By Takura Zhangazha*
One hot afternoon at the University of Zimbabwe, we were in
a tutorial for a course called Development Administration. The technical aspects of the course combined
with the weather made the mood rather snoozy until one of our classmates
suddenly said, " Let me catapult this discussion to a higher level". We all burst out in laughter. Not only at the oddity of the statement but
because perhaps he did indeed have a ‘higher’ angle to whatever technical questions
about rural development we were discussing.
It turned out that he didn’t quite change the mood. Though every time we meet with former
classmates who were present on that day, we sometimes have hearty laughs about
the incident.
I have given this anecdotal example mainly because I would
like to discuss the nature, intent and assumed levels of political discourse in
Zimbabwe. I however do not intend to
claim that I can ‘catapult it’ to any other levels.
What is however apparent is that there are a number of
perspectives of how political debate is being shaped in contemporary
Zimbabwe. These are based mainly on personal
political persuasions which also inform general social media banter. In rare instances, they are based on either
factual or academic analysis but again even these angles cannot escape some
forms of bias. Even if they are purveyed
via mainstream media outlets which also remain politically polarized.
A general overview of how our political discourse is now
being shaped points to at least three angles.
These are namely the ‘emotional or populist’ angle, the ‘proof of
loyalty’ angle and the ‘default ideological’ angle.
I will start by analyzing the most ubiquitous one which is
that of the emotional/populist approach to debates. Over the last twenty years our national
politics has been binary mainly due to the two main antagonistic political
parties in the form of Zanu PF and the mainstream opposition MDCs. In this, our
political culture has become characterized by a strident form of populism either
side of the political divide. Including populist
accusations and counter accusations by either party as to their true character and
meaning in our national politics. Moreover,
due to the occurrence of disputed elections and in the majority of electoral campaigns’
since 2000 high levels of politically motivated violence, many Zimbabweans who experienced
the latter are extremely emotional about their political opinions and those
they support. Especially if they are opposition
political party supporters. They will
never accept Zanu Pf as a ruling party in their debates and continue to assume
that at some point they will eventually come to power. Neither will ardent Zanu Pf supporters who
either have benefitted from the radical land reform programme (both urban and
rural) or fought in the liberation struggle accept opposition rule. Even after Mugabe was removed from
power.
This brings us to the second element of our discourse angles
which is closely linked to the first.
This being that of debate as proof of loyalty. There are many instances
where there is no point to actually engage in what would be objective
argumentation with influential individuals.
Mainly because there is always a patent desire on their part to
demonstrate a specific loyalty to their party of choice. Even where and when
facts point to a different perspective.
While this is not preferable in our context it regrettably remains
somewhat understandable. This is how we
sort of are. For now. It’s a combination
of stubborn loyalty and in part semi-religious fervor that shapes the discourse
in this particular direction. Including
assumptions of self-righteousness in our politics. Whichever way you want to
look at.
The third strand of political debate in Zimbabwe is the default
ideological one. Whatever polarizes our
political debate, whichever political opinion that many people hold, there is
always a default acceptance of neoliberalism as some sort of shared panacea to
our country’s problems. I personally am
not a neoliberal ideologue but the dominance of materialism and assumptions of
the free market or private capital as being a sign of political progress in our
political debates is something that cannot be wished away. This means that there are no fundamental
disagreements in mainstream political discourse. It is mainly a question of who is personally
preferably in power. Not necessarily
what they can change from an ideological viewpoint. So we are at a place where there is quite
literally limited counter-hegemonic debate mainly because we have highly personalized
what we consider political struggles and even what can be considered political
progress.
As a final and relatively abstract point, we may need to
enquire how contemporary political debate in Zimbabwe remains encapsulated in relatively
egocentric narratives. That it rarely transcends
the immediate and the material. Almost
as though it were being done for an external gallery/audience before it is
about the people of Zimbabwe.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
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