MAFUME MAY BE THE UNEXPECTED DOOR TO A NEW POLITICAL FUTURE

image

There is something happening in our politics right now and many people do not want to talk about it. A man like Jacob Mafume stands at the centre of it. Some people like him, some people do not, but everyone who watches Zimbabwe’s politics can see that he is not an ordinary leader. What we make of Mafume is our own choice, but one thing is clear. He may hold the key to something new in our politics. He may open a door many people never thought possible in this country.

I have spoken to Mafume a few times in my work as a journalist before I became the activist I am today. From the days of the MDC splits under Tsvangirai until now, he always seemed like someone who truly believes in democracy. He hates dictatorship. He hates the idea of one big man controlling everything. He does not like leaders who act like kings. Maybe in the future he may also face the same temptations, but for now he still looks sincere in the way he thinks about leadership. He is also very sharp. He thinks fast. That is how he has stayed in politics for so long and why he now sits in the office he holds.

Next year, if nothing changes, Mafume will become Harare’s longest serving mayor since the year 2000. Many before him were removed or destroyed by the Government. We all know how ZANU PF uses the law, the police and State power to crush opponents. Many good leaders were pushed out simply because they refused to bow down. Somehow, Mafume has survived all of that and is still standing.

I have had friendly talks with him lately, and he explained to me his new attitude. He says he is just trying to do the job he was elected to do. He says people of Harare want water in their taps. They want rubbish collected. They want sewer lines fixed. The deals he agreed to for waste management and water reticulation may have come through Government, but they bring real benefits to the residents. He had two choices. He could refuse the help and play politics, or he could work with Government so that services improve. He chose to work with them, and he will likely keep doing so on many future projects that the Government brings.

There is a political story inside this. He told me the opposition always wanted to be part of running the country. Controlling councils was one way to show people that the opposition could govern. So for him, working with Government partners is the same as working with USAID or any other group that brings help to Harare. He says he cannot refuse help just because it comes from ZANU PF. In his mind, service to the people must come first.

But many of his own councillors do not understand him. They want the old style of opposition politics where fighting and blocking everything was the strategy. There are also people in ZANU PF and outside ZANU PF who do not want Harare to work. They do not want a city that functions well. So it becomes easy for people to say Mafume is working with a ZANU PF faction even if that is not true.

This brings us to a big question. With Chamisa hiding from politics right now, could Mafume reshape the nation’s politics? He leads the capital city and that office has power. Could he openly say he wants to work with Government to build a new political culture? The problem is fear. In the opposition, anyone who is seen to move away from Chamisa is treated like an enemy. If Mafume chooses a new path, he risks backlash from Chamisa’s supporters. But the truth is this. Mafume’s life no longer depends on Chamisa. And in this moment in our history, he may become something very different.

3 thoughts on “MAFUME MAY BE THE UNEXPECTED DOOR TO A NEW POLITICAL FUTURE

  1. This is one of the few honest takes on Jacob Mafume that I have read. You don’t have to like him to see that he is different from the usual opposition noise. He understands that politics must serve people, not egos. Harare residents don’t drink slogans, they drink water. If working with government delivers services, then that is leadership, not betrayal. Zimbabwe desperately needs leaders who put results before party dogma. Mafume may not be perfect, but he is thinking beyond survival politics, and that alone makes him dangerous to the old system.

  2. This idea that Mafume can reshape national politics is laughable. Zimbabwe is not run by mayors. It is run by liberation fighters who earned this country with blood. Mafume has no war credentials, no rural support, and no national backing. He should focus on collecting rubbish and stop dreaming of national leadership.

  3. Working with government does not automatically mean corruption or betrayal. It means understanding power. Mafume choosing water pipes over Twitter fights is something many activists should reflect on. The people of Harare did not elect him to fight Chamisa’s battles. They elected him to fix the city. That honesty is rare in Zimbabwean politics.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *