The Leadership Struggle in MDC
In 1995 the General Secretary of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions sat in his office thinking about the situation that confronted the Unions in Zimbabwe. He had held the position for several years by then and was recognised as being an outstanding leader and negotiator. The problem he was grappling with was that the national government under Zanu PF was simply not managing the national economy properly. Everything he was achieving for workers was being wiped out by bad government policy and leadership.
He had been a member of Zanu PF all his working life, owed his position to the Party which had engineered his rapid ascension to the position of Secretary General, thinking him a loyal and competent pair of hands. Now he painfully recognised that his Party and its leadership had to be challenged, Civil Society and the Unions had to have more say in how the country was being administered.
What happened then is now part of our history. He started by calling for consultation and consensus on all policy issues, when that was denied, he decided that it was the Constitution that was at fault and he called for a new national Constitution that would reduce the power of the Party and the President and create a more democratic State. He called for and then established and led an organisation called the National Constitutional Assembly to promote this ideal.
Initially the new organisation was ignored by the government; however it slowly built momentum until it could no longer be ignored. The President established a Commission to canvas views and draft a new Constitution and then subverted the whole thing and forced through changes that the NCA felt would not only negate what they wanted, but further entrench State and Presidential power.
It was too much. Morgan Tsvangirai decided that the ruling Party had to be challenged. He began quietly canvassing the views of ordinary people across the country. Eventually, convinced that the people wanted change, he announced the holding of a "Working People's Convention" where the basis of a new Party was crafted and agreed. The MDC was born.