CCC: Citizens at the Center?
On 24 January 2022, Nelson Chamisa launched a new political party, the Citizen Coalition for Change (CCC). This also signaled the demise of the MDC Alliance Party, a short lived stand-alone formation which existed following the 2018 elections and distinct from the 2018 coalition of seven parties. The main ideology of CCC was presented as re-centering the citizen in policy and decision making. This announcement, laden with claims of a people-centred revival within the main opposition party, was paradoxical in several ways, raising fundamental questions over the nature and purpose of political parties.
Political parties generally have a space for citizens in the form of their members. That membership is the highest voice in the political organization. It constitutes the party (party formation) can reconstitute it (constitutional amendment) and even terminate it (party dissolution). The members choose party leaders who remain subject to the membership’s ultimate authority. This explains why the most fundamental issues are reserved for party members as represented at congress, the supreme and most representative organ of any party.
Consider article 19 of the MDC Constitution for comparison. This is the contested document which applied to the MDC Alliance until they claimed to be a stand-alone party. According to that document, dissolution of the party is moved by one third of congress attendees/two thirds of provincial executive committees and adopted by three quarters of the total congress membership. It is not an announcement made during a press conference following consultations. There are procedural hurdles and a high level of demonstrable consensus commensurate with the objective of keeping party actions consistent with the majoritarian voice of its membership. Further, article 19 states that in the event of dissolution, any assets will be disposed to a charitable cause chosen by the National Council and shall not benefit any member. In other words, the constitution provides for the procedure and consequences of dissolution.
The current scenario is somewhat bizarre. The institutional pillars which give a voice to the people (congress and the constitution) have been side-lined in the process of claiming a re-centering of the citizen. Not only has an entire party been dissolved with neither congressional approval nor constitutional reference – but a new party has been formed with no popular acclamation through congressional process. Often, party congresses endorse actions taken by party leadership in hindsight, but there seems no desire for this eventuality. This is reminiscent of the chaotic manner in which the transition from the Tsvangirai era was handled. There is no congressional process, no explanation regarding assets on the party books and no reference whatsoever to the MDC Alliance Party Constitution. In fact, the party constitution has become an almost mythical document; not produced in court process and efficiently hidden from the public eye, forever shielded from contestation and public reflection.
There are many ways of centering the citizen including increasing the scope of congressional power and making party organs more inclusive and representative. A press conference in which political leaders take centre stage and announce that citizens will be at the center seems both ironic and counter-intuitive. This is made worse by the impression that the new party is modeled singularly around the person of Nelson Chamisa and his social media hashtags.
Many are not bothered by this minutiae and would rather embrace a political identity distinct from that of Douglas Mwonzora in order to reap an electoral dividend as the by-elections draw closer. However, some of us believe political parties are the great laboratories of our democracy, with party behaviour foreshadowing governmental practice and national culture. Constitutional misfeasance is the gateway to democratic backsliding and institutional capture. Thus, we are left with the following unresolved questions:
1) What was the provision for party dissolution in the MDC Alliance Party Constitution?
a) Could it be done by mere press conference (even after consultations)?
2) What is the provision for party formation in the CCC Party Constitution?
a) Can it be done by mere press conference (even after consultations)?
If the answer to either is affirmative, then a significant deficit in citizen participation already exists. If the answer is negative, we could be in yet another legal quagmire. It is a grave matter when the scepter of personalized parties and big-man politics usurps the role of, and sells itself as, a broad citizen coalition. There is an ever diminishing reference to constitutional text, congressional approval and party procedure which redounds to an increased role for political leaders; claims of a people-centered revival notwithstanding. Eerily, the leader’s press conference is being treated as more constitutive than the people’s congress. Trust in an individual's proclamation can never substitute the institutional voice of the people themselves. Thus, calls for the citizen to be at the center will ring hollow unless the foundational documents of the CCC constrain its leaders and strengthen the role of institutional structure, constitutional conformity and democratic accountability.
Incisive
ReplyDeleteThank you so much
DeleteThe most common of sense! Indeed a disorganised experiment yields no outcome/results! The cult of personality politics and one-upmanship in full glare!
DeleteBut the mdc is not dissolved its still running under Mwonzora. I beg to differ from what you are saying
DeleteRe-read
DeleteU are factual but you seem to miss the true facts that these guys are operating on very volatile ground. The aim of what Mwonzora was or is doing is to divide votes. It does not need analysis from a university graduate to see that there is fowl play and acts of sabotaging of one particular party. Why would an opposition fight another. Intelligence would not allow someone to act recklessly hence the swiftness in the formations and consultation. Logical approaches dont apply at all times. No constitution was breached ref to SC judgement for further info sir.
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brilliant and factual as usual!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much
DeleteGood points.
DeleteAikazve inga your wrote articles wani before explaining that mdc alliance was not a political party? Nhasi zvaita sei futi zvaamukti they should dissolve mdc alliance before forming something else....kkkk ayaaas!
ReplyDeleteYou did not understand any of those articles then
DeletePlease revisit them and go through them *slowlY*
But why are you mentioning mdc constitution? How is that organisation constitution related to CCC... also where does it say a party should have a Congress first??
DeleteThis addressed in paragraphs 3 and 4 of the post.
DeletePlease revisit them.
Have you had sight of mdc alliance constitution? If no then surely your points are off...
DeleteOnly if you have had sight and are able to present adverse provisions...which you have not done.
DeleteInsightful.
DeleteGreat Content!
DeleteI am not a lawyer so I have a layman question, if a person decide that his or her current party is no longer saving his/her interest decides to leave and form another party, leaving the previous party operational, is that person required to have his/her previous party desolved first before leaving?
ReplyDeleteWhat does the Constitution say?
DeleteWhich constitution? Handiti where they belonged was not a party....
DeletePlease read your original post - which asks about a party no longer saving (sic) interests.
DeleteNow you say they didn't belong to a party.
Maybe you need to get your story straight.
You did not answer the question though.. if a person is expelled, like Chamisa , Hwende etc. How then are they still bound to the same party that has a constitution which states that if you Join another party you have automatically expelled yourself. So, how then is it logical to still expect Chamisa et al to disband a party which is under Mwonzora presently ?
DeleteThank you we commit zvose mumaoko a Mwari
ReplyDeleteMr Hofisi, it is a fact on a public record that you wrote articles claiming that the MDC Alliance is not a political party but a grouping of parties bound by an agreement called the Alliance agreement. There is no need to revisit this, it's own record. It is so surprising all of a sudden upon the establishment of a whole new political institution with a different name and symbols that you now want to associate this new political party with a grouping of parties which you argued on record that is kot a political party. Meanwhile, we please wish to hear your views on the Sybeyh musengezi case currently before the High Court
ReplyDeleteYou have misunderstood all my writings. Alliance for 2018 elections remains a coalition, thats why MDC-T can recall them. Alliance AFTER the elections was a party and I wrote nothing would stop them from reconstituting themselves. It is not a distinction most people appreciate.
DeleteAs for your other inquiry, I do no generally comment on matters that are pending before the courts unless or until there is a judgement available.
DeleteBy announcing a new party Chamisa automatically terminated membership from MDC A, so did the leaders who show support for CCC?? Does this make sense, Im not so 'learned'
ReplyDeleteOnly if the MDC A Constitution says so
DeleteCde lowu ubhala amasimba 😂😂😂😂😂,Ayi asazi ukuthi wafunda kuphi but Lana umbale umdidi straight
ReplyDeleteBrief and Factual as always.
ReplyDeleteHahaha munoseva Hofisi very insightful, cuts way too deep and thought provoking than BSR village stories 😱😱😱😭😭😭🤗🤗🤗
ReplyDeleteNdozvatikuramba izvozvi, idolising people. BSR and this complement each other.
DeleteIdolizing a person creates a Mugabe, we never learn. Zimbabweans are their worst enemy. We form new things with old attitudes, a copy and paste of ZANU, 2deputies??? What for?
ReplyDeleteThere is always the technical and the pragmatic side.The political situation in Zimbabwe is irritional so orthdox process is for academia
ReplyDeleteChamisa is causing a lot of discomfort to so many people,these learned analysis are not important at the moment, the masses have suffered more than enough under the current government so anything that can and is seen as able to be an alternative is embraced with open arms.That issue of aligning the party in accordance with the right statutes will be dealt with at a later stage.
ReplyDeleteThey are hurt they couldnt get inside informatiom fast enough.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteWhen Mwonzora threatened to go again before the courts to reclaim the name MDC Alliance, Chamisa had no choice but to outwit him. By-elections are around the corner and who wants to see Zanu go unchallenged coz of a mere Congress? That will be sorted out later. Mwonzora has the alliance now, so it wasn't dissolved.He claims signatories are still there, so Chamisa just said take all the MDCs and he forms a whole new party. Makoni and Nkosana also formed their parties with Press statements
ReplyDeleteDo you believe the Makoni/Nkosana model builds a national culture of democracy?
DeleteThe problem I am identifying is moving from mass based institutions to personalized parties modeled around a personality.
Trusting individuals over institutions led us to the problems we now have.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteMDCA doesn't have constitution it was electoral pact controlled buy a document moreover all the members of CCC were rejected in public meaning no one was attached to any party in question
ReplyDeleteBut from angle rekuvhunduka CCC zvinogona kuita
MDCA as at the 2018 election was not a party and had no constitution. After the election they then regularized that by having a congress. So for the purposes of the 2018 election yes there was no party but after wards they constituted a party with a constitution. Most people are very forgetful.
DeleteThose with ears will take corrective action before another mashavira case
ReplyDeleteAfter reading the whole article I have to say i totally agree with your views. Political parties in Zimbabwe do not respect their constitutions, we let a group of leaders do as they wish thus, when leaders dissagree the parties become chaotic. We need to urge our parties to adhere to constitutionalism.
ReplyDeleteIs it possible for sum1 from the party MDC Alliance that you said it's not yet disolved to recall sum1 from CCC.
ReplyDeleteInteresting question. I do not think it will be possible in the same way since CCC is not a coalition of parties and we expect to produce its own independent founding documents.
DeleteI'm not a lawyer and never wanted to be one but my question to you is that, do a member has to dissolve his party first before forming a new one? I thought a political party is a voluntary organisation such that when one feels his party is no longer a good fit for him, he's free to renounce his membership. I also read you talking about MDC A constitution, did you ever saw it?
ReplyDeleteYou can renounce membership in terms of your party constitution - just as dissolution is guided by the same.
DeleteNo, I have never seen the MDC A Constitution. I have only seen pictures which were posted by the party leadership.
how do you seperate consultations and citizens being at the center? are you suggesting an should election to constitute the formation of a party? I hear your cons but what is or was the alternative then?
ReplyDeleteI believe consultations are subject to the person consulting. They are a way of participation yes - but placing the citizen at the centre would entail hearing their voices without the middleman that is the political leaders.
DeleteIt's just a debate about the meaning of placing citizens at the centre.
and why does Chamisa have to desolve the MDC A before forming a new party? why cant he excersize his right as a Zimbabwen citizen to associate or disassociate with the party of his choice let alone give birth to his own?
ReplyDeleteWell articulated
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis is an insightful piece of writing. It broadens our perspectives vis the recent political developments in Zimbabwe. However, I do not entirely agree with a few issues you raised. I will only highlight two. First, I am yet to see where a person has been idolised in the new movement. Is this not a too generalised assertion? Second,after Dougie and Zanu pf had taken away the MDC Alliance (which you now conveniently acknowledge was a political party) I do not think that requirements and procedures of forming a completely new political outfit are written on stone. Why not wait for the inaugural congress to take place before you start 'kudaira jecha' on the new baby?
ReplyDeleteMy assertion that the party seems singularly modeled on the leader's hashtags is borne out by the facts. MDC Alliance OF 2018 remains a coalition of parties, an electoral pact. The MDC Alliance AFTER 2018 was a stand alone party incoorporating MDC Green and Biti's PDP: this has never been in dispute. The problem is you are conflating the two versions of the Alliance.
DeleteI did not hear of any impending CCC Congress as you point to - are you aware of such an announcement?
I have no doubt you have been following events that have been happening in the the party. CCC is a baby born in a battlefield, on the war front! Remember soon after the press conference we went to the nomination court! Surely it will be asking for too much to expect it to have complied with certain basic procedures you outlined. The inaugural Congress is coming but for now let's go for by-elections.
DeleteThese guys from main opposition parties in Zimbabwe are not serious.zapu and zanu managed to stand for over 40years and and formed a government .Mdc/CCC showed no respect for the will of the people they power hungry man Chamisa is a Dictator and Mwonzora a thick headed
ReplyDeleteInsightful
ReplyDeleteThanks cde for this article. My main take away is that the ccc has sidelined consideration of 2pillars that r of importance to citizens, ie the congress and constitution. May i ask: outside of these2, does it therefore invalidates the existance of that party? My assumption is that there z no law that says these 2 must be there b4 a party is recognised.
ReplyDeleteIt does not invalidate the party.
DeleteIt undermines their claims of commitment to democracy and placing citizens at the centre.
HOWEVER, if the MDC Alliance Constitution has a procedure for dissolution which was not followed - then this could lead to court process.
Insightful
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