In 1980 when we came to Independence the Party known as the Zimbabwe African National Union was a monolith. They had taken over 80 per cent of the vote in the elections and controlled all aspects of Government. Only in the south west of the country, where the Zimbabwe African Peoples Union had dominated, was the control of Zanu PF challenged.
Over the next 7 years conflict between these two Parties raged to and fro across the land culminating in the eventual collapse of Zapu and its integration into Zanu PF. Having cemented its hold over the country, Zimbabwe entered an era as a virtual one Party State. Opposition groups came and went but the hold that the Party had over national activities remained absolute.
Then came 1999 when the Trade Union movement in Zimbabwe launched a Party, the Movement for Democratic Change, the era of one Party hegemony virtually came to an end. At this stage the only measure of the relative strength of the Zanu PF Party was their performance in the elections that took place in 2000. In those elections they took just over half the support they had received in 1980. This was a decline of one third and marks the first real sign that support for Zanu PF was on the wane.
In the following 16 years there were 4 more elections and in my personal view the 2002 Presidential election was lost to the MDC by a significant margin. In the 2005 elections Zanu PF was able to claw their way back into the field and secured a two thirds majority. In 2008, the March elections were held under reasonable conditions and Zanu support fell to less than 30 per cent of the vote, losing both a majority in the House of Assembly and the Presidency. In the 2013 elections, the Party repeated what it had done in 2005 and secured another two thirds majority in Parliament.
What was not apparent in this process was the changing nature of the Party on the ground. In 1980 the Party was firmly entrenched in the country with structures in every electoral District and Ward. These political structures were reinforced with the War Veterans and together they constituted a formidable political organisation. In the intervening years, the Party has treated the State as an extension of itself. In the process they have moved Party Cadres into key positions in the Civil Service and also into Parastatals and the Private Sector.
The security services of the State have become effectively, at a high level, extensions of the Party. This process was built upon the integration process that followed Independence. After 2000 when the MDC began to contest for power, the Zanu PF Party was forced to recognise that their field structures were no longer able to perform the way they had in the early decades of Independence. To remedy this, the security services were drawn upon to fill key gaps, a senior officer was recruited into the Party Head Office as CEO and in the 2008 and 2013 elections, the Army and other branches of the Security Services deployed staff in every District and Ward.