Zimbabwe's ruling party is cooking up constitutional changes that would kill off direct presidential votes, stretch terms to seven years, and hand the executive branch near-total control.
The presidential election system gets gutted completely
The presidential election system gets gutted completely
- Direct public voting for the president would be scrapped under the proposals.
- Parliament would pick the head of state in a joint sitting instead.
- The dominant party controlling the legislature would essentially crown the president automatically.
- Public participation and perceived legitimacy of leadership would take a nosedive.
- Presidential and parliamentary terms would balloon from five to seven years each.
- The president could appoint 10 extra senators to boost executive sway.
- These handpicked legislators would likely rubber-stamp the executive's agenda without pushback.
- Legislative independence and oversight capacity would get kneecapped by the appointments.
- The voters' roll would shift from the Electoral Commission to the Registrar-General.
- Justice Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi is set to present the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment Bill.
- A separate Delimitation Commission would handle constituency boundary decisions going forward.
- Critics worry the Registrar-General's executive ties will compromise voter registration transparency.
- Public interviews for judicial appointments would be eliminated from the process.
- Defence Forces would act "in accordance with the Constitution" rather than actively upholding it.
- The Zimbabwe Gender Commission would be dissolved, with its functions absorbed by the Human Rights Commission.
- Removing public scrutiny from judicial picks could politicize the bench, according to critics.