2030 Bill: CSO petitions Mudenda

The amendment Bill was gazetted on February 16 and has since triggered fierce debate across the political divide.
By Garikai Tunhira 4h ago

Ngwena loves Zimbabweans so much he refuses to subject them to elections

The Lacoste cabal is doing everything possible to avoid a referendum and is counting on the support of sell-out opposition MPs who have decided to put their stomachs first.  
By Doctor Stop It Mar. 1, 2026

Torture, bombs, and mandatory bootlicking

Moreso, when the regime baulk at having a referendum to vote on the particular amendment of extending the vapid leadership of the octogenarian by two more years without going for elections.  
By Doctor Stop It Feb. 22, 2026

ERC slams proposed constitutional amendments

Under the proposal, the President would no longer be elected directly by Zimbabweans but responsibility will fall on the shoulders of lawmakers.  
By Evans Mathanda Feb. 18, 2026

ERC slams proposed constitutional amendment to extend presidential term

In a statement, the ERC said the proposal lacks a factual and democratic foundation, arguing that it fails to take into account Zimbabwe’s history of disputed elections.
By Evans Mathanda Feb. 16, 2026

Chamisa’s return is theatre of the absurd, no transformation

In essence, Chamisa confuses visibility for viability: his politics are rich in symbolism but poor in substance, leaving Zimbabwe’s opposition trapped in cycles of hope and disappointment.  
By Wellington Muzengeza Feb. 13, 2026

The political logic behind Zimbabwe’s dangerous constitutional turn

I argue that this Bill marks a clear break from the promise of Zimbabwe’s 2013 Constitution. That settlement largely imagined a future built on limits, competition and accountability. 
By Phillan Zamchiya Feb. 13, 2026

Constitutional farce unfolds

Such structural revisions would ordinarily require broad national consensus secured through a referendum, not routine legislative manoeuvring. 
By Faith Zaba Feb. 13, 2026

Votes in the shadows: How informality fuels electoral power in African cities

The declaration is clear: informality is political capital, and literacy in its dynamics is the decisive frontier for Africa’s urban future. 
By Wellington Muzengeza Feb. 2, 2026