Is Zimbabwe Set For A Mugabe Dynasty With Grace As VP?
A flurry of party endorsements and parades in honour of Grace Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s first lady, could mark the stirring of a national political dynasty for the Mugabes, as structures within the ruling Zanu PF endorse Grace as a potential candidate for the vice presidency following Monday’s dismissal of former Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
All the party’s provinces have rallied around the 52-year-old for the vice presidency, with her strongest support coming from the Zanu PF women’s league, which she leads, and the youth league.
Youth league leader, Kudzanai Chipanga, who organised a solidarity march in her honour on Wednesday, said she was the only person fit to take up the post.
“As youth, we don’t believe in patriarchy; women can also be leaders. We want [Grace] Mugabe as our vice president because she can work well with the president and she can help him in leading the nation,” he said.
The solidarity gathering was held to apologise to the first lady for being heckled by a small group of pro-Mnangagwa party youths in the second city of Bulawayo last weekend.
“My husband is the president, and I’m the president’s wife. I’m a woman, so why can’t I be the vice president? Am I not a child of Zimbabwe”
The overwhelming support for Grace comes ahead of an extraordinary Zanu-PF congress to be held in the capital, Harare.
That gathering next month is set to endorse President Robert Mugabe as the party’s one centre of power and sole presidential candidate for 2018’s elections.
From typist to aspiring president
Grace herself has not ruled out the possibility of becoming vice president, nor has she rejected claims that she aspires to succeed her husband.
“My husband is the president, and I’m the president’s wife. I’m a woman, so why can’t I be the vice president? Am I not a child of Zimbabwe?” she said to crowds at a rally in the second city of Bulawayo at the weekend.
During the first years of their marriage in 1996, Grace had little involvement in political affairs and mainly focused on managing the family’s vast business and real estate interests in Zimbabwe and beyond.
Shopping sprees abroad earned the former president’s office typist the monikers “First Shopper” and “Gucci Grace”.
Since her controversial attainment of a PhD in Sociology in 2014 – she was hastily awarded a doctorate from the University of Zimbabwe – and her election as first secretary of the Zanu PF women’s league, she has become more involved in party politics.
In late 2014, Grace held a series of rallies accusing the then vice president, Joice Mujuru, of conspiring to topple Mugabe.
Mounting allegations of corruption and attempting to assassinate the president resulted in Mujuru’s dismissal and expulsion from the party.
Now for the second time in less than five years, Mugabe has fired another deputy accused by Grace of plotting to succeed the world’s oldest sitting president.
Shopping sprees abroad earned the former president’s office typist the monikers “First Shopper” and “Gucci Grace”.
Since her controversial attainment of a PhD in Sociology in 2014 – she was hastily awarded a doctorate from the University of Zimbabwe – and her election as first secretary of the Zanu PF women’s league, she has become more
The power behind the throne
As Zanu PF’s December congress is a special elective conference, some analysts predict Grace could be elected into the party’s four-member executive as the party constitution requires the praesidium to consist of at least one female member.
Since Mnangagwa’s expulsion, Zanu PF’s praesidium currently consists of Mugabe – who is the first secretary, Ignatius Chombo, the national administrator and Phelekezela Mphoko, who currently serves as the deputy second secretary and national vice president.
The choreographed endorsements we have seen from the provinces may be all the Mugabes need to convince themselves that what they are doing is legitimate
McDonald Lewanika, a political analyst and activist, told Al Jazeera Grace’s election to the praesidium was a strong possibility that could lead to her succeeding her husband.
“Her power belies in the fact that her husband is the president, but we are yet to see what happens if Robert Mugabe isn’t there for her. She is angling for the vice presidency right now, but she also seems intent on keeping the presidency in the Mugabe household.
“For now the choreographed endorsements we have seen from the provinces may be all the Mugabes need to convince themselves that what they are doing is legitimate and they have the will of the people,” he said.
While most observers agree with Lewanika’s view, one analyst holds a different perspective.
Ibbo Mandaza, director of the SAPES Trust, a regional think-tank, told Al Jazeera he believes Grace does not want the presidency, but to secure her future after Mugabe.
“Now that Emerson is out, her job is done. She doesn’t need to be vice president because she already sees herself as president. She sees herself as Mugabe’s other because she can make important decisions on the country’s affairs so what more can the vice presidency give her?
“She wants to ensure her future and the security of her family so she might prefer someone who can look after her interests to succeed Mugabe,” he said in a telephone interview.
The ongoing purges of scores of Mnangagwa allies have widened the rift between the Mugabes and various groups of war veteran leaders.
War veterans, who fought alongside Mugabe during the 1970s liberation struggle and spearheaded the repossession of white-owned commercial farms in the 2000s, claim Mugabe has betrayed the revolution.
Source: thepublisher/worldnews
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