7th Parliament of Zimbabwe
| 7th Parliament of Zimbabwe | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Overview | |||||||||||
| Legislative body | Parliament of Zimbabwe | ||||||||||
| Jurisdiction | Zimbabwe | ||||||||||
| Meeting place | Parliament House, Harare | ||||||||||
| Term | 25 August 2008 – 28 June 2013 | ||||||||||
| Election | 2008 Zimbabwean general election | ||||||||||
| Government | Government of National Unity | ||||||||||
| Website | parlzim | ||||||||||
| House of Assembly | |||||||||||
| Members | 210 → 215[a] | ||||||||||
| Speaker | Lovemore Moyo | ||||||||||
| Deputy Speaker | Nomalanga Khumalo | ||||||||||
| Clerk | Austin Zvoma | ||||||||||
| Party control | MDC-T | ||||||||||
| Senate | |||||||||||
| Members | 93 → 99[b] | ||||||||||
| President | Edna Madzongwe | ||||||||||
| Deputy President | Naison Ndlovu | ||||||||||
| Clerk | Austin Zvoma | ||||||||||
| Party control | ZANU-PF [c] | ||||||||||
| Sessions | |||||||||||
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In Zimbabwe's 2008 general election, 210 members were elected to the House of Assembly – one for each parliamentary constituency. The Constitution of Zimbabwe had been amended in 2007 to increase the number of constituency seats from 120 to 210. The new constituencies were drawn out in the 2007 Delimitation Report.
As part of the election, a new Senate was also elected. 60 members - six for each of Zimbabwe's 10 provinces - were elected for the sixty senatorial constituencies that had been drawn up as part of the 2007 Delimitation Report. 10 senators were Provincial Governors appointed by the President. 16 traditional Chiefs were elected by the Council of Chiefs, while the President and Deputy President of the Council of Chiefs were automatically Senators ex officio. The final five seats in the Senate were made up of Senators directly appointed by the President.
The Zimbabwean Parliament comprises the elected House of Assembly, the Senate and the President of Zimbabwe. The list of new parliamentarians was published in an Extraordinary edition of the Zimbabwe Government Gazette on 12 May 2008.
Overview
Convening of Parliament
On 19 August 2008, President Robert Mugabe announced his intention to open Parliament in the subsequent week, five months after the parliamentary election was held. Due to ongoing negotiations over the disputed election, the opposition Movement for Democratic Change – Tsvangirai party saw this as unacceptable, with MDC–T Secretary-General Tendai Biti stating that it would "be a clear repudiation of the Memorandum of Understanding, and an indication beyond reasonable doubt of ZANU–PF's unwillingness to continue to be part of the talks. In short, convening Parliament decapitates the dialogue."[1]
Nevertheless, Parliament was convened on 25 August 2008. That morning, Mugabe appointed 11 senators, including eight of the ten seats reserved for provincial governors and three of the five special non-constituency Senate seats. Chris Mushohwe was appointed Resident Minister and Governor for Manicaland Province, Ephraim Masawi for Mashonaland Central, Aeneas Chigwedere for Mashonaland East, and Faber Chidarikire for Mashonaland West. The remaining Resident Ministers and Governors—Cain Mathema for Bulawayo, David Karimanzira for Harare, Thokozile Mathuthu for Matabeleland North, and Angeline Masuku for Matabeleland South—were reappointed to their posts. (Mugabe did not appoint governors for Midlands and Masvingo provinces at that time.) The three non-constituency senators appointed that day were Vice-President Joseph Msika, Patrick Chinamasa, and John Nkomo, who was Speaker of Parliament during the preceding parliamentary term.[2] Mugabe was believed to have left some of the posts vacant so that they could go to the MDC in the event of a power-sharing agreement.[3]
Despite the MDC–T's objections, the members of Parliament were sworn in on the morning of 25 August.[4][5][6] The MDC MPs sat on the government benches and told the ZANU–PF MPs to sit on the opposition benches.[6] Also on 25 August, two MDC–T MPs, Shuwa Mudiwa[5][6] and Eliah Jembere,[6] were arrested. Mudiwa was released later in the day and was sworn in as an MP.[5][6] Wayne Bvudzijena, a police spokesman, said that the police questioned Mudiwa with regard to political violence, while Jembere was being held over rape charges.[6][7] Five other MDC MPs were also wanted by the police.[7] The MDC–T denounced the arrests as politically motivated and said that the police had entered Parliament and forcefully removed Mudiwa from the building. It also claimed that another of its MPs was targeted for arrest but that this arrest was prevented by other MDC MPs;[8] however, according to the MDC, a third MP was arrested at his home the next day.[9]
Mugabe opened Parliament with a speech on 26 August,[9][10] expressing an optimistic outlook on resolving the political dispute—"Landmark agreements have been concluded, with every expectation that everyone will sign up"[10]—while denouncing the West's policies toward Zimbabwe.[9] MDC MPs heckled him during his speech;[9][10] although Mugabe continued speaking and completed it,[9][11] he was reportedly inaudible at times due to the volume of the heckling, "look[ed] annoyed", and spoke more loudly and quickly as a result.[9] In a petition on the same day, the MDC condemned the convening of Parliament as a violation of the preliminary agreement between the parties regarding negotiations, described Mugabe as an "illegitimate usurper", and criticized the arrest of the MDC MPs.[9] The state-owned newspaper The Herald strongly criticized the heckling in an editorial, describing it as "disgraceful" and "infantile", while also asserting that the MDC–T had effectively acknowledged Mugabe's legitimacy by attending Parliament and remaining there during Mugabe's speech.[11]
Election of speakers
Parliament was convened at 10 a.m. on 25 August 2008 by Clerk of Parliament Austin Zvoma, though Mudiwa and Jembere had been arrested prior to the ceremony. Mudiwa was later released and sworn into office, but Jembere remained in police custody. In addition, the MDC announced that 15 of its members would not attend the ceremony because they were hiding from intimidation and violence.[citation needed]
After the members of Parliament were sworn in, elections were held that day for the leadership of both houses of Parliament. In the House of Assembly, a secret-ballot election of the Speaker pitted Lovemore Moyo (MDC–T) against Paul Temba Nyathi (MDC–M); ZANU–PF declined to field a candidate against the two, opting to back the MDC–M candidate instead. Moyo won the election with 110 votes against Nyathi's 98.[12] The Deputy Speaker, Nomalanga Khumalo (MDC–M) was also elected.[6] Moyo reportedly received 99 votes from MDC–T MPs, seven votes from MDC–M MPs, and four votes from ZANU–PF MPs,[4] but the breakdown of results could not be known for certain because the vote was secret.[13] Independent MP Jonathan Moyo also backed Nyathi.[13][14]
ZANU–PF's Emmerson Mnangagwa described Moyo's election as "a truly historic event" and expressed his congratulations on behalf of Mugabe and the party.[6] Following his election as Speaker, Moyo predicted that Parliament would henceforth be a meaningful check on the executive, which would need to "find ways of negotiating with the legislature in order to put through programs".[15] In the Speaker election, a number of the MDC–M MPs voted against their own party's candidate for Speaker, which was considered a blow to Mugabe, because it meant that he could not rely on MDC–M MPs to vote with ZANU–PF. Thus, ZANU–PF would likely be unable to control a parliamentary majority despite the support of the MDC–M leadership.[3][13]
In the Senate, where ZANU–PF held a majority, ZANU–PF candidate Edna Madzongwe was reelected President of the Senate with 58 votes. Gibson Sibanda, whose candidacy was supported by both the MDC–T and the MDC–M, received 28 votes.[16]
Temporary adjournment and power-sharing agreement
On 24 October, it was announced that Parliament would be adjourned until 11 November due to a lack of funds from the government.[17]
Parliament planned to meet again in October 2008, at which point it would consider proposed constitutional amendments resulting from the power-sharing agreement between ZANU–PF and the MDC, which was signed in September. As the terms of the deal were supported by all three parties, the amendments were expected to pass without difficulty. Elements of the agreement specifically relevant to Parliament included granting all three parties the right to appoint one minister who is not a Member of Parliament. These ministers would be allowed to participate in Parliament, but would not have voting rights. Additionally, the agreement provided for the appointment of nine more non-constituency senators, three from each party.[18]
House of Assembly
Composition of the House of Assembly
At the start of the Parliament, the House of Assembly was made up of 210 members, as well as the presiding officer, known as the Speaker, who is elected at the Assembly's first sitting. A Member of the House of Assembly who is elected as Speaker ceases to be a Member of the House of Assembly, and the vacant seat must be filled in accordance with the Electoral Law.
Following the signing of the Global Political Agreement between ZANU-PF, MDC-T and MDC-M, five extra seats were added to the House of Assembly under the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 19) Act, 2009. [19] These additional seats comprised persons appointed to the posts of Vice-President, Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Minister and who are not already Members of Parliament, become ex officio members of the House of Assembly. Should persons so appointed be already members of Parliament, then the Party of which that person is a member or nominee had the right to nominate a non-constituency member of the relevant House.
| Members | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elected in July 2008 | At dissolution in June 2013 | ||||||
| Constituency Maps | |||||||
| Assembly composition | |||||||
| Party | Constituency Seats | Constituency Seats | Appointed Seats | Total Seats | Change | ||
| ZANU–PF | 99 | 90 | 1 | 91 | |||
| MDC–T | 100 | 95 | 2 | 97 | |||
| MDC-M | 10 | 7 | 1 | 8 | |||
| Independent | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
| Total | 210 | 192 | 4 | 196 | |||
| Vacant | 0 | 18 | 1 | 19 | |||
| Speaker | 1 | 1 | |||||
| Government majority | -12 | -14 | |||||
Elected Constituency Members
210 members of the House of Assembly were elected by secret ballot from the 210 constituencies into which Zimbabwe is divided.[20] The following members were gazetted as having won seats during the General Election in March 2008.
Members appointed in accord with the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 19) Act, 2009
Following the signing of the Global Political Agreement between ZANU-PF, MDC-T and MDC-M, five extra seats were added to the House of Assembly under the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 19) Act, 2009. [21] These additional seats comprised persons appointed to the posts of Vice-President, Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Minister and who are not already Members of Parliament, become ex officio members of the House of Assembly. Should persons so appointed be already members of Parliament, then the Party of which that person is a member or nominee had the right to nominate a non-constituency member of the relevant House.
| Post | Party of member | Member | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Constituency Seat | ZANU-PF | Oppah Muchinguri | Nominated in lieu of First Vice-President Joice Mujuru, who already had a seat representing Mount Darwin West. Sworn into House of Assembly on 29 March 2011. | |
| Second Vice-President | ZANU-PF | Joseph Msika | Died 4 August 2009 | |
| Prime Minister | MDC-T | Morgan Tsvangirai | ||
| Non-Constituency Seat | MDC-T | Gorden Moyo | Nominated in lieu of Deputy Prime Minister Thokozani Khupe, who already had a seat representing Makokoba | |
| Deputy Prime Minister | MDC-M | Arthur Mutambara | ||
| Replacement Members | ||||
| Second Vice-President | ZANU-PF | John Nkomo | Vice-President from 13 December 2009. Sworn into House of Assembly on 29 March 2011, transferring from Senate. Died 17 January 2013. | |
Senate
Composition of the Senate
The Senate is made up of 93 members, as well as the presiding officer, known as the President of the Senate, who is elected at the Senate's first sitting. A Senator who is elected as President of the Senate ceases to be a Senator, and the vacant seat must be filled in accordance with the Electoral Law.
Following the signing of the Global Political Agreement between ZANU-PF, MDC-T and MDC-M, six extra seats were added to the Senate under the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 19) Act, 2009. [22] These additional seats were to balance the five existing seats allocated to ZANU-PF members appointed by the President and would be distributed so that four would be nominated by MDC-T and two by MDC-M.
| Members | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| At opening of Parliament in August 2008 | At dissolution in June 2013 | |||||||||
| Constituency Maps | ||||||||||
| Senate composition | ||||||||||
| Affiliation | Elected Members | Provincial Governors | Presidential Appointees | Total | Elected Members | Provincial Governors | Presidential Appointees | Total | Change | |
| ZANU–PF | 30 | 10 | 5 | 45 | 24 | 9 | 5 | 38 | ||
| MDC–T | 24 | 0 | 0 | 24 | 19 | 0 | 4 | 23 | ||
| MDC-M | 6 | 0 | 0 | 6 | 6 | 0 | 2 | 8 | ||
| Chiefs | 18 | N/a | N/a | 18 | 16 | N/a | N/a | 16 | ||
| Total | 78 | 10 | 5 | 93 | 65 | 9 | 11 | 85 | ||
| Vacant | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 13 | 1 | 0 | 14 | ||
| President of the Senate | 1 | 1 | ||||||||
Elected Constituency Senators
60 members of the Senate were elected by secret ballot from the 60 senatorial constituencies into which Zimbabwe is divided.[23] The following members were gazetted as having won seats during the General Election in March 2008.
Provincial Governors
Chapter 5, Part 2, §34(b) of the Constitution of Zimbabwe reserved 10 seats in the Senate for Provincial Governors, one from each of the ten Provinces, appointed by the President.[24]
The appointment of Provincial Governors emerged as a significant source of contention, underscoring the asymmetrical power dynamics within the power-sharing framework established by the GPA. Under the provisions of the Constitution of Zimbabwe (as amended), President Robert Mugabe held the exclusive authority to appoint the ten Provincial Governors — one for each of the ten provinces — who served ex officio as non-constituency members of the Senate, thereby affording the executive considerable influence over upper-house proceedings despite the opposition's parliamentary gains.[25] Mugabe, exercising this prerogative with minimal consultation, systematically appointed loyalists from ZANU–PF to these positions, often extending or renewing incumbents from prior terms and installing new figures aligned with the party's hardline faction, in a manner that contravened the GPA's stipulation for inter-party consensus on senior appointments to promote inclusivity and reconciliation.[26] Notable appointments included the re-endorsement of David Karimanzira for Harare, a veteran ZANU–PF mobiliser with roots in the liberation struggle; Christopher Mushohwe for Manicaland, known for his role in party provincial structures; Cain Mathema for Bulawayo, a long-standing ideologue whose tenure evoked historical ethnic sensitivities.[citation needed]
In response to Mugabe's unilateralism, the MDC–T and MDC–M advanced their own slates of nominees for the gubernatorial posts, framing these as reflective of their electoral mandate and essential for equitable provincial administration in a context of economic collapse and service delivery failures. In March 2011, following the death of ZANU–PF’s David Karimanzira, the Harare provincial governorship fell vacant. Under the GPA, the MDC formations were entitled to five of the ten governorships, and MDC–T promptly nominated James Makore – a former ZANU–PF member turned trade-unionist, long-serving aide to Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, and the sitting MDC–T senator for Chitungwiza – to fill the Harare post.[27] Despite repeated demands from MDC–T spokesman Douglas Mwonzora that Makore be sworn in immediately, Mugabe refused, insisting that governors remained a presidential prerogative and linking any MDC appointments to the prior removal of targeted Western sanctions.[28] Makore was never installed; the post remained vacant until the end of the GNU in 2013.[29] Nominees for other provinces included Lucia Matibenga for Masvingo, Julius Magaramombe for Manicaland, Seiso Moyo for Bulawayo, and Tose Sansole for Matabeleland North. Throughout the Parliament, they remained notionally reserved but unsworn—exacerbating perceptions of ZANU–PF's deliberate sabotage of devolutionary reforms amid Harare's mounting sanitation crises and infrastructural decay.[30]
Chiefs' seats
Chapter 5, Part 2, §34(d) and (d) of the Constitution of Zimbabwe reserved 16 seats in the Senate for Chiefs, of whom two are elected by the provincial assembly of Chiefs from each of the provinces, other than the metropolitan provinces, and two for the President and Deputy President of the National Council of Chiefs.[31]
| Elected by Provincial Assembly of Chiefs for | Traditional Chief's Name | Name of Chief | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| President of the Council of Chiefs (ex officio) | Fortune Charumbira | ||
| Deputy President of the Council of Chiefs (ex officio) | Lucas Mtshane Khumalo | ||
| Manicaland | Chiduku | Rivai Mbaimbai | |
| Chimombe | George Chimombe | Died 26 January 2011. | |
| Mashonaland Central | Chisunga | Daster Chisunga | |
| Nembire | Clemence Nyabvunzi | ||
| Mashonaland East | Musarurwa | Enos Masakwa | |
| Nyamukoho | Samson Katsande | ||
| Mashonaland West | Dandawa | Try Manyepa | |
| Nebiri | Wilson Nebiri | ||
| Masvingo | Chitanga | Felani Chauke | |
| Mabika | J.T. | ||
| Matabeleland North | Gampu | Ashel Gampu Sithole | |
| Shana | Zondani Jonah Neluswi | ||
| Matabeleland South | Bidi | Bidi Ndiweni | Died 2009 |
| Masendu | Siandalizwe Dube | ||
| Midlands | Ngungumbane | Zama Nthua Mkwananzi | |
| Ntabeni | Milton Ntabeni |
Presidential appointees
Chapter 5, Part 2, §34(e) of the Constitution of Zimbabwe reserved 5 seats in the Senate for members directly appointed by the President of Zimbabwe.[32]
| Party of member | Appointee | Other role(s) | Notes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ZANU-PF | Joseph Msika | Second Vice-President of Zimbabwe | Appointed 25 August 2008. Died 4 August 2009. | ||
| ZANU-PF | John Landa Nkomo | From 13 December 2009 Second Vice-President of Zimbabwe | Appointed 25 August 2008. Transferred to House of Assembly on 29 March 2011. | ||
| ZANU-PF | Patrick Chinamasa | Minister of Justice and Legal Affairs | Appointed 25 August 2008 | ||
| ZANU-PF | Joseph Made | Minister of Agriculture, Mechanisation and Irrigation Development | Appointed 4 November 2008 | ||
| ZANU-PF | Aguy Georgias | Deputy Minister of Public Works | Sworn in April 2009 | ||
| Replacement Appointees | |||||
| ZANU-PF | Rugare Gumbo | Sworn in 29 March 2011. Replacing Joseph Msika. | |||
| ZANU-PF | Simon Khaya Moyo | Sworn in 31 March 2011. Unsuccessfully bid to become Speaker of the House of Assembly. Replacing John Nkomo. | |||
Senators appointed in accord with the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 19) Act, 2009
Following the signing of the Global Political Agreement between ZANU-PF, MDC-T and MDC-M, six extra seats were added to the Senate under the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 19) Act, 2009. [33] These additional seats were to balance the five existing seats allocated to ZANU-PF members appointed by the President and would be distributed so that four would be nominated by MDC-T and two by MDC-M.
| Party of member | Member | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| MDC-T | Tichaona Mudzingwa | Deputy Minister of Transport and Infrastructural Development. Died 10 April 2009. | |
| MDC-T | Sesel Zvidzai | Deputy Minister of Local Government and Urban Development | |
| MDC-T | Roy Bennett | Designated Deputy Minister of Agriculture by Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai but President Robert Mugabe refused to swear him into ministerial office. Sworn in as Senator, however. | |
| MDC-T | Morgan Komichi | From 28 November 2012 Deputy Minister of Transport and Infrastructural Development | |
| MDC-M | Welshman Ncube | Minister of Industry and Commerce | |
| MDC-M | Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga | Minister of Regional Integration and International Cooperation | |
| Replacement Appointees | |||
| MDC-T | Sibusisiwe Masara | Sworn in 29 November 2012, replacing Tichaona Mudzingwa. | |
By-elections, replacements and recalls
Under the terms of the GPA, the principal parties of ZANU–PF, MDC–T, MDC–M reached an informal understanding to refrain from contesting parliamentary seats against one another during the lifespan of the Parliament, thereby preserving the fragile balance of power within the Government of National Unity.[34] This arrangement, while aimed at averting potential flashpoints of electoral violence akin to those that marred the 2008 polls, effectively led to the systematic postponement and de facto abolition of by-elections to fill vacancies in the House of Assembly arising from deaths, resignations, or disqualifications between 2009 and 2013. The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), tasked with overseeing electoral processes, cited resource constraints, logistical challenges, and the overarching need for political stability as justifications for these deferrals, though critics contended that the decisions were politically motivated to shield the coalition's equilibrium from disruption.[35] By the end of 2012, 18 Assembly seats remained vacant. These gaps eroded parliamentary representation for affected districts, particularly in urban opposition strongholds, exacerbating perceptions of democratic deficit.[36]
The deferments ignited fierce controversies, with MDC formations accusing ZANU–PF of exploiting the GPA's ambiguities to entrench its influence and suppress opposition gains in potential by-elections. MDC–T spokesperson Douglas Mwonzora decried the policy as "a deliberate strangulation of democracy," arguing that it contravened section 67 of the Constitution (as amended in 2009), which mandated the filling of vacancies within six months to ensure "regular, fair, and reliable elections."[37] ZANU–PF countered that the GPA's spirit prioritised national healing over "needless politicking," with spokesperson Rugare Gumbo asserting in 2011 that by-elections risked reigniting the "anarchy of 2008," including the deaths of over 200 supporters and displacement of 5,000 families.[38] Civil society organisations, including the Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN), amplified these debates, reporting in their 2012 annual review that the absences distorted legislative oversight, particularly on GNU-mandated reforms like security sector alignment, where opposition voices were underrepresented.[39] International observers, such as the European Union, echoed these concerns, linking the deferrals to broader GPA implementation failures, including stalled media liberalisation and security force partisanship, which Human Rights Watch documented as fostering a "climate of fear" that deterred voter participation in any hypothetical contests.[40]
Judicial interventions sought to compel the ZEC to honour constitutional timelines, yielding mixed outcomes amid allegations of judicial capture. In a landmark 2010 High Court application, MDC–T MP Nelson Chamisa and others petitioned for by-elections in three vacant Harare seats, invoking section 39 of the Electoral Act [Chapter 2:13] and arguing that deferrals violated citizens' rights to representation under the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance, ratified by Zimbabwe in 2009. Justice Tendai Uchena dismissed the suit in Chamisa v. Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (HC 4567/10), ruling that GPA-mediated consensus superseded statutory deadlines, a decision critics lambasted as "executive overreach" given Uchena's prior ZANU–PF affiliations.[41] An appeal to the Supreme Court in 2011 fared no better; Chief Justice Luke Chidyausiku upheld the deferral in a 2–1 split, with Justice Paddington Garwe dissenting on grounds that "electoral moratoriums undermine the rule of law," but the majority deferred to the GPA's "stabilising intent."[42] A subsequent 2012 challenge by civic group Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition (CiZic) in the High Court (HC 8921/12) sought declaratory relief against ZEC's "indefinite postponements," but Justice Charles Hungwe ruled the matter moot post-GPA roadmap announcements, prompting CiZic to decry the judiciary's "complicity in electoral sabotage."[43] These rulings, observers noted, reflected ZANU–PF's leverage over judicial appointments, as per the GPA's unfulfilled security sector reforms, and contributed to SADC's tepid 2012 summit communiqué urging "expeditious vacancy fillings" without enforceable timelines.[44] By the GNU's dissolution in July 2013, the deferrals had entrenched a de facto electoral vacuum, fuelling MDC–T's boycott threats and underscoring the coalition's prioritisation of stasis over democratic renewal.
Constituency vacancies
| Constituency | Date of vacancy | Party of incumbent before vacancy |
Outgoing member | Reason for vacancy | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gokwe Gumunyu | MID | Between the election in March and the first sitting of Parliament in August 2008 | ZANU-PF | Ephrem Mushoriwa | Death of member | |
| Matobo North | MBS | 25 August 2008 | MDC-T | Lovemore Moyo | Elected Speaker | |
| Guruve North | MSC | 26 September 2008 | ZANU-PF | Cletus Mabaranga | Death of member | |
| Bindura North | MSC | 6 December 2008 | ZANU-PF | Elliot Tapfumaneyi Manyika | Death of member | |
| Mutare North | MCL | 17 July 2009 | ZANU-PF | Charles Fungayi Pemhenayi | Death of member | |
| Lupane East | MBN | 22 July 2009 | MDC | Njabuliso Mguni | Member expelled from Party | |
| Nkayi South | MBN | 22 July 2009 | MDC | Abedinico Bhebhe | Member expelled from Party | |
| Bulilima East | MBS | 22 July 2009 | MDC | Norman Mpofu | Member expelled from Party | |
| Emakhandeni–Entumbane | BYO | 15 August 2009 | MDC-T | Cornelius Raphael Dube | Elected Speaker | |
| Makoni Central | MCL | 8 November 2009 | MDC-T | John Nyamande | Death of member | |
| Mabvuku-Tafara | HRE | 2 June 2010 | MDC-T | Shepherd Madamombe | Death of member | |
| Gutu South | MVG | 5 August 2011 | MDC-T | Eliphas Mukonoweshuro | Death of member | |
| Marondera East | MSE | 31 August 2011 | ZANU-PF | Tracy Mutinhiri | Member expelled from Party | |
| Shamva South | MSC | 17 December 2011 | ZANU-PF | Kingstone Samuel Ziteya | Death of member | |
| Mwenezi West | MVG | Late 2011 | ZANU-PF | Neddie Pilot Sacks Masukume | Death of member | |
| Mount Darwin East | MSC | 11 January 2012 | ZANU-PF | Betty Chikava | Death of member | |
| Masvingo North | MVG | 4 October 2012 | ZANU-PF | Isack Stanisalaus Mudenge | Death of member | |
| Mberengwa North | MID | 30 November 2012 | ZANU-PF | Jabulani Mangena | Death of member | |
Senate vacancies
| Constituency | Date of vacancy | Party of incumbent before vacancy |
Outgoing member | Reason for vacancy | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chegutu | MSW | 25 August 2008 | ZANU-PF | Edna Madzongwe | Member elected President of the Senate | |
| Chiredzi | MVG | 25 August 2008 | ZANU-PF | Titus Hatlani Maluleke | Member appointed Provincial Governor of Masvingo | |
| Gokwe South | MID | 25 August 2008 | ZANU-PF | Jaison Max Kokerai Machaya | Member appointed Provincial Governor of Midlands | |
| Gweru-Chirumanzu | MID | 20 June 2009 | MDC-T | Patrick Kombayi | Death of member | |
| Bindura-Shamva | MSC | 23 October 2009 | ZANU-PF | Misheck Chando | Death of member | |
| Mberengwa | MID | 21 August 2009 | ZANU-PF | Richard Hove | Death of member | |
| Chief | MBS | 2009 | Bidi | Bidi Ndiweni | Death of member | |
| Kadoma | MSW | 30 July 2010 | ZANU-PF | Chiratidzo Gava | Death of member | |
| Hwange | MBN | 1 December 2010 | MDC-T | Jabulani Ndlovu | Death of member | |
| Chief | MCL | 26 January 2011 | Chimombe | George Chimombe | Death of member | |
| Provincial Governor of Harare | HRE | 24 March 2011 | ZANU-PF | David Ishemunyoro Karimanzira | Death of member | |
| Mabuthweni | BYO | 26 December 2011 | MDC-T | Gladys Tambudzo Dube | Death of member | |
| Masotsha Ndlovu | BYO | 2 March 2012 | MDC-T | Enna Chitsa | Death of member | |
| Chipinge | MCL | 24 September 2012 | MDC-T | Josiah Mukayi Rimbi | Death of member | |
Notes
- ^ Following the Global Political Agreement in 2009, five extra seats were created in the House of Assembly for the Vice-Presidents, Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Ministers.
- ^ Following the Global Political Agreement in 2009, six extra seats were created in the Senate for MDC-nominated members.
- ^ The Chiefs typically vote in line with ZANU-PF Senators.
References
- ^ Cris Chinaka, "MDC says Mugabe parliament plans endanger talks", Reuters (International Herald Tribune), 20 August 2008.
- ^ "President Appoints Ministers", The Herald (allAfrica.com), 25 August 2008.
- ^ a b Dumisani Muleya, "Zimbabwe: Mugabe Bid to Wangle Speaker Post Backfires", Business Day, Johannesburg (allAfrica.com), 25 August 2008.
- ^ a b "Zimbabwe: Tsvangirai Wins Parliamentary Vote", allAfrica.com, 25 August 2008.
- ^ a b c Celia W. Dugger, "Zimbabwe opposition gains a key position", International Herald Tribune, 25 August 2008.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "MDC wins Zimbabwe parliament vote", BBC News, 25 August 2008.
- ^ a b "MDC-T MP for Epworth Arrested", The Herald (allAfrica.com), 26 August 2008.
- ^ "Mugabe names cronies as parliament opens" Archived 2006-06-15 at the Wayback Machine, The Star (IOL), 25 August 2008, page 3.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Zimbabwe leader jeered at parliament opening", Associated Press (International Herald Tribune), 26 August 2008.
- ^ a b c Cris Chinaka, "Mugabe opens parliament"[permanent dead link], Reuters (International Herald Tribune), 26 August 2008.
- ^ a b "MDC-T MPs' Behaviour Disgraceful", The Herald (allAfrica.com), 27 August 2008.
- ^ "MDC wins Zimbabwe parliament vote", BBC News
- ^ a b c Kitsepile Nyathi and agencies, "Zimbabwe: Mugabe Party Loses Election for Speaker", The Nation, 25 August 2008.
- ^ Angus Shaw, "Mugabe loses key post" Archived 2006-06-15 at the Wayback Machine, Cape Times, 26 August 2008, page 1.
- ^ "Speaker hope for new Zimbabwe era", BBC News, 26 August 2008.
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