It's May 2013 and the weeks and months slide past with accelerating speed. Just yesterday our leadership was squabbling over the new Constitution, today that is all behind us and next week on Tuesday we start the process of bringing it into force as the supreme law of the land. None of us saw that happening, but it has and now we are gearing up for the final act in this long drawn out play in the form of an election.
Zanu PF is, as usual, playing a smoke and mirrors game - they are shrilly calling for an election no later than the 29th of June - the last day of the life of this Parliament and of the Mugabe Presidency. In fact there is not a snowballs chance of that happening and Zanu PF is to blame for that. We have to see the new Constitution signed into law, then the electoral acts harmonised with the new Constitution and then finalise the voters roll and nominate perhaps 20 000 candidates from 23 political parties for 2400 seats. That process cannot be completed before the end of June and only then can we start the campaign that leads up to the election itself.
Only the MDC (T) seems to have all its ducks in a row - we will wrap up our primary elections for all candidates in the next two weeks and I do not expect any trouble during that process. To me it looks well planned and orderly and although there will be disappointments - by and large I think the outcome of the primaries will not be contested in any serious way. Then we hold our policy conference on the 18th and 19th of May which will see delegates from the whole country coming together to endorse the policy platform of the MDC. This has taken three years to prepare and incorporates our experience in Government since 2009.
This launches our manifesto for the 2013 campaign and our election campaign. We will roll out our messaging and our strategies and take time out to brief all our new nominee candidates on the way forward and what we expect from them. From that day onwards we hit the ground running on all cylinders.
By contrast Zanu PF has not even issued the guidelines for candidate selection and primaries; instead, the different factions inside and outside the Party squabble and scrap over who should contest who and where. Senior officers from all branches of the armed forces and the Police are declaring their intent to run as potential candidates for the Party. There is no sign of the new Party manifesto which was reportedly in draft by Jonathan Moyo and I suspect that is because the backbone of their "policy" is indigenisation and that is in a shambles and is being revealed as a form of Ponzi scam designed at its core to sort out the Ministers financial problems.
As for the other Parties - I see no sign of any activity involving the appointment of candidates, I hear that Welshman is struggling to find suitable people and Simba Makoni is debating with himself as to whether he should run again and be humiliated. Mutambara may run as a Presidential candidate as might several others but that will be a total waste of resources and anyone who votes for any of them is simply wasting their vote. None have any form of a policy platform that is worth reading.