Zimbabwe’s Constitutional Amendments: A Bid to Consolidate Power and Undermine Democracy
Emmerson Mnangagwa, currently serving his second and final presidential term under Zimbabwe’s 2013 constitution, is approaching the end of his tenure in 2028 at the age of 86. However, a proposed constitutional amendment bill, gazetted on February 16, 2026, threatens to fundamentally alter the nation’s democratic landscape. If enacted, the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment Bill No. 3 aims to roll back crucial protections, extend presidential and parliamentary terms from five to seven years, and replace direct presidential elections with a parliamentary selection process. These changes could potentially keep Mnangagwa in office until 2030, a prospect he has publicly stated.
This ambition has evidently galvanized his ruling party, the Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front (Zanu PF), leading to party resolutions supporting an extended tenure and the introduction of the current bill. This move comes after the 2013 constitution was enacted with the explicit intention of addressing the authoritarian tendencies and pervasive influence of Zanu PF that characterized former President Robert Mugabe’s 33-year rule.
Safeguards of the 2013 Constitution Under Threat
The 2013 constitution was designed with several key features to strengthen Zimbabwe’s democracy:
- Presidential Term Limits: A strict two-term limit was imposed on the presidency.
- Impartial State Institutions: The constitution mandated impartiality and non-partisanship from state institutions.
- Independent “Fourth Branch” Institutions: The establishment of independent bodies was intended to bolster democratic processes.
- Public Interviews for Appointments: The process for appointing judges and the prosecutor general was reformed to include public interviews, promoting transparency and accountability.
However, Zanu PF has systematically eroded these democratic guardrails, leveraging its supermajorities in Parliament. The first constitutional amendment in 2017 removed the requirement for public interviews for the most senior judicial appointments. This was followed by a second amendment four years later, which eliminated public interviews for the appointment of the prosecutor general and for promotions within the judiciary. The proposed third amendment represents a significant escalation of this trend, further weakening institutional and democratic constraints.
Justifications and Constitutional Ambiguities
The government’s rationale for extending presidential and parliamentary terms centers on mitigating election-related “toxicity” and fostering long-term economic growth. However, the bill’s provisions raise serious questions about its adherence to the spirit and letter of the constitution.
Section 328(7) of the constitution stipulates that amendments extending tenure do not apply to incumbents. To circumvent this, the bill’s proponents argue that it does not alter term limits but merely adjusts “election cycles.” This assertion is contested, as the bill’s plain text appears to override the prohibition against incumbents extending their tenure. The minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs suggests that the seven-year term would retroactively apply from September 4, 2023, to September 4, 2030. This deliberate ambiguity serves multiple purposes: it may mitigate public backlash, offer plausible deniability to political elites, and potentially weaken legal challenges. Should courts later validate these transitional details or dismiss challenges, it would lend judicial legitimacy to subsequent government actions.
Dismantling Direct Presidential Elections
Beyond extending terms, the bill proposes a more fundamental shift: the elimination of direct presidential elections. This change comes at a time when Zanu PF’s presidential vote share has declined significantly, from 61% in 2013 to just over the 50% threshold in subsequent elections. Despite this, the party has maintained parliamentary supermajorities, making the legislature a more reliable base of power.
Under the proposed system, the president would be elected by a joint sitting of Parliament, supervised by the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission or a designated judge. A candidate securing over half of the valid votes would be declared president. The specifics of the process, including the designation of a judge and the circumstances triggering this alternative election method, are left to Parliament’s standing orders. This indirect election, coupled with the constitution’s stringent impeachment procedures, would leave the Zimbabwean president uniquely insulated from conventional democratic accountability. This revision also diminishes the participatory aspect of the right to vote by removing a direct constitutional channel for its exercise.
False Equivalence and Enhanced Executive Control
The government draws parallels to parliamentary systems in Botswana, Germany, South Africa, and the U.S. electoral college, claiming inspiration for these changes. Critics argue this is a false equivalence, as those systems are products of established democratic processes and embedded within robust accountability frameworks, unlike Zimbabwe’s elite-driven modifications. The bill conspicuously lacks features that would enhance proportional representation, enable votes of no confidence in the president, or include safeguards analogous to “faithless elector” laws.
Furthermore, the bill aims to reinforce presidential control by reintroducing pre-2013 provisions allowing executive appointments to the legislature. The president would be empowered to appoint ten additional senators, doubling the previous allocation. This would increase the Senate’s membership to 90, facilitating Zanu PF’s ability to secure a supermajority.
Recentralizing Electoral Power
The bill also signals a reversal of reforms designed to ensure the independence of electoral processes. Historically, the registrar-general, a presidential appointee, oversaw voter registration and the compilation of the voters’ roll. This office has been implicated in practices that have led to voter disenfranchisement and unequal access to electoral information.
To address concerns of partisanship, the compilation of the voters’ roll and voter registration were transferred to the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), an independent body with more transparent appointment procedures. Similarly, voter redistricting (delimitation) was moved from presidentially appointed ad hoc commissions to the ZEC.
The proposed amendments would reverse these changes, returning responsibility for voter registration and the voters’ roll compilation to the registrar-general. Crucially, delimitation would also be transferred to a presidentially appointed Zimbabwe Electoral Delimitation Commission. This means that a president elected through parliamentary means would appoint the officials responsible for registering voters, compiling the voters’ roll, and redrawing the constituencies from which his electors are chosen.
The timing of these processes also raises concerns. Delimitation must be completed six months before an election. Under the bill’s proposed election cycle, the period between the 2042 national census and the 2044 elections would provide a narrow window for delimitation. The bill further extends the deadline for finalizing delimitation from six to eighteen months, exacerbating concerns about time constraints and the potential for manipulation.
Erosion of Judicial Independence
The erosion of democratic safeguards extends to the judiciary. While the 2013 constitution mandated public interviews for all judicial appointments, the first amendment exempted the three most senior judges. Currently, if the president appoints a chief justice, deputy chief justice, or judge president contrary to the Judicial Service Commission’s recommendations, the president must inform the senate. The proposed amendments, by consolidating executive power and potentially altering the appointment and oversight mechanisms, risk further diminishing the independence of the judiciary and weakening the checks and balances vital for a functioning democracy.
Tinashé Hofisi is a human rights lawyer and post-doctoral research associate at the Karsh Institute of Democracy, University of Virginia. He writes in his personal capacity.








