January 2012 Volume 39, Featured Articles, Guest Writer
Alexander Rusero : Tsvangirai’s ascendancy to the throne irrefutable
HARARE - I am not a fanatic of the MDC neither am I an enemy of the state or even of Zanu PF.
I was personally born in a family under the fatherhood of a genuine war veteran, where stories of Zanu PF were our daily bread and the praises of President Mugabe our night prayers.
In fact, at one point in our Highfield community we were among the labelled Vanhu VeZanu so to speak and whenever I make an assessment of Zanu PF, I do so honestly bearing in mind that this was the only party my father knew to the grave.
This cannot stop or suppress the truth that Morgan Tsvangirai, the MDC president is the man of the moment.
Like it or not Morgan is the best that opposition politics in Zimbabwean history has so far given.
Besides, the only unfairness of the facet of democracy we cherish and desire so much is that it does not churn out the best person, educated, degreed or even a professor but simply an individual whom the people in their majority prefer.
Democracy despite all virtues and intrinsic values it possess is mass-driven and based much on populist support above everything else. A closer synopsis of what Zimbabwean mass entails will favour Tsvangirai.
Tsvangirai pitted Mugabe in the last election without any arsenals of power and worse still without the support of the public media.
The media is very crucial in an election because it plays the representational role by providing a platform for political parties to articulate what they can offer for the betterment of the country should they be elected into office.
Tsvangirai trounced Mugabe in the last election without any ally in the opposition parties.
All these are indicators that Tsvangirai is the man of the moment given that Zanu PF has chosen to stick to its guns by ritually seconding Mugabe as its presidential candidate.
People in their numbers have tasted all relishes that Zanu PF has prepared and offered, but the same people have not had enough of the MDC and particularly Tsvangirai.
They feel Morgan still needs to be given a chance. Despite all the blunders and off-sides Tsvangirai has previously indulged into, people are not worried much as has been evidenced by the Tsvangirai-Locadia saga, the controversial gay issue among other remarks that Tsvangirai has uttered.
There is not going to be any scramble of votes in whatsoever way because past elections have mirrored Tsvangirai at the apex of the situation. Zanu PF and other opponents of Tsvangirai mostly the smaller faction of the MDC blunders much in capitalising on Tsvangirai’s mistakes or rather weaknesses.
The strategy of capitalising on opponents’ tragedies has since proved to be useless in modern politics.
Progressive politicians have learnt to pray for their opponents and not bay for their blood.
People are more interested in listening to what a political party can offer rather than what other parties and leaders have wrongly done.
Zimbabwe’s political arena is in need of an urgent paradigm shift, it needs to deviate from politics of hate and name- calling to opponents. Robert Mugabe and all his lieutenants were once labelled bloody-thirsty-terrorists.
Abel Muzorewa went to the grave with the tag “sell-out”, Ndabaningi Sithole was also a “sell-out” whose punishment even in death was denial of hero status, currently Tsvangirai together with his party are “British Imperialist stooges”, Tsvangirai has been labelled “uneducated”, “traitor”, chimbwa sungata among other most contemptuous titles known on this earth.
The goodness of history is that no-one is able to stop an idea whose time has come and in Zimbabwe currently, Tsvangirai overally appears to be the idea, unless otherwise there might be a political accident of history which at the moment looks very unlikely.
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