Let us not feign surprise. When Zimbabwe’s parliament rubber-stamps a bill extending the president’s tenure, it is merely the latest act in a farce we have watched for decades. The script is drearily familiar: a once-promising liberation movement, now a geriatric kleptocracy, tightening its grip as the economy decays. The bill, passed with theatrical efficiency, ensures that Emmerson Mnangagwa—or his anointed successor—can cling to power until 2030. This is not democracy in retreat; it is democracy’s corpse being paraded through the streets of Harare.
Compare this to the late Roman Republic, where Sulla and Marius used army loyalties to shred constitutional norms. Here, the weapon is not legions but legislative majorities. The Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) treats parliament as a rubber stamp—a fact that would embarrass even the most corrupt Victorian-era rotten borough. Remember those? Before the Reform Acts, British MPs could bribe electors with gin and gold. Zimbabwe’s version is cheaper: a nod from the party chairman suffices.
The intellectual decadence is staggering. Western pundits wring hands about “democratic backsliding” as if this is a sudden affliction. It is not. Zimbabwe’s democracy has been in a coma since 1980, punctuated by brief, violent awakenings during disputed elections. The real story is the West’s selective amnesia. We celebrated Mugabe as a liberator while he crushed the Matabeleland. Now we tut-tut over Mnangagwa’s power grabs, as if he is a rogue exception rather than the logical product of a system designed to ensure perpetual rule.
National identity in Zimbabwe is now a zero-sum game. To be “patriotic” is to cheer the president’s extended reign. Dissent is treason. This is the playbook of every decaying autocracy: conflate the ruler with the nation. It is not clever; it is desperate. The bill’s passage is a sign of weakness, not strength. A regime confident in its legitimacy does not need to rewrite the constitution every decade. It is a political morphine shot: temporary relief from the pain of declining support.
The West’s response will be predictable. Sanctions that harm the poor. Strenous statements from ambassadors. Perhaps a token ban on the president’s luxury shopping trips. But no one will ask the uncomfortable question: why does Zimbabwe keep producing leaders who treat the state as a private estate? Because the political culture has been hollowed out. The opposition is a collection of fractious egos. Civil society is funded by foreign donors who demand theatrical protests, not structural change. And the economy is a zombie, kept alive by remittances and a parallel currency.
We should not moralise. Let us observe with the cold eye of the historian. The fall of Rome was not a single event but a long slide into institutionalised corruption. Zimbabwe is repeating that slide in fast-forward. The bill extends the president’s term, but it also extends the nation’s terminal decline. The only question is whether the patient will expire quietly or in a convulsion.
For now, the MPs have done their duty: they have voted themselves irrelevance. The president has his extension. And the people, as always, are left to pick through the rubble of a failed state. This is the face of modern authoritarianism: not jackboots and secret police, but parliamentary motions and constitutional amendments. It is efficient, it is bloodless, and it is utterly destructive. Do not mourn for Zimbabwean democracy. It died long ago. We are merely attending its wake.








