Life in the Mud Hole
We have been working flat out in the MDC - getting the policy platform through the Party structures, then the primaries - 2300 of them all over the country, a massive exercise and a first for any political Party in Africa.
At the same time we have been struggling with the business of Government in the GNU and a hectic programme in Parliament. Also taking our time and attention is JOMIC and the complex process of getting the Constitution through and into law and the constant negotiations with the other Parties to resolve the steady stream of issues that arise out of the GPA process.
While all of that is going on we were ambushed by the Constitutional Court and its decision to "instruct the President" to hold the elections before the 31st July. The application to the Court came from a serving officer of the CIO with no standing in law for such an application and the Court met with completely uncharacteristic haste on a Friday - they have never met on a Friday before. All 9 grey beards sat and then issued their "judgment" with two significant and thoughtful dissenting judgments.
It was quite clear that this whole thing was politically motivated, based on lousy law and haste. It was also probably unconstitutional - election dates are reserved for the Executive (in this case the three principals) and not the judiciary.
In Parliament, when we debated this issue last Wednesday the Zanu PF benches were thumping the table and cheering while the MDC bench sat in bemused silence. I looked at the opposition and thought how weird it was. They thought this was a huge victory; at last they were forcing us into an election without the essential reforms to make the process legitimate, free and fair.