What CAB3 Proposes

CAB3: Proposed Constitutional Changes in Zimbabwe


Its most important provisions concern how the President is chosen, how long elected officials serve, and how electoral and oversight institutions are structured.

WHY CAB3 MATTERS TO ZIMBABWE’S DEMOCRACY

CAB3 is not just a technical or procedural amendment.

It directly affects:

  • The method of choosing the President
  • The length of elected terms
  • The role of Parliament
  • Public participation in governance
  • The independence of democratic institutions

When a Constitution is changed, citizens have the right to ask a simple but critical question:

Does this strengthen democracy, or weaken it?

THE CENTRAL CONCERN

The biggest concern surrounding CAB3 is that it may:

  • Reduce direct public choice
  • Normalise rule changes that extend political control

This debate is larger than:

  • Any single leader
  • Any political party
  • Any election cycle

At its core, the issue is about whether Zimbabwe’s constitutional system remains strong enough to hold all leaders equally accountable.

PUBLIC IMPACT

1. LOSS OF DIRECT PRESIDENTIAL CHOICE

Currently, citizens directly vote for the President.

Under the proposed model:

CURRENT SYSTEM

Citizens vote directly for President.

PROPOSED SYSTEM

Citizens elect Members of Parliament, and Members of Parliament choose the President.

This creates a major shift in the relationship between citizens and executive power.

WHY IT MATTERS

A direct vote gives every citizen an individual voice in deciding who leads the country.

A parliamentary selection system makes the process less direct and potentially more dependent on party structures.

2. ACCOUNTABILITY AND ELECTION TERMS

CAB3 proposes extending terms from:

5 Years to 7 Years

Supporters argue this may create:

  • Greater political stability
  • More time for long term planning

Critics argue it may:

  • Reduce democratic accountability
  • Delay opportunities for citizens to reassess leadership

Regular elections are one of the strongest tools citizens have to hold leaders accountable.

3. PUBLIC TRUST

Public trust depends on whether people believe constitutional rules are applied fairly.

Concerns arise when constitutional changes appear to benefit current office holders.

Possible consequences include:

  • Increased political tension
  • Lower public participation
  • Reduced confidence in democratic institutions

A democracy depends not only on laws, but on citizens believing those laws are fair.

ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL EFFECTS

Constitutional stability affects more than politics.

The following groups rely on predictable governance:

  • Businesses
  • Investors
  • Workers
  • Students
  • Civil society organisations
  • Regional partners

When constitutional uncertainty grows:

  • Investor confidence may weaken
  • Political risk may increase
  • Economic pressure may deepen

WHY THIS MATTERS SPECIFICALLY FOR ZIMBABWE

Zimbabwe already faces significant national challenges, including:

  • Economic pressures
  • Migration challenges
  • Public service constraints
  • Trust deficits in institutions

A constitutional dispute perceived as extending political power rather than strengthening governance could increase instability.

THE SOCIAL COST

When citizens feel excluded from important constitutional decisions:

  • Public frustration increases
  • Civic trust declines
  • Democratic participation weakens

Concerns also emerge when:

  • Journalists fear intimidation
  • Activists face pressure
  • Lawyers and students hesitate to speak openly

Healthy constitutional reform requires open public discussion without fear.

WHAT REAL STABILITY LOOKS LIKE

Real stability does not come from avoiding elections or extending mandates.

Real stability comes from:

  • Predictable rules
  • Peaceful participation
  • Lawful transitions of power
  • Public confidence in constitutional limits

REAL CASE EXAMPLES

CASE EXAMPLE 1: DIRECT ELECTIONS

The proposed shift from direct presidential elections to parliamentary selection is one of the clearest examples of why CAB3 matters.

DIRECT ELECTION MODEL

Every voter directly chooses the President.

PARLIAMENTARY ELECTORAL COLLEGE MODEL

Members of Parliament select the President.

KEY CONCERN

In systems dominated by a strong ruling party, parliamentary selection may make the presidency:

  • More dependent on party structures
  • Less directly accountable to citizens

THE PUBLIC QUESTION

Should Zimbabweans directly elect their President, or should Parliament decide?

CASE EXAMPLE 2: INCUMBENT BENEFIT

Another major issue is whether current office holders should benefit from constitutional changes made during their own term.

This is why Section 328 has become central to the debate.

CRITICS ARGUE

Constitutional protections exist specifically to stop leaders from rewriting rules in their own favour.

SUPPORTERS ARGUE

The amendment process is lawful and follows constitutional procedure.

THE CORE ISSUE

If term related rules can be changed for current office holders, term limits may stop functioning as real limits.

CASE EXAMPLE 3: PUBLIC HEARINGS

Public consultation is a critical part of constitutional reform.

However, consultation must be meaningful.

Concerns arise if hearings are:

  • Rushed
  • Poorly communicated
  • Difficult to access
  • Dominated by organised political groups
  • Disrupted or intimidating

Citizens need:

  • Enough time
  • Enough information
  • Enough safety

to participate freely and meaningfully.

“Consultation is not consent.”

KEY STATISTICS & HIGHLIGHTS

PROPOSED TERM EXTENSION

5 Years to 7 Years

Applies to:

  • Presidential terms
  • Parliamentary terms
  • Local authority terms

PRESIDENTIAL SELECTION CHANGE

CURRENT

Direct public vote

PROPOSED

Vote by Members of Parliament

SECTION 328

The constitutional provision at the centre of debate involving:

  • Term limits
  • Constitutional safeguards
  • Incumbent benefit
  • Amendment procedures

90 DAY CONSULTATION PERIOD

CAB3 triggered a constitutionally required public consultation process after publication.

2028 TO 2030 DEBATE

Public discussion around CAB3 has included concerns that it could allow President Mnangagwa to remain in office until 2030 rather than leaving in 2028.

FUTURE RISKS

If core constitutional concerns remain unresolved, several risks may emerge.

RISK 1: LEGAL ESCALATION

Further legal challenges may continue around:

  • Section 328
  • Term limits
  • Referendum requirements
  • Public consultation standards

RISK 2: CIVIC TENSION

If citizens believe their voting power is weakened:

  • Public opposition may increase
  • Political tensions may deepen

RISK 3: REGIONAL CONCERN

Regional and international observers, including SADC and neighbouring countries, may increasingly view CAB3 as a governance and stability issue.

RISK 4: NORMALISATION OF CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGES

If major constitutional changes become politically routine, future governments may feel encouraged to alter foundational democratic rules whenever convenient.

THE LONG TERM CONSTITUTIONAL QUESTION

A Constitution either restrains power, or it becomes a tool of power.

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