Looks messy, but this feels like another Zanu PF setup where someone talks loudly, takes heat, and tests internal power lines.
Paul Tungwarara stirring party nerves
Paul Tungwarara stirring party nerves
- Paul Tungwarara, a presidential investment adviser, took public shots at Kudakwashe Tagwirei.
- Sounded isolated inside Zanu PF, like someone drifting off-script.
- Looked inexperienced, poking heavyweight interests early.
- Sparked chatter about a risky internal misstep.
- Comments landed at a rally in Manicaland province.
- Zanu PF culture rarely allows random freelancing.
- Reads like a trial balloon to gauge reactions.
- Smells less impulsive, more tactical.
- Robert Mugabe-era insiders described pre-planned political theater.
- Public drama often masked private decisions.
- Spontaneity regularly doubled as performance.
- Jim Kunaka said seniors pushed him to attack targets.
- Backed off after weighing family and personal stakes.
- Exposed a habit of shielding real power players.
- Lewis Matutu and Godfrey Tsenengamu accused big business figures.
- Kudakwashe Tagwirei, Billy Rautenbach, and Tafadzwa Musarara were named.
- Public anger briefly aligned with their claims.
- Punishment followed fast with suspensions and ideological training.
- Radical talk without approval gets crushed.
- Utility ends once damage is done.
- Truth-telling stays conditional.
- Joice Mujuru faced months of coordinated isolation.
- Attacks piled up before the removal landed.
- Outrage looked natural, but planning came first.
- Might be testing boundaries for unseen actors.
- Could be flushing rivals or ambition markers.
- Zanu PF thrives on deliberate confusion.
- Edson Zvobgo called the party deceptive by design.
- Said its internal logic resists mastery.
- Dissent rarely happens by accident.
- Loyalty shifts with internal math.
- Speaking loudly does not mean holding power.