in Maputo Mozambique as recently as 1999 61 ZANU PF has not attended any SI congresses or meetings since and Zimbabwe s then leading opposition party the Movement for Democratic Change Tsvangirai joined the SI in 2008 The Socialist International has condemned the actions of Zimbabwe s ZANU PF dominated government and military 62 Electoral history editPresidential elections edit Election Party candidate Votes Percentage Votes Percentage ResultFirst Round Second Round1990 Robert Mugabe 2 026 976 83 05 Elected nbsp Y1996 1 404 501 92 76 Elected nbsp Y2002 1 685 212 56 20 Elected nbsp Y2008 1 079 730 43 24 2 150 269 90 22 Elected nbsp Y2013 2 110 434 61 88 Elected nbsp Y2018 Emmerson Mnangagwa 2 460 463 51 44 Elected nbsp Y2023 2 350 711 52 60 Elected nbsp YNational Assembly elections edit Election Party leader Votes Percentage Seats won Change Position Result1980 Robert Mugabe 1 668 992 62 99 n 1 57 100 nbsp 57 nbsp 1st Majority government1985 2 233 320 77 19 64 100 New nbsp 1st Majority government1990 1 690 071 80 55 117 120 nbsp 53 nbsp 1st Supermajority government1995 1 143 349 81 38 118 120 nbsp 1 nbsp 1st Supermajority government2000 1 211 284 48 47 62 120 nbsp 56 nbsp 1st Majority government2005 1 569 867 59 59 78 120 nbsp 16 nbsp 1st Majority government2008 1 110 649 45 84 99 210 nbsp 19 nbsp 2nd ZANU PF MDC coalition government2013 2 116 116 63 16 196 270 nbsp 97 nbsp 1st Supermajority government2018 Emmerson Mnangagwa 2 477 708 52 35 179 270 nbsp 17 nbsp 1st Majority government2023 2 515 607 56 18 177 280 nbsp 2 nbsp 1st Majority governmentSenate elections edit Election Party leader Votes Percentage Seats won Change Position Result2005 Robert Mugabe 449 860 73 71 43 66 nbsp 43 nbsp 1st Majority2008 1 101 931 45 79 57 93 nbsp 2 nbsp 1st ZANU PF MDC coalition2013 2 120 634 64 27 37 80 nbsp 20 nbsp 1st Minority2018 Emmerson Mnangagwa 34 80 nbsp 3 nbsp 1st Minority2023 33 80 nbsp 1 nbsp 1st MinoritySee also editList of political parties in Zimbabwe List of ruling political parties by country Politics of ZimbabweFootnotes edit 63 of Common Roll votes In the 1980 elections two rolls of voters existed the Common Role which contained nonwhites and formed the vast majority of voters and the White Roll which contained white voters and formed a small minority of voters References edit Drinkwater Michael 1991 The State and Agrarian Change in Zimbabwe s Communal Areas Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan pp 93 96 ISBN 978 0312053505 Nyambi Oliver 2021 Cultures of Change in Contemporary Zimbabwe Socio Political Transition from Mugabe to Mnangagwa Routledge a b What is ZANU PF ZANU PF Retrieved 9 June 2018 ROBERT GABRIEL MUGABE African Nationalist Leaders Rhodesia to Zimbabwe Mungwari Teddy November 2017 Representation of Political Conflict in the Zimbabwean Press The Case of The Herald The Sunday Mail Daily News and The Standard 1999 2016 PDF University of South Africa Chan Stephen Primorac Ranka 2013 Zimbabwe since the Unity Government Routledge p 17 ISBN 9781135742683 Breaking News President Mugabe resigns accessed Jan 14 2018 Raftopoulos Brian March 1995 Nationalism and Labour in Salisbury 1953 1965 Journal of Southern African Studies 21 1 79 93 doi 10 1080 03057079508708434 JSTOR 2637332 via JSTOR Mlambo Alois S 2014 A History of Zimbabwe Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 145 ISBN 978 1 107 02170 9 a b c d e f g h i j k Goldstone Jack A Gurr Ted Robert Moshiri Farrokh eds 1991 Revolutions of the Late Twentieth Century Boulder Colorado Westview Press ISBN 9781000310078 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Cary Robert Mitchell Diana eds 1977 Joshua Nkomo African Nationalist Leaders in Rhodesia Who s Who Bulawayo Books of Rhodesia a b c d e Musarurwa W D 1977 African Nationalism in Rhodesia In Cary Robert Mitchell Diana eds African Nationalist Leaders in Rhodesia Who s Who Bulawayo Books of Rhodesia Kornegay Jr Francis A 1969 Zimbabwe Nationalism in Southern Rhodesia A Current Bibliography on African Affairs 2 2 5 11 doi 10 1177 001132556900200202 S2CID 155605343 via SAGE a b Rhodesia Enjoins Africans Party National Democratic Heads Arrested Violence Flares The New York Times 10 December 1961 p 2 Retrieved 7 January 2023 a b c d e f g h Cary Robert Mitchell Diana eds 1977 The Rev Ndabaningi Sithole African Nationalist Leaders in Rhodesia Who s Who Bulawayo Books of Rhodesia Uys Stanley 14 December 2000 The Rev Ndabaningi Sithole The Guardian Retrieved 8 January 2023 a b c d e Morris Jones W H ed 1980 From Rhodesia to Zimbabwe Behind and Beyond Lancaster House London Frank Cass amp Co p 98 ISBN 978 1 317 76100 6 a b c Scarnecchia Timothy Lewis 2021 Race and Diplomacy in Zimbabwe The Cold War and Decolonization 1960 1984 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 25 28 ISBN 978 1 316 51179 4 Msipa Cephas G 2015 In Pursuit of Freedom and Justice A Memoir Harare Weaver Press p 34 ISBN 978 1 77922 381 4 a b Cary Robert Mitchell Diana eds 1977 Enos Mzombi Nkala African Nationalist Leaders in Rhodesia Who s Who Bulawayo Books of Rhodesia Sithole Masipula 1999 Zimbabwe Struggles Within the Struggle 1957 1980 Harare Rujeko Publishers p 17 ISBN 978 0 7974 1935 3 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Scarnecchia Timothy 2008 The Urban Roots of Democracy and Political Violence in Zimbabwe Harare and Highfield 1940 1964 Rochester New York University of Rochester Press pp 134 137 ISBN 978 1 58046 281 5 Political Violence Breaks Calm in Southern Rhodesia The New York Times 19 August 1963 p 2 Retrieved 8 January 2023 a b c d Ndlovu Gatsheni Sabelo J 2013 Coloniality of Power in Postcolonial Africa Myths of Decolonization Dakar CODESRIA p 207 ISBN 978 2 86978 578 6 a b c Ndlovu Gatsheni Sabelo J ed 2017 Joshua Mqabuko Nkomo of Zimbabwe Politics Power and Memory London Palgrave Macmillan p 18 ISBN 978 3 319 60555 5 a b Rhodesia ZANU Congress AP Television 21 May 1964 Retrieved 8 January 2023 a b President Mnangangwa s early days political career The Sunday News 26 November 2017 Retrieved 9 July 2018 Ranger Terence 1997 Violence Variously Remembered The Killing of Pieter Oberholzer in July 1964 History in Africa 24 273 286 doi 10 2307 3172030 JSTOR 3172030 S2CID 159673826 via JSTOR a b Martin D amp Johnson P 1981 The Struggle for Zimbabwe Faber amp Faber p 400 Karekwaivanane George Hamandishe 30 November 2017 The Struggle over State Power in Zimbabwe Law and Politics since 1950 Cambridge University Press p 192 ISBN 9781108117692 Zimbabwean political flags at FOTW Mutasa blasts Mnangagwa The Standard Zimbabwe 5 May 2013 Retrieved 23 May 2013 Mugabe s party sweeps to victory BBC News Mugabe s Zanu PF loses majority BBC News 3 April 2008 Zimbabwe cholera death toll nears 500 CNN 2 December 2008 Retrieved 2 December 2008 We must all resign in December says Mugabe NewsdzeZimbabwe 18 August 2014 Retrieved 9 October 2014 Zimbabwe waiing for the future PDF www crisisgroup org 29 September 2014 Retrieved 9 October 2014 Zimbabwe ruling party expels Mugabe rival Joyce Mujuru Bbc com 3 April 2015 Jeffrey Muvundusi and Tendai Kamhungira 23 May 2017 Mugabe s Zanu PF brawls Wheels come off Zimbabwe Situation DailyNews Live Retrieved 24 May 2017 Ruling party sacks Mugabe as leader BBC News 19 November 2017 Retrieved 19 November 2017 Cde ED Mnangagwa Sworn in as the new President of the Republic of Zimbabwe accessed Jan 14 2018 hermesauto 6 September 2019 Ex Zimbabwe leader Robert Mugabe dies at 95 in Singapore The Straits Times Retrieved 8 November 2019 Zimbabwe uproar as roads named after Emmerson Mnangagwa BBC News 22 November 2019 Retrieved 3 September 2023 Muronzi Chris Zimbabwe By elections to provide hint of what is to come in 2023 www aljazeera com Retrieved 31 August 2023 Chingono Nyasha Banya Nelson 27 August 2023 Zimbabwe s president declared election winner opposition rejects result Reuters Retrieved 3 September 2023 Zanu PF official site Zanupf org zw Retrieved 27 November 2017 Robinson Simon 1 May 2000 Power to the Mob Time Retrieved 2 March 2023 a b President E D Mnangagwa Inauguration Speech Accessed Jan 14 2018 Mugabe s land reform costs Zimbabwe 17 billion economists News 24 Cape Town 12 May 2018 Retrieved 14 June 2018 Politburo Meeting Held on the 10th of January 2018 ZANU PF 10 January 2018 Archived from the original on 30 May 2018 a b Constitution of the Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front ZANU PF PDF Veritas Retrieved 9 January 2023 a b c Ruzvidzo Wallace 30 October 2022 President reappoints Cdes Chiwenga Mohadi VPs The Sunday Mail Retrieved 15 January 2023 Machivenyika Farai 10 September 2022 War vets give Zanu PF renewed strength The Herald Retrieved 9 January 2023 Mhofu Sebastian 15 December 2017 Zimbabwe s President Appeals for Ruling Party Unity VOA Retrieved 9 January 2023 Zanu PF Congress starts today The Herald 26 October 2022 Retrieved 9 January 2023 President in SA for former liberation movements meeting The Herald 7 March 2013 Retrieved 7 January 2021 Matanda Dennis 19 March 2021 Decoding China s Africa Strategy beyond 2021 A Discussion with Paul Nantulya The Habari Network Retrieved 7 January 2023 Socialist International Congress 1980 PDF Socialist Affairs 27 1981 XIX Congress of the Socialist International Berlin PDF Socialist Affairs 49 1992 The XX Congress PDF Socialist Affairs 64 1996 Meeting of the Socialist International Africa Committee Maputo Mozambique Socialist International September 1999 Retrieved 14 October 2018 Tengely Evans Tomas 15 November 2017 Zimbabwean socialist responds to palace coup facing Mugabe s regime Socialist Worker Retrieved 14 October 2018 External links editOfficial website ZANU PF constitution Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ZANU PF amp oldid 1189392574, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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