Uploaded by Zibusiso Moyo

Economic Governance Watch 1-2023 - The Preliminary Delimitation Report

advertisement
Economic Governance Watch 1/2023
The Preliminary
Delimitation Report
5 January 2022
ELECTION WATCH 1/2023
[5th January 2023]
The Preliminary Delimitation Report
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission [ZEC] has been conducting a delimitation
exercise since last June in order to fix the boundaries of constituencies and
wards for the general election due to be held later this year, and on Monday
26th December the Commission’s chairperson presented the preliminary
delimitation report to the President.
We examined the law on delimitation in our Election Watch 3/2022 of the 19th
September 2022 [link], and for the purposes of this bulletin it is only necessary
to outline what is supposed to happen after the preliminary delimitation report
has been presented to the President. The procedure is laid down in section
161 of the Constitution:
After receiving the preliminary report the President must lay it before
Parliament – i.e. the National Assembly and the Senate – within seven days
[section 161(7)].
Within 14 days after that, the President must refer the preliminary report back
to ZEC for the Commission to consider any issue raised by himself or
Parliament. ZEC must give consideration to any issue so raised, but its
decision on them is final [section 161(8) & (9)].
Once ZEC has prepared its final delimitation report it must send the report to
the President, who must publish it in the Gazette within 14 days [section
161(10) & (11).
It is important to note section 161(2) of the Constitution, which states:
“If a delimitation of electoral boundaries is completed less than six months
before polling day in a general election, the boundaries so delimited do not
apply to that election, and instead the boundaries that existed immediately
before the delimitation are applicable.”
As we explained in our Election Watch 3/2022, this means that ZEC’s final
delimitation report must be published by the 28th January if the new boundaries
are to apply to this year’s general election.
What Has Been Done So Far
What the President has done
On the 30th December the President issued Proclamation 5 of 2022 [link] in which
he summoned Parliament to an extraordinary session tomorrow, the 6th
January, so that the preliminary delimitation report can be laid before it – and,
although the proclamation does not say so, the report will have to be laid before
Economic Governance Watch 1/2023
The Preliminary
Delimitation Report
5 January 2022
both the Senate and the National Assembly in terms of section 338 of the
Constitution.
What Parliament has done
Parliament has issued a notice to its members saying that tomorrow’s sitting will
be held virtually, with only a few members attending physically.
The Acting Clerk has sought permission from the Committee on Standing Rules
and Orders to appoint an ad hoc committee to analyse the Delimitation and has
proposed the following timetable:
6th January: Tabling of the preliminary report in both Houses of Parliament
7th January:
Ad hoc committee to begin its work on the
report
13th January: Ad hoc committee to report its findings and recommendations
to both Houses
17th & 18th January: Both Houses to debate the committee’s findings and
recommendations
19th January: Parliament’s recommendations to be presented to the
President.
This timetable, it will be seen, gives ZEC just nine days before the 28th January
deadline within which it must consider recommendations made by the
President or Parliament and issue its final delimitation report. If the deadline is
not met, the existing – i.e. old – electoral boundaries will apply in the next
general election.
Have the Time-limits Been Met So Far?
No they haven’t. When the preliminary report was presented to the President on
the 26th December, a government spokesman said:
“In terms of the law, His Excellency is required to cause the report to be
tabled before the Parliament of Zimbabwe within seven working days from
the date of presentation of the said report.”
With respect, this is incorrect. Section 161(7) of the Constitution says the
preliminary report must be laid before Parliament “within seven days”, not
seven working days. When the Constitution says “days” it means what it
says. This is clear from section 336(3), which provides that:
“Whenever the time for doing anything in terms of this Constitution ends or
falls on a Saturday, Sunday or public holiday, the time extends to … the
next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday or public holiday.”
This provision would be unnecessary, indeed meaningless, if Saturdays,
Sundays and public holidays – non-working days – are to be excluded from
any period, because in that event a period could not possibly end on a nonworking day.
Economic Governance Watch 1/2023
The Preliminary
Delimitation Report
5 January 2022
Correctly construed, section 161(7) of the Constitution required the President to
cause the preliminary delimitation report to be laid before Parliament within
seven actual days from the 26th December, when he received it. In other
words, he should have summoned Parliament to meet by the 3rd January at
the latest. On the same construction, section 161(8) requires the President to
return the preliminary report to ZEC within 14 actual days from the date on
which it should have been laid before Parliament, i.e. by the 17th January.
Does the failure to meet the time-limits matter?
Any failure to comply with the Constitution is to be deprecated, but in this case
the failure probably does not invalidate what has been done so far because if
it did it would mean that the entire delimitation process would be nullified
because of a failure to meet a time-limit by a couple of days.
On the other hand, the failure to meet the constitutional time-limits does mean
that publication of the final delimitation report will be pushed closer to the
ultimate deadline, the 28th January, after which the new electoral boundaries
cannot be used for the mid-year general election. Parliament’s consideration
of the preliminary report will be restricted to just two days, and ZEC will have
only nine days to decide what to do about Parliament’s recommendations and
to publish its final report.
Conclusion
There are two morals here:
1. Always follow the Constitution, and
2. Don’t leave things to the last minute.
Veritas makes every effort to ensure reliable information, but cannot take legal responsibility for information supplied.
If you want to contact Veritas, have any questions or wish to subscribe or unsubscribe please email veritas@mango.zw
If you are looking for legislation please look for it on www.veritaszim.net
Follow us on
(+263 71 893 3633)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Download