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Politics of Zimbabwe

The politics of Zimbabwe occurs in a society deeply divided along lines of race, ethnicity, gender and geography.[1] The ZANU–PF party has historically been dominant in Zimbabwe politics.[1] The party, which was led by Robert Mugabe from 1980 to 2017, has used the powers of the state to intimidate, imprison and otherwise hobble political opposition in Zimbabwe, as well as use state funds and state media to advance the interests of the party.[1]

Per the 2013 Constitution, Zimbabwe is a full presidential republic, whereby the President is the head of state and government. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and parliament. The status of Zimbabwean politics has been thrown into question by a 2017 coup.

Zimbabwe has been undergoing an economic crisis since the late 1990s.[1]

Political developments since the Lancaster House Agreement edit

The Zimbabwean Constitution, initially from the Lancaster House Agreement a few months before the 1980 elections, chaired by Lord Carrington, institutionalises majority rule and protection of minority rights. Since independence, the Constitution has been amended by the government to provide for:

  • The abolition of seats reserved for whites in the country's parliament in 1987;[2]
  • The abolition of the office of prime minister in 1987 and the creation of an executive presidency.[2] (The office was restored in 2009, and abolished again in 2013.)
  • The abolition of the Senate in 1990 (reintroduced in 2005), and the creation of appointed seats in the House of Assembly.[2]

The elected government controls senior appointments in the public service, including the military and police, and ensures that appointments at lower levels are made on an equitable basis by the independent Public Service Commission.

ZANU-PF leader Robert Mugabe, elected prime minister in 1980, revised the constitution in 1987 to make himself president. President Mugabe's affiliated party won every election from independence on April 18, 1980, until it lost the parliamentary elections in March 2008 to the Movement for Democratic Change. In some quarters corruption and rigging elections have been alleged. In particular the elections of 1990 were nationally and internationally condemned as being rigged, with the second-placed party, Edgar Tekere's Zimbabwe Unity Movement, winning only 20% of the vote. Presidential elections were held in 2002 amid allegations of vote-rigging, intimidation, and fraud, and again in March 2008.

Ethnic rivalry between the Shona and Ndebele has played a large part in Zimbabwe's politics, a consequence of the country's borders defined by its British colonial rulers. This continued after independence in 1980, during the Gukurahundi ethnic cleansing liberation wars in Matabeleland in the 1980s. This led to the political merger of Joshua Nkomo's Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU) with the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) to form ZANU-PF and the appointment of Nkomo as vice president.

During 2005, with Mugabe's future in question, factionalism within the Shona has increased.[3] In October 2005 it was alleged that members of the ruling ZANU-PF and the opposition MDC had held secret meetings in London and Washington to discuss plans for a new Zimbabwe after Robert Mugabe.[4] On February 6, 2007, Mugabe orchestrated a Cabinet reshuffle, ousting ministers including 5-year veteran Minister of Finance Herbert Murerwa.

Political conditions edit

Since the defeat of the constitutional referendum in 2000, politics in Zimbabwe has been marked by a move from the norms of democratic governance, such as democratic elections, the independence of the judiciary, the rule of law, freedom from racial discrimination, the existence of independent media, civil society and academia.[citation needed] Recent years have seen widespread violations of human rights.

Elections have been marked by political violence and intimidation, along with the politicisation of the judiciary, military, police force and public services.[5] Statements by the President and government politicians have referred to a state of war, or Chimurenga, against the opposition political parties, in particular the Movement for Democratic Change – Tsvangirai (MDC-T). Newspapers not aligned with the government have been closed down and members of the judiciary have been threatened and/or arrested. Repressive laws aimed at preventing freedoms of speech, assembly and association have been implemented and subjectively enforced. Members of the opposition are routinely arrested and harassed, with some subjected to torture or sentenced to jail. The legal system has come under increasing threat. The MDC has repeatedly attempted to use the legal system to challenge the ruling ZANU-PF, but the rulings, often in favour of the MDC, have not been taken into account by the police.[citation needed]

Government of Zimbabwe edit

Political power in Zimbabwe is split between three branches, the executive, the legislative and the judicial branches, with the President as the head of the executive branch, the Prime Minister the head of the legislative branch and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe the head of the judicial branch.

Executive edit

Under the present Zimbabwean Constitution, the President's powers can be grouped roughly into the following categories:

  • Power over the Legislature, namely the power to summon, adjourn and dissolve Parliament, and the power to appoint members of Parliament.
  • Power over the Judiciary, namely the power to appoint judges and other members of the judiciary.
  • Power to appoint members of the Executive, namely Cabinet Ministers and administrative officers such as public servants.
  • Power to appoint ambassadors and members of constitutional Commissions.
  • Power over the security forces, namely the Defence Forces and the Police.
  • Legislative power, namely the power to enact legislation.
  • Power to declare war and make peace
  • Miscellaneous powers, such as the exercise of the prerogative of mercy and the power to confer honours and precedence. The grant of a pardon or respite from execution of sentence or the substitution or suspension of a sentence must be published in the Gazette.[6]
Main office-holders
Office Name Party Since
President Emmerson Mnangagwa ZANU-PF 24 November 2017
Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga ZANU-PF 28 December 2017

Under Zimbabwe's Constitution, the president is the head of state, government and commander-in-chief of the defense forces, elected by popular majority vote. Prior to 2013, the president was elected for a 6-year term with no term limits. The new constitution approved in the 2013 constitutional referendum limits the president to two 5-year terms, but this does not take effect retrospectively (Robert Mugabe had held the office from 1987 to 2017).

The Cabinet is appointed by the president and responsible to the House of Assembly.

The Minister of State for Presidential Affairs is a non-cabinet ministerial position in the government of Zimbabwe. The incumbent is Didymus Mutasa.[7] The duties of the position have yet to be publicly defined.

Legislature edit

 
Parliament of Zimbabwe in Harare

Parliament consists of the House of Assembly and, since 2005, the Senate, which had previously been abolished in 1990. The House of Assembly has 210 members elected by universal suffrage, including the Speaker, and the Attorney General, and may serve for a maximum of five years.[8] Under the 2013 constitution, the Senate consists of 80 members, of whom 60 are elected for five-year terms in 6-member constituencies representing one of the 10 provinces, elected based on the votes in the lower house election, using party-list proportional representation, distributed using the hare quota. Additionally the Senate consists of 2 seats for each non-metropolitan district of Zimbabwe elected by each provincial assembly of chiefs using SNTV,[9] 1 seat each for the president and deputy president of the National Council of Chiefs and 1 male and 1 female seat for people with disabilities elected on separate ballots using FPTP by an electoral college designated by the National Disability Board.[10][11]

Judiciary edit

The judiciary is headed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe who, like their contemporaries, is appointed by the President on the advice of the Judicial Service Commission. The Constitution has a Bill of Rights containing extensive protection of human rights. The Bill of Rights could not be amended for the first 10 years of independence except by unanimous vote of Parliament.

The Supreme Court is the highest court of order and the final court of appeal. The Chief Justice is the senior judge. Others who sit on the bench of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe are Justice Paddington Garwe, former Judge-President of the High Court, Wilson Sandura and Vernanda Ziyambi. Luke Malaba, a former justice of the Supreme Court, was appointed acting chief justice on 1 March 2017 following the retirement of Chief Justice Godfrey Chidyausiku. Malaba was promoted to chief justice on 28 March.[12]

The legal system is based on Roman-Dutch law with South African influences. A five-member Supreme Court, headed by the Chief-Justice has original jurisdiction over alleged violations of fundamental rights guaranteed in the constitution and appellate jurisdiction over other matters. There is a High Court consisting of general and appellate divisions. Below the High Court are regional magistrate's courts with civil jurisdiction and magistrate's courts with both civil and criminal jurisdiction over cases involving traditional law and custom. Beginning in 1981, these courts were integrated into the national system.

List of chief justices of Zimbabwe:

Incumbent Tenure Notes
Took office Left office
Hector Norman MacDonald 1977 May 1980 Appointed by Ian Smith (Rhodesia under UDI)
Sir John Fieldsend[13] 1 July 1980 1983
Enoch Dumbutshena February 1984 1990
Anthony Gubbay 1990 2001
Godfrey Chidyausiku 2001 2017
Luke Malaba[12] 2017 present

Provincial governance edit

Main articles: Provinces of Zimbabwe, Districts of Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe is divided into eight provinces, each administered by a provincial governor appointed by the President. The provincial governor is assisted by the provincial administrator and representatives of several service ministries. The provinces are further divided into 63 districts.Provinces are constituent political entities of Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe currently has ten provinces, two of which are cities with provincial status. Zimbabwe is a unitary state, and its provinces exercise only the powers that the central government chooses to delegate. Provinces are divided into districts, which are divided into wards.

The Constitution of Zimbabwe delineates provincial governance and powers. After constitutional amendments in 1988, provinces were administered by a governor directly appointed by the President of Zimbabwe.[1] Since the 2013 constitutional changes, there are technically no longer provincial governors, though in practice they remain in place as Ministers of State for Provincial Affairs. The 2013 Constitution also calls for the devolution of governmental powers and responsibilities where appropriate, though Zimbabwean opposition parties argue that the central government has yet to comply.[2]

With the establishment of Company rule in Rhodesia in the 1890s, the country was divided into two provinces: Matabeleland in the west and Mashonaland in the east. Under British colonial rule as Southern Rhodesia, the colony was divided into five provinces. Later, the Rhodesian government expanded the number of provinces to seven: Manicaland, Matabeleland North and South, Mashonaland North and South, Midlands, and Victoria (today Masvingo).[3] In the 1980s, Mashonaland North and South became three provincesThe youngest provinces, Bulawayo and Harare, were created in 1997.

Political parties and elections edit

Presidential elections edit

Mnangagwa was re-elected president.[14]

CandidatePartyVotes%
Emmerson MnangagwaZANU–PF2,350,71152.60
Nelson ChamisaCitizens Coalition for Change1,967,34344.03
Wilbert MubaiwaNational People’s Congress53,5171.20
Douglas MwonzoraMovement for Democratic Change – Tsvangirai28,8830.65
Joseph Makamba BushaFreeZim Congress18,8160.42
Blessing KasiyamhuruZimbabwe Partnership for Prosperity13,0600.29
Tapiwa Trust ChikohoraZimbabwe Coalition for Peace and Development Party10,2300.23
Gwinyai Henry MuzorewaUnited African National Council7,0530.16
Elisabeth ValerioUnited Zimbabwe Alliance6,9890.16
Harry Peter WilsonDemocratic Opposition Party6,7430.15
Lovemore MadhukuNational Constitutional Assembly5,3230.12
Total4,468,668100.00
Valid votes4,468,66897.97
Invalid/blank votes92,5532.03
Total votes4,561,221100.00
Registered voters/turnout6,623,51168.86
Source: Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, ZEC

Results by province edit

Results by Province[15]
Province Joseph Makamba Busha Nelson Chamisa Tapiwa Trust Chikohora Blessing Kasiyamhuru Lovemore Madhuku Emmerson Mnangagwa Wilbert Mubaiwa Gwinyai Henry Muzorewa Douglas Mwonzora Elisabeth Valerio Harry Peter Wilson Total Votes Rejected Total Votes Cast Total Valid Votes Cast Voter Population Voter Turnout %
FreeZim Congress CCC ZCPD ZIPP NCA ZANU–PF NPC UANC MDC-T UZA DOP
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes %
Bulawayo 437 0.26 131,037 78.52 306 0.18 255 0.15 129 0.08 31,053 18.61 1,389 0.83 230 0.14 1,004 0.60 803 0.48 249 0.15 2,040 1.21 168,932 166,892 287,352 58.79
Harare 1,236 0.17 517,494 71.46 778 0.11 804 0.11 543 0.07 193,881 26.77 4,958 0.68 470 0.06 2,337 0.32 1,365 0.19 325 0.04 10,071 1.37 734,262 724,191 1,084,601 67.70
Manicaland 2,496 0.45 240,672 43.47 1,547 0.28 1,814 0.33 1,074 0.19 290,960 52.56 8,588 1.55 993 0.18 3,891 0.70 713 0.13 877 0.16 11,354 2.01 564,979 553,625 829,324 68.13
Mashonaland Central 2,089 0.44 95,508 19.97 785 0.16 1,289 0.27 455 0.10 370,175 77.41 4,058 0.85 586 0.12 2,280 0.48 358 0.07 648 0.14 9,200 1.89 487,431 478,231 625,968 77.87
Mashonaland East 1,435 0.26 184,827 33.51 892 0.16 914 0.17 415 0.08 354,081 64.20 5,101 0.92 671 0.12 2,178 0.39 435 0.08 563 0.10 10,694 1.90 562,206 551,512 773,281 72.70
Mashonaland West 2,579 0.47 209,744 38.10 1,165 0.21 1,667 0.30 529 0.10 323,523 58.77 5,664 1.03 825 0.15 3,157 0.57 757 0.14 887 0.16 13,931 2.47 564,428 550,497 785,583 71.85
Masvingo 2,634 0.53 167,813 33.96 1,454 0.29 2,240 0.45 637 0.13 307,383 62.21 6,798 1.38 908 0.18 2,825 0.57 540 0.11 896 0.18 11,087 2.19 505,215 494,128 723,934 69.79
Matabeleland North 1,425 0.65 111,609 51.03 955 0.44 1,060 0.48 489 0.22 91,306 41.74 5,356 2.45 751 0.34 4,249 1.94 826 0.38 703 0.32 6,594 2.93 225,323 218,729 371,701 60.62
Matabeleland South 1,331 0.76 80,365 45.89 970 0.55 1,035 0.59 416 0.24 82,511 47.12 3,997 2.28 702 0.40 2,673 1.53 503 0.29 612 0.35 4,772 2.65 179,887 175,115 300,768 59.81
Midlands 3,154 0.57 228,274 41.08 1,378 0.25 1,982 0.36 636 0.11 305,838 55.03 7,608 1.37 917 0.17 4,289 0.77 689 0.12 983 0.18 12,810 2.25 568,558 555,748 840,999 67.61
National Total 18,816 0.42 1,967,343 44.03 10,230 0.23 13,060 0.29 5,323 0.12 2,350,711 52.60 53,517 1.20 7,053 0.16 28,883 0.65 6,989 0.16 6,743 0.15 92,553 2.03 4,561,221 4,468,668 6,623,511 68.86

House of Assembly elections edit

The National Assembly has 210 single-member constituencies, the results of which are shown below.[16] The remaining 70 seats comprises 60 seats which are reserved for women, six seats in each province, and 10 seats for youth, one seat in each province, which are filled based on the votes in the single-member constituencies using party-list proportional representation, distributed using the largest remainder method and the Hare quota.

On election day itself ZANU–PF won 136 seats and the CCC 73, with ZANU–PF retaining its rural base and the CCC capturing the urban vote.[17][18][19] Voting in the Gutu West constituency was postponed to 11 November after one of the candidates died shortly before the elections.[20] Following the parliamentary election in Gutu West, 65.24% of the constituency seats went to ZANU-PF and 34.76% of the constituency seats went to the CCC.[21]

 
PartyVotes%Seats
CommonWomenYouthTotal+/–
ZANU–PF2,515,60756.18137337177–2
Citizens Coalition for Change1,856,39341.4673273103New
Movement for Democratic Change – Tsvangirai15,3070.340000–88
Zimbabwe African People's Union10,8570.2400000
United Zimbabwe Alliance4,9370.110000New
National Constitutional Assembly2,4620.0500000
Democratic Opposition Party2,1050.050000New
FreeZim Congress1,9260.0400000
Democratic Union of Zimbabwe1,8810.0400000
Mthwakazi Republic Party1,6410.0400000
Zimbabwe National Revival Party1,2710.030000New
Zimbabwe African National Congress6280.010000New
United African National Council5740.0100000
Zimbabwe Coalition for Peace and Development Party4340.010000New
National People’s Congress2970.010000New
Economic Freedom Fighters2860.010000New
United Freedom Party1870.000000New
Freedom Alliance1480.000000New
Independents60,4451.350000–1
Total4,477,386100.002106010280+10
Source: Zimbabwe Electoral Commission Zimbabwe Elections

Senate elections edit

 
PartySeats+/–
ZANU–PF33–1
Citizens Coalition for Change27New
Chiefs180
Persons with disabilities20
Total800
Source: Zimbabwe Electoral Commission

MPs who lost their seats edit

International organization participation edit

Zimbabwe participates in the following Pan-African and international organisations:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Gloppen, Siri; Hinfelaar, Marja; Rakner, Lise (2023), "Zimbabwe", Democratic Backsliding in Africa?, Oxford University Press, pp. 235–257, doi:10.1093/oso/9780192867322.003.0010, hdl:20.500.12657/60999, ISBN 978-0-19-286732-2
  2. ^ a b c Zimbabwe Moves to Limit Whites' Role : Legislation Prepared to End a Guarantee of Parliament Seats, Los Angeles Times, June 24, 1987.
  3. ^ [1] Archived copy at the Library of Congress (April 14, 2005).
  4. ^ . openDemocracy. 13 October 2005. Archived from the original on 15 January 2012. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
  5. ^ [2] March 22, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ The Constitution of The Republic of Zimbabwe Amendment(No.20) 2013. Zimbabwe: MOJLPA in partnership with ZBCB. 2013. p. 49.
  7. ^ . The Herald (Zimbabwe). 13 February 2009. Archived from the original on 16 February 2009. Retrieved 13 February 2009.
  8. ^ "Zimbabwe's Mugabe Finalizes Constitutional Amendment On Elections"[permanent dead link], Carole Gombakomba, VOA News, November 1, 2007.
  9. ^ "Part X, Section 44". . Zimbabwe Electoral Commission. p. 35. Archived from the original (pdf) on 18 January 2015. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
  10. ^ "3, 4". (PDF). pp. 52–54. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 September 2014.
  11. ^ "Electoral Amendment Act 2014 [Act 6-2014]" (doc). Veritas Zimbabwe. pp. 52–55. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
  12. ^ a b Zharare, Herbert; Kachere, Phyllis. "Malaba appointed Chief Justice | The Herald". www.herald.co.zw. Retrieved 1 April 2017.
  13. ^ "THE LIGHT OF SUCCESSIVE CHIEF JUSTICES OF ZIMBABWE IN SEEKING TO PROTECT HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE RULE OF LAW" (PDF). MIRIAM ROTHSCHILD AND JOHN FOSTER HUMAN RIGHTS TRUST. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  14. ^ "Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa wins re-election after troubled vote". AP News. 26 August 2023.
  15. ^ "Zimbabwe Electoral Commission". Retrieved 26 August 2023.
  16. ^ "Election Dashboard : Live Update Results 23 August 2023". zimbabweelections2023.co.zw. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  17. ^ Banya, Nelson; Chingono, Nyasha (25 August 2023). "Zimbabwe braces for close election as early parliamentary results come in". Reuters. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  18. ^ "Early results suggest closely fought Zimbabwe parliamentary polls". Daily Sabah. 25 August 2023. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  19. ^ "Partial results suggest ZANU-PF's lead as election observers decry 'climate of fear'". SABC News. 25 August 2023. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  20. ^ "ZEC stops Gutu West election after death of retired soldier candidate". Nehanda Radio. 15 July 2023.
  21. ^ "2023 Elections Zimbabwe". Pindula. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  22. ^ Murwira, Zvamaida (26 August 2023). "Zanu PF poised for landslide". The Herald. Retrieved 26 August 2023.
  23. ^ Masau, Problem. "Candidates concede defeat". NewsDay. Retrieved 3 September 2023.
  24. ^ "Zimbabwe Elections 2023 Results: Deputy Minister Raj Modi Loses Parliamentary Seat To CCC's Watson". Pindula. Retrieved 26 August 2023.
  25. ^ Muzavazi, Shakespeare (24 August 2023). "ZANU PF candidate locks borehole after losing to CCC; as Mthuli Ncube loses in Cowdray Park". Zw News Zimbabwe. Retrieved 25 August 2023.

External links edit

politics, zimbabwe, politics, zimbabwe, occurs, society, deeply, divided, along, lines, race, ethnicity, gender, geography, zanu, party, historically, been, dominant, zimbabwe, politics, party, which, robert, mugabe, from, 1980, 2017, used, powers, state, inti. The politics of Zimbabwe occurs in a society deeply divided along lines of race ethnicity gender and geography 1 The ZANU PF party has historically been dominant in Zimbabwe politics 1 The party which was led by Robert Mugabe from 1980 to 2017 has used the powers of the state to intimidate imprison and otherwise hobble political opposition in Zimbabwe as well as use state funds and state media to advance the interests of the party 1 Per the 2013 Constitution Zimbabwe is a full presidential republic whereby the President is the head of state and government Executive power is exercised by the government Legislative power is vested in both the government and parliament The status of Zimbabwean politics has been thrown into question by a 2017 coup Zimbabwe has been undergoing an economic crisis since the late 1990s 1 Contents 1 Political developments since the Lancaster House Agreement 2 Political conditions 3 Government of Zimbabwe 3 1 Executive 3 2 Legislature 3 3 Judiciary 3 4 Provincial governance 4 Political parties and elections 4 1 Presidential elections 4 1 1 Results by province 4 2 House of Assembly elections 4 3 Senate elections 4 3 1 MPs who lost their seats 5 International organization participation 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPolitical developments since the Lancaster House Agreement editThe Zimbabwean Constitution initially from the Lancaster House Agreement a few months before the 1980 elections chaired by Lord Carrington institutionalises majority rule and protection of minority rights Since independence the Constitution has been amended by the government to provide for The abolition of seats reserved for whites in the country s parliament in 1987 2 The abolition of the office of prime minister in 1987 and the creation of an executive presidency 2 The office was restored in 2009 and abolished again in 2013 The abolition of the Senate in 1990 reintroduced in 2005 and the creation of appointed seats in the House of Assembly 2 The elected government controls senior appointments in the public service including the military and police and ensures that appointments at lower levels are made on an equitable basis by the independent Public Service Commission ZANU PF leader Robert Mugabe elected prime minister in 1980 revised the constitution in 1987 to make himself president President Mugabe s affiliated party won every election from independence on April 18 1980 until it lost the parliamentary elections in March 2008 to the Movement for Democratic Change In some quarters corruption and rigging elections have been alleged In particular the elections of 1990 were nationally and internationally condemned as being rigged with the second placed party Edgar Tekere s Zimbabwe Unity Movement winning only 20 of the vote Presidential elections were held in 2002 amid allegations of vote rigging intimidation and fraud and again in March 2008 Ethnic rivalry between the Shona and Ndebele has played a large part in Zimbabwe s politics a consequence of the country s borders defined by its British colonial rulers This continued after independence in 1980 during the Gukurahundi ethnic cleansing liberation wars in Matabeleland in the 1980s This led to the political merger of Joshua Nkomo s Zimbabwe African People s Union ZAPU with the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union ZANU to form ZANU PF and the appointment of Nkomo as vice president During 2005 with Mugabe s future in question factionalism within the Shona has increased 3 In October 2005 it was alleged that members of the ruling ZANU PF and the opposition MDC had held secret meetings in London and Washington to discuss plans for a new Zimbabwe after Robert Mugabe 4 On February 6 2007 Mugabe orchestrated a Cabinet reshuffle ousting ministers including 5 year veteran Minister of Finance Herbert Murerwa Political conditions editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Since the defeat of the constitutional referendum in 2000 politics in Zimbabwe has been marked by a move from the norms of democratic governance such as democratic elections the independence of the judiciary the rule of law freedom from racial discrimination the existence of independent media civil society and academia citation needed Recent years have seen widespread violations of human rights Elections have been marked by political violence and intimidation along with the politicisation of the judiciary military police force and public services 5 Statements by the President and government politicians have referred to a state of war or Chimurenga against the opposition political parties in particular the Movement for Democratic Change Tsvangirai MDC T Newspapers not aligned with the government have been closed down and members of the judiciary have been threatened and or arrested Repressive laws aimed at preventing freedoms of speech assembly and association have been implemented and subjectively enforced Members of the opposition are routinely arrested and harassed with some subjected to torture or sentenced to jail The legal system has come under increasing threat The MDC has repeatedly attempted to use the legal system to challenge the ruling ZANU PF but the rulings often in favour of the MDC have not been taken into account by the police citation needed Government of Zimbabwe editPolitical power in Zimbabwe is split between three branches the executive the legislative and the judicial branches with the President as the head of the executive branch the Prime Minister the head of the legislative branch and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe the head of the judicial branch Executive edit Under the present Zimbabwean Constitution the President s powers can be grouped roughly into the following categories Power over the Legislature namely the power to summon adjourn and dissolve Parliament and the power to appoint members of Parliament Power over the Judiciary namely the power to appoint judges and other members of the judiciary Power to appoint members of the Executive namely Cabinet Ministers and administrative officers such as public servants Power to appoint ambassadors and members of constitutional Commissions Power over the security forces namely the Defence Forces and the Police Legislative power namely the power to enact legislation Power to declare war and make peace Miscellaneous powers such as the exercise of the prerogative of mercy and the power to confer honours and precedence The grant of a pardon or respite from execution of sentence or the substitution or suspension of a sentence must be published in the Gazette 6 Main office holders Office Name Party Since President Emmerson Mnangagwa ZANU PF 24 November 2017 Vice President Constantino Chiwenga ZANU PF 28 December 2017 Under Zimbabwe s Constitution the president is the head of state government and commander in chief of the defense forces elected by popular majority vote Prior to 2013 the president was elected for a 6 year term with no term limits The new constitution approved in the 2013 constitutional referendum limits the president to two 5 year terms but this does not take effect retrospectively Robert Mugabe had held the office from 1987 to 2017 The Cabinet is appointed by the president and responsible to the House of Assembly The Minister of State for Presidential Affairs is a non cabinet ministerial position in the government of Zimbabwe The incumbent is Didymus Mutasa 7 The duties of the position have yet to be publicly defined Legislature edit nbsp Parliament of Zimbabwe in Harare Parliament consists of the House of Assembly and since 2005 the Senate which had previously been abolished in 1990 The House of Assembly has 210 members elected by universal suffrage including the Speaker and the Attorney General and may serve for a maximum of five years 8 Under the 2013 constitution the Senate consists of 80 members of whom 60 are elected for five year terms in 6 member constituencies representing one of the 10 provinces elected based on the votes in the lower house election using party list proportional representation distributed using the hare quota Additionally the Senate consists of 2 seats for each non metropolitan district of Zimbabwe elected by each provincial assembly of chiefs using SNTV 9 1 seat each for the president and deputy president of the National Council of Chiefs and 1 male and 1 female seat for people with disabilities elected on separate ballots using FPTP by an electoral college designated by the National Disability Board 10 11 Judiciary edit The judiciary is headed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe who like their contemporaries is appointed by the President on the advice of the Judicial Service Commission The Constitution has a Bill of Rights containing extensive protection of human rights The Bill of Rights could not be amended for the first 10 years of independence except by unanimous vote of Parliament The Supreme Court is the highest court of order and the final court of appeal The Chief Justice is the senior judge Others who sit on the bench of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe are Justice Paddington Garwe former Judge President of the High Court Wilson Sandura and Vernanda Ziyambi Luke Malaba a former justice of the Supreme Court was appointed acting chief justice on 1 March 2017 following the retirement of Chief Justice Godfrey Chidyausiku Malaba was promoted to chief justice on 28 March 12 The legal system is based on Roman Dutch law with South African influences A five member Supreme Court headed by the Chief Justice has original jurisdiction over alleged violations of fundamental rights guaranteed in the constitution and appellate jurisdiction over other matters There is a High Court consisting of general and appellate divisions Below the High Court are regional magistrate s courts with civil jurisdiction and magistrate s courts with both civil and criminal jurisdiction over cases involving traditional law and custom Beginning in 1981 these courts were integrated into the national system List of chief justices of Zimbabwe Incumbent Tenure Notes Took office Left office Hector Norman MacDonald 1977 May 1980 Appointed by Ian Smith Rhodesia under UDI Sir John Fieldsend 13 1 July 1980 1983 Enoch Dumbutshena February 1984 1990 Anthony Gubbay 1990 2001 Godfrey Chidyausiku 2001 2017 Luke Malaba 12 2017 present Provincial governance edit This section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message Main articles Provinces of Zimbabwe Districts of ZimbabweZimbabwe is divided into eight provinces each administered by a provincial governor appointed by the President The provincial governor is assisted by the provincial administrator and representatives of several service ministries The provinces are further divided into 63 districts Provinces are constituent political entities of Zimbabwe Zimbabwe currently has ten provinces two of which are cities with provincial status Zimbabwe is a unitary state and its provinces exercise only the powers that the central government chooses to delegate Provinces are divided into districts which are divided into wards The Constitution of Zimbabwe delineates provincial governance and powers After constitutional amendments in 1988 provinces were administered by a governor directly appointed by the President of Zimbabwe 1 Since the 2013 constitutional changes there are technically no longer provincial governors though in practice they remain in place as Ministers of State for Provincial Affairs The 2013 Constitution also calls for the devolution of governmental powers and responsibilities where appropriate though Zimbabwean opposition parties argue that the central government has yet to comply 2 With the establishment of Company rule in Rhodesia in the 1890s the country was divided into two provinces Matabeleland in the west and Mashonaland in the east Under British colonial rule as Southern Rhodesia the colony was divided into five provinces Later the Rhodesian government expanded the number of provinces to seven Manicaland Matabeleland North and South Mashonaland North and South Midlands and Victoria today Masvingo 3 In the 1980s Mashonaland North and South became three provincesThe youngest provinces Bulawayo and Harare were created in 1997 Political parties and elections editMain articles List of political parties in Zimbabwe and Elections in Zimbabwe Presidential elections edit Main article 2023 Zimbabwean general election Mnangagwa was re elected president 14 CandidatePartyVotes Emmerson MnangagwaZANU PF2 350 71152 60Nelson ChamisaCitizens Coalition for Change1 967 34344 03Wilbert MubaiwaNational People s Congress53 5171 20Douglas MwonzoraMovement for Democratic Change Tsvangirai28 8830 65Joseph Makamba BushaFreeZim Congress18 8160 42Blessing KasiyamhuruZimbabwe Partnership for Prosperity13 0600 29Tapiwa Trust ChikohoraZimbabwe Coalition for Peace and Development Party10 2300 23Gwinyai Henry MuzorewaUnited African National Council7 0530 16Elisabeth ValerioUnited Zimbabwe Alliance6 9890 16Harry Peter WilsonDemocratic Opposition Party6 7430 15Lovemore MadhukuNational Constitutional Assembly5 3230 12Total4 468 668100 00Valid votes4 468 66897 97Invalid blank votes92 5532 03Total votes4 561 221100 00Registered voters turnout6 623 51168 86Source Zimbabwe Electoral Commission ZEC Results by province edit Results by Province 15 Province Joseph Makamba Busha Nelson Chamisa Tapiwa Trust Chikohora Blessing Kasiyamhuru Lovemore Madhuku Emmerson Mnangagwa Wilbert Mubaiwa Gwinyai Henry Muzorewa Douglas Mwonzora Elisabeth Valerio Harry Peter Wilson Total Votes Rejected Total Votes Cast Total Valid Votes Cast Voter Population Voter Turnout FreeZim Congress CCC ZCPD ZIPP NCA ZANU PF NPC UANC MDC T UZA DOP Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Bulawayo 437 0 26 131 037 78 52 306 0 18 255 0 15 129 0 08 31 053 18 61 1 389 0 83 230 0 14 1 004 0 60 803 0 48 249 0 15 2 040 1 21 168 932 166 892 287 352 58 79 Harare 1 236 0 17 517 494 71 46 778 0 11 804 0 11 543 0 07 193 881 26 77 4 958 0 68 470 0 06 2 337 0 32 1 365 0 19 325 0 04 10 071 1 37 734 262 724 191 1 084 601 67 70 Manicaland 2 496 0 45 240 672 43 47 1 547 0 28 1 814 0 33 1 074 0 19 290 960 52 56 8 588 1 55 993 0 18 3 891 0 70 713 0 13 877 0 16 11 354 2 01 564 979 553 625 829 324 68 13 Mashonaland Central 2 089 0 44 95 508 19 97 785 0 16 1 289 0 27 455 0 10 370 175 77 41 4 058 0 85 586 0 12 2 280 0 48 358 0 07 648 0 14 9 200 1 89 487 431 478 231 625 968 77 87 Mashonaland East 1 435 0 26 184 827 33 51 892 0 16 914 0 17 415 0 08 354 081 64 20 5 101 0 92 671 0 12 2 178 0 39 435 0 08 563 0 10 10 694 1 90 562 206 551 512 773 281 72 70 Mashonaland West 2 579 0 47 209 744 38 10 1 165 0 21 1 667 0 30 529 0 10 323 523 58 77 5 664 1 03 825 0 15 3 157 0 57 757 0 14 887 0 16 13 931 2 47 564 428 550 497 785 583 71 85 Masvingo 2 634 0 53 167 813 33 96 1 454 0 29 2 240 0 45 637 0 13 307 383 62 21 6 798 1 38 908 0 18 2 825 0 57 540 0 11 896 0 18 11 087 2 19 505 215 494 128 723 934 69 79 Matabeleland North 1 425 0 65 111 609 51 03 955 0 44 1 060 0 48 489 0 22 91 306 41 74 5 356 2 45 751 0 34 4 249 1 94 826 0 38 703 0 32 6 594 2 93 225 323 218 729 371 701 60 62 Matabeleland South 1 331 0 76 80 365 45 89 970 0 55 1 035 0 59 416 0 24 82 511 47 12 3 997 2 28 702 0 40 2 673 1 53 503 0 29 612 0 35 4 772 2 65 179 887 175 115 300 768 59 81 Midlands 3 154 0 57 228 274 41 08 1 378 0 25 1 982 0 36 636 0 11 305 838 55 03 7 608 1 37 917 0 17 4 289 0 77 689 0 12 983 0 18 12 810 2 25 568 558 555 748 840 999 67 61 National Total 18 816 0 42 1 967 343 44 03 10 230 0 23 13 060 0 29 5 323 0 12 2 350 711 52 60 53 517 1 20 7 053 0 16 28 883 0 65 6 989 0 16 6 743 0 15 92 553 2 03 4 561 221 4 468 668 6 623 511 68 86 House of Assembly elections edit Main article 2023 Zimbabwean general election The National Assembly has 210 single member constituencies the results of which are shown below 16 The remaining 70 seats comprises 60 seats which are reserved for women six seats in each province and 10 seats for youth one seat in each province which are filled based on the votes in the single member constituencies using party list proportional representation distributed using the largest remainder method and the Hare quota On election day itself ZANU PF won 136 seats and the CCC 73 with ZANU PF retaining its rural base and the CCC capturing the urban vote 17 18 19 Voting in the Gutu West constituency was postponed to 11 November after one of the candidates died shortly before the elections 20 Following the parliamentary election in Gutu West 65 24 of the constituency seats went to ZANU PF and 34 76 of the constituency seats went to the CCC 21 nbsp PartyVotes SeatsCommonWomenYouthTotal ZANU PF2 515 60756 18137337177 2Citizens Coalition for Change1 856 39341 4673273103NewMovement for Democratic Change Tsvangirai15 3070 340000 88Zimbabwe African People s Union10 8570 2400000United Zimbabwe Alliance4 9370 110000NewNational Constitutional Assembly2 4620 0500000Democratic Opposition Party2 1050 050000NewFreeZim Congress1 9260 0400000Democratic Union of Zimbabwe1 8810 0400000Mthwakazi Republic Party1 6410 0400000Zimbabwe National Revival Party1 2710 030000NewZimbabwe African National Congress6280 010000NewUnited African National Council5740 0100000Zimbabwe Coalition for Peace and Development Party4340 010000NewNational People s Congress2970 010000NewEconomic Freedom Fighters2860 010000NewUnited Freedom Party1870 000000NewFreedom Alliance1480 000000NewIndependents60 4451 350000 1Total4 477 386100 002106010280 10Source Zimbabwe Electoral Commission Zimbabwe Elections Senate elections edit Main article 2023 Zimbabwean general election nbsp PartySeats ZANU PF33 1Citizens Coalition for Change27NewChiefs180Persons with disabilities20Total800Source Zimbabwe Electoral Commission MPs who lost their seats edit Defeated Party Constituency Defeated by Party Starman Chamisa 22 Citizens Coalition for Change Mbare Martin Matinyanya ZANU PF Temba Mliswa 23 Independent Norton Richard Tsvangirai Citizens Coalition for Change Raj Modi 24 ZANU PF Bulawayo South Nicola Watson Citizens Coalition for Change Mthuli Ncube 25 ZANU PF Cowdray Park Pashor Raphael Sibanda Citizens Coalition for ChangeInternational organization participation editZimbabwe participates in the following Pan African and international organisations ACP AfDB Commonwealth of Nations formerly from 1980 to 2003 ECA FAO G 15 G 77 IAEA IBRD ICAO ICCt signatory ICFTU ICRM IDA IFAD IFC IFRCS ILO IMF Interpol IOC IOM ISO ITU NAM OAU OPCW PCA PMAESA SADC United Nations UNCTAD UNESCO UNIDO UNMIK UPU WCL WCO WFTU WHO WIPO WMO WToO WTrOSee also editEducation in Zimbabwe Political history of Zimbabwe Politics of RhodesiaReferences edit a b c d Gloppen Siri Hinfelaar Marja Rakner Lise 2023 Zimbabwe Democratic Backsliding in Africa Oxford University Press pp 235 257 doi 10 1093 oso 9780192867322 003 0010 hdl 20 500 12657 60999 ISBN 978 0 19 286732 2 a b c Zimbabwe Moves to Limit Whites Role Legislation Prepared to End a Guarantee of Parliament Seats Los Angeles Times June 24 1987 1 Archived copy at the Library of Congress April 14 2005 The end of Mugabe openDemocracy 13 October 2005 Archived from the original on 15 January 2012 Retrieved 31 December 2011 2 Archived March 22 2006 at the Wayback Machine The Constitution of The Republic of Zimbabwe Amendment No 20 2013 Zimbabwe MOJLPA in partnership with ZBCB 2013 p 49 New Cabinet appointed The Herald Zimbabwe 13 February 2009 Archived from the original on 16 February 2009 Retrieved 13 February 2009 Zimbabwe s Mugabe Finalizes Constitutional Amendment On Elections permanent dead link Carole Gombakomba VOA News November 1 2007 Part X Section 44 ELECTORAL ACT Zimbabwe Electoral Commission p 35 Archived from the original pdf on 18 January 2015 Retrieved 18 January 2015 3 4 Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment No 20 PDF pp 52 54 Archived from the original PDF on 10 September 2014 Electoral Amendment Act 2014 Act 6 2014 doc Veritas Zimbabwe pp 52 55 Retrieved 18 January 2015 a b Zharare Herbert Kachere Phyllis Malaba appointed Chief Justice The Herald www herald co zw Retrieved 1 April 2017 THE LIGHT OF SUCCESSIVE CHIEF JUSTICES OF ZIMBABWE IN SEEKING TO PROTECT HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE RULE OF LAW PDF MIRIAM ROTHSCHILD AND JOHN FOSTER HUMAN RIGHTS TRUST Retrieved 26 February 2016 Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa wins re election after troubled vote AP News 26 August 2023 Zimbabwe Electoral Commission Retrieved 26 August 2023 Election Dashboard Live Update Results 23 August 2023 zimbabweelections2023 co zw Retrieved 29 August 2023 Banya Nelson Chingono Nyasha 25 August 2023 Zimbabwe braces for close election as early parliamentary results come in Reuters Retrieved 25 August 2023 Early results suggest closely fought Zimbabwe parliamentary polls Daily Sabah 25 August 2023 Retrieved 25 August 2023 Partial results suggest ZANU PF s lead as election observers decry climate of fear SABC News 25 August 2023 Retrieved 25 August 2023 ZEC stops Gutu West election after death of retired soldier candidate Nehanda Radio 15 July 2023 2023 Elections Zimbabwe Pindula Retrieved 31 August 2023 Murwira Zvamaida 26 August 2023 Zanu PF poised for landslide The Herald Retrieved 26 August 2023 Masau Problem Candidates concede defeat NewsDay Retrieved 3 September 2023 Zimbabwe Elections 2023 Results Deputy Minister Raj Modi Loses Parliamentary Seat To CCC s Watson Pindula Retrieved 26 August 2023 Muzavazi Shakespeare 24 August 2023 ZANU PF candidate locks borehole after losing to CCC as Mthuli Ncube loses in Cowdray Park Zw News Zimbabwe Retrieved 25 August 2023 External links editZimbabwe Government at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Politics of Zimbabwe amp oldid 1220969653 Government of Zimbabwe, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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