If one expected the mainstream media to go apoplectic with this
officially announced statistic, it didn’t happen. Across the state
and the private media in Zimbabwe. At least in the immediacy of
Justice Chigumba’s statement.
Social media on the other hand went slightly haywire. And
this is particularly with reference to users sympathetic to the mainstream opposition MDC-T and its informal offshoot, the MDC Alliance. They expressed their optimism in lieu of the new
ascendancy, controversial as it may seem , of one of the appointed acting
presidents of the same party, Nelson Chamisa.
The ruling Zanu Pf side of social media was understandably
somewhat muted. Probably because shooting from the hip about age and
political capacity may be a slightly vulnerable point for them. At
least on social media.
In both respects, and no matter how much raving, ranting or
muting that may occur on social media platforms, I am certain that the main
political parties that will contest the 2018 harmonised elections, should they
be serious about their political ambitions, are probably frenetically crunching
the electoral numbers. And this should be in at least three
respects.
Firstly, they need to crosscheck their own numbers
(membership lists and so on) against those that the biometric voter
registration process has produced so far. That is to say, on their
membership and supporter estimates, how many young people of the same did they
get to finally become registered voters? In this they must then cross check
their own figures with those of ZEC. By polling station, ward,
district, province.
Then after putting together their figures and
again, by way of the mathematical calculus that is ‘probability’, measure the
likely voter turnout in what they perceive to be their respective
strongholds. And after such a serious process, work on the figures they
perceive they do not have in areas that they know are not their traditional
strongholds.
I know its a hard ask especially of a divided but more
significantly deliberately repressed Zimbabwean political
opposition. Whether it be in the form of newfound attempts at an
‘Alliance’ or as various splinter or new parties.
For the ruling Zanu Pf party, it’s an easier
ask. Mainly because it is a ruling party, an
incumbent. Even after a ‘coup-not- a –coup’ in November
2017. It however has to contend with queries as to who mobilized the
voter registration process in its own rural strongholds. And whether it can
claim these new registered young voters did so as mobilised by the party or as
a result of its own factionalism. And in the latter, which faction in or out of
power can persuade them to vote for the party in its own perceived traditional
strongholds.
The second key consideration for political parties in the
2018 harmonised election is the fact that they have to think about the social
aspects of the 60% young voter demographic. Who exactly are these young
people? What do they do? Where and why? What is their gender?Where they understand this, they then fashion out policies that relate to solving problems that these young voters face in aide of giving democratic value to their campaign requests for support from these young voters.
Should the political parties hunker down to these key questions, they will
find that a majority of young Zimbabweans are looking to
survive. Not only by way of subsistence (vendors, kombi drivers) but
on a more ambitious, desired lifestyle basis (money-changers, car-dealers,
informal wholesale suppliers, tobacco farmers, ranchers, urban transport/kombi
owners). In their wildest dreams they want the materialistic lifestyle that
benefactors can offer them.
Or they want to be left in political
patronage ‘peace’ to get there via the many patronage, religious and other
networks that they are invariably part of.
The third and final consideration is that of not forgetting the 40% by
ostracising it in favour of the young voter.
This is particularly because in most instances the 40% remains decisive
in ‘political’ opinion leadership and where it concerns the rural vote is in
the great majority of socio-economic leadership positions (chiefs, headmen,
teachers, businessmen, and clergy). But more importantly, there is no single political
party that can win a majority of the 60% young voters. They will require significant
chunks of both the 40% and 60% to win the presidency and have a majority in
parliament.
And even if ZEC’s final figures reduce the proportion of
young voters to older ones, it will not be far from its initial registered young voters count of 60%. Given our political
realities that 60% alone will not win it for a singular party. But any serious political
party will know that it has its work cut out to get a majority of these
registered young voters on their side.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)