Saviour Kasukuwere Letter 1
Saviour Kasukuwere Letter 1
Saviour Kasukuwere Letter 1
I humbly write to you on the eve of the sitting of the nomination court to inform you that I have
considered your plea for my return home to participate in our 2023 electoral processes. I accept
the call to run for the Office of President of the Republic of Zimbabwe.
My decision to stand as an independent candidate, painful as it is, arises out of two missed
opportunities. Both in December 2017 and September 2022, our party Congress failed to allow
fair competition for the Presidency. As a result, it failed to unite the membership, forgive the past,
and reconcile for the future of our glorious revolution. Unfortunately, to this day, notwithstanding
a promise to let “bygones be bygones” post-November 2017 and a pledge to “restore the legacy”
and values of our liberation movement, we continue to witness exclusionary politics; persecution
of members who loyally served the people, the party, the government, and the late founding
President, Cde Robert Gabriel Mugabe. It is unacceptable that the so-called new dispensation has
exiled myself and many other comrades over one key disagreement about how the internal
succession process ought to have been handled. Our position was and remains clear, that without
intimidation, and abuse of state institutions, Cde Mnangagwa could never have won and cannot
win any leadership position in a fair and open political process.
Post-November 2017, together, we all gave the "new dispensation" leadership space to govern and
to make responsible decisions in uniting the party and the country. In his 2018 campaign, Cde
Mnangagwa promised to deliver health care for all, electricity, he promised the youth jobs, he
promised educational reforms; he promised modern railway system; he promised to mechanise,
modernise and grow the economy; he promised to conduct social and security reforms that
predicate our international reengagement needs. On all counts, he has failed on his own promises.
The question for the party is whether Cde Mnangagwa must be allowed to fail for another
five years at the expense of the people of Zimbabwe? The country cannot afford another five
years of toxic political differences, a failed economy, and social strife. It is time to settle this by
throwing this matter back to the people through this election for them to make a choice between
fear and hope.
His conduct as party leader and state president is averse to the core values of the liberation
movement of inclusive, open, and transparent politics. His tenure and leadership style so far have
left our party structures - the Main Wing, the Women’s League, and the Youth League - badly
exposed and threatened by corrupt, foreign, hero-worshipping “for ED” structures, which
undermine elected national, provincial and district leaders and are disrespectful to our traditional
leaders. In his own words, he advised President Mugabe that “the party is not your personal
property nor that of your family” and let alone the country.
Saviour Kasukuwere
Presidential Candidate