News / Local
Tsvangirai, Mujuru plot coalition
10 Sep 2015 at 02:01hrs | Views
Former Vice-President Joice Mujuru and MDC-T leader Morgan Tsvangirai are ready to coalesce, as the political temperature in the country soars ahead of the 2018 elections, NewsDay reported.
"We are ready to help each other restore our country to its glory days; we believe that every person has a task to solve the crisis we find ourselves in,"
Mujuru's re-entry into the political scene is nigh and the People First (PF) movement on Wednesday said she was ready to work with any "democratic Zimbabwean", including Tsvangirai, to dislodge Zanu PF.
PF spokesman Rugare Gumbo said last night. "We regard every democratic Zimbabwean has a right to participate in our democratic development."
The coalition between Mujuru and Tsvangirai is gaining momentum after National Convergence Platform (NCP) spokesman Vince Musewe hinted that they would prefer the two politicians' alliance. The NCP, which seeks to bring all parties
and civic society actors together on September 24, could likely become the catalyst for the alliance.
"Mujuru would bring her liberation credentials, while Tsvangirai will come on board with his numbers of supporters,"Musewe said.
"Mujuru, too, has government institutional memory, which is needed, and stability, but we also need other parties
to come together and sit down for a better Zimbabwe."
Musewe last week also said: "A coalition movement led by Mujuru and Tsvangirai will work to get us out of a dictatorship", an indication that this was a matter that had been considered over a long period.
Mujuru, several Cabinet ministers and senior party officials were recently expelled from Zanu PF charged with
plotting Mugabe's ouster through clandestine means.
MDC-T spokesperson Obert Gutu said his party was ready to work with the Mujuru camp, as they carried "the much-needed liberation credentials that we need as a country and have now realised that in Zanu PF, there is nothing to live for".
"We would like to make it known that as a party, we are happy that some former liberation stalwarts have seen the
light and are now speaking the language of democracy," Gutu said.
"As a party, we are ready and open for any dialogue with people who share with us the same beliefs and understanding so that we could help Zimbabwe come out of the current catastrophe which we have been plunged into
by Zanu PF."
The former Vice-President's political roadmap included property rights, review of the land reform programme,
a repeal of stringent media laws and an amendment to the indigenisation laws and a Diaspora vote, among other
things.
Research and Advocacy Unit official Dereck Matyszak said Mujuru had, through her manifesto, effectively laid
down a good platform for a coalition, but this could be undone by "egos".
"The fact that Mujuru's manifesto is clearly a checklist of the demands of the opposition in the past 15 years makes it easier to form a coalition," Matyszak said.
"But the antipathy between Tsvangirai and other opposition formations makes it highly unlikely. It is difficult to
come to a convergence given the fact that Tsvangirai, as with Mugabe in Zanu PF, has become a stumbling block to the democratic movement. The issue is he believes he has the masses behind him, but the reality on the ground and his belief are two differing things."
University of Zimbabwe lecturer and political analyst Eldred Masunungure said for the coalition to work, it would
need political leaders to change tack.
"Political egos are the anti-thesis to a coalition. It depends on whether Mujuru, Tsvangirai and the other opposition leaders are willing to swallow their collective egos for the greater good of the country," Masunungure said.
"The question is on whether they see the greater picture beyond their own political ambitions. Unless there are
fundamental shifts in the psychological and behavioural set-up within the leadership of the opposition, I am not optimistic.
"Singularly, it is impossible to dislodge Zanu PF and the imperative is for these parties to come together, but the
probability is low."
Masunungure gave an example of the stillborn moves to unite by former Cabinet ministers Tendai Biti of the
MDC-Renewal and Welshman Ncube of the MDC as an indicator of how difficult it is for Zimbabwean opposition leaders
to form a coalition.
"The Biti-Ncube attempt is dead in the water and there are lessons to be learnt from that and other coalitions in
Africa, where they have been successful.
We could take a leaf out of the Kenyan, Nigerian and lately Tanzanian examples," he said.
"We are ready to help each other restore our country to its glory days; we believe that every person has a task to solve the crisis we find ourselves in,"
Mujuru's re-entry into the political scene is nigh and the People First (PF) movement on Wednesday said she was ready to work with any "democratic Zimbabwean", including Tsvangirai, to dislodge Zanu PF.
PF spokesman Rugare Gumbo said last night. "We regard every democratic Zimbabwean has a right to participate in our democratic development."
The coalition between Mujuru and Tsvangirai is gaining momentum after National Convergence Platform (NCP) spokesman Vince Musewe hinted that they would prefer the two politicians' alliance. The NCP, which seeks to bring all parties
and civic society actors together on September 24, could likely become the catalyst for the alliance.
"Mujuru would bring her liberation credentials, while Tsvangirai will come on board with his numbers of supporters,"Musewe said.
"Mujuru, too, has government institutional memory, which is needed, and stability, but we also need other parties
to come together and sit down for a better Zimbabwe."
Musewe last week also said: "A coalition movement led by Mujuru and Tsvangirai will work to get us out of a dictatorship", an indication that this was a matter that had been considered over a long period.
Mujuru, several Cabinet ministers and senior party officials were recently expelled from Zanu PF charged with
plotting Mugabe's ouster through clandestine means.
MDC-T spokesperson Obert Gutu said his party was ready to work with the Mujuru camp, as they carried "the much-needed liberation credentials that we need as a country and have now realised that in Zanu PF, there is nothing to live for".
"We would like to make it known that as a party, we are happy that some former liberation stalwarts have seen the
light and are now speaking the language of democracy," Gutu said.
by Zanu PF."
The former Vice-President's political roadmap included property rights, review of the land reform programme,
a repeal of stringent media laws and an amendment to the indigenisation laws and a Diaspora vote, among other
things.
Research and Advocacy Unit official Dereck Matyszak said Mujuru had, through her manifesto, effectively laid
down a good platform for a coalition, but this could be undone by "egos".
"The fact that Mujuru's manifesto is clearly a checklist of the demands of the opposition in the past 15 years makes it easier to form a coalition," Matyszak said.
"But the antipathy between Tsvangirai and other opposition formations makes it highly unlikely. It is difficult to
come to a convergence given the fact that Tsvangirai, as with Mugabe in Zanu PF, has become a stumbling block to the democratic movement. The issue is he believes he has the masses behind him, but the reality on the ground and his belief are two differing things."
University of Zimbabwe lecturer and political analyst Eldred Masunungure said for the coalition to work, it would
need political leaders to change tack.
"Political egos are the anti-thesis to a coalition. It depends on whether Mujuru, Tsvangirai and the other opposition leaders are willing to swallow their collective egos for the greater good of the country," Masunungure said.
"The question is on whether they see the greater picture beyond their own political ambitions. Unless there are
fundamental shifts in the psychological and behavioural set-up within the leadership of the opposition, I am not optimistic.
"Singularly, it is impossible to dislodge Zanu PF and the imperative is for these parties to come together, but the
probability is low."
Masunungure gave an example of the stillborn moves to unite by former Cabinet ministers Tendai Biti of the
MDC-Renewal and Welshman Ncube of the MDC as an indicator of how difficult it is for Zimbabwean opposition leaders
to form a coalition.
"The Biti-Ncube attempt is dead in the water and there are lessons to be learnt from that and other coalitions in
Africa, where they have been successful.
We could take a leaf out of the Kenyan, Nigerian and lately Tanzanian examples," he said.
Source - newsday