Why Do We Care About President Mnangagwa’s First 100 Days In Office?
https://allafrica.com/stories/201801080100.html
The minute Cde E.D. Mnangagwa assumed office of the presidency,
the clock started ticking on his first 100 days in office. But why the
fascination with a president’s first 100 days?. Does a first 100 days
provide some insight into how President Mnangagwa will run the government up until elections or beyond if he wins a fresh mandate?
The concept of grading the president’s first 100 days was born
of the Great Depression, when Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) was aware
that voters were desperate for fast action from their president. Knowing
that the promise of expedient moves to ameliorate job loss, hunger and
depleted national morale would set him apart, FDR became the first
president to make big promises about immediate action,and then followed
through in a serious way. FDR’s impact on American government was
nothing short of monumental, but although he was elected to the
presidency no fewer than four times, he enacted a good chunk of his most
significant policies during his first 100 days in office.
President Mnangagwa in his inauguration speech on the 24th of
November 2017, defined his Presidential priorities. The key was not
just what he said he’d do, but when. There is particular pressure on him
to deliver something in the first 100 days to demonstrate he’s moving
the country forward.
We expect the media and the public to keep scrupulous tabs on these first months of President Mnangagwa’s
presidency. The first 100 days is really important in Zimbabwe
considering that the economy has collapsed and all economic fundamentals
are wrong. Given this scenario he would be judged so much on his early
accomplishments. Unfortunately for him, Zimbabweans may not give him
time to make mistakes and learn, nor focus on long term vision and not
have to worry so much about tactical maneuvering.
Unfortunately, President Mnangagwa has
to live in the Zimbabwe he inherited. A country with a struggling
economy and a financial crisis. It’s a Zimbabwe in which his early days
has a disproportionate impact on all that follows. Any significant
missteps will feed downward spirals that can be hard to arrest. So its
far better for him to get early wins that build personal credibility and
political capital, rather than dig himself into holes and have to
clamber back out. He has a back breaker task to build a granite
foundation in a period of confusion.
There are those who argue that 100 days is not really
important, and that it is an ‘arbitrary benchmark” which hasn’t
correlated very much with subsequent success or failure. Whether an
administration has success or not really depends on the five years, or
10 years if it has two terms. What truly matters is what the president
is able to accomplish over the course of his entire term. The first 100
days mark according to this argument, is not the end of the story, its
the end of the beginning.
The larger point, though, is that Zimbabweans should focus on the first 100 days, but be mindful that President Mnangagwa still
has plenty more time ( +-240 days before elections) to get things done
as president. Whether he possesses the competence to do so is an open
question, but he certainly has the time.
We expect the President to give his administration a self-appraisal in honor of the 100 day mark that ends on the 4th of March 2018.
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