×

Zimbabwe cabinet backs bill that would extend Mnangagwa’s rule till 2030

By Thomson Reuters Feb 10, 2026 | 10:52 AM

HARARE, Feb 10 (Reuters) – Zimbabwe’s cabinet backed draft legislation on Tuesday that would change the constitution to extend presidential terms from five years to ​seven, allowing President Emmerson Mnangagwa to stay in ‌office until 2030.

Other proposed changes in the bill presented to cabinet include a provision that the president be elected by parliament rather than through a direct popular vote.

Justice Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi ‌told ​a news briefing that the bill ⁠would be sent to ⁠the speaker of parliament and published in an official gazette before lawmakers consider it.

Mnangagwa, 83, is currently meant to step down in 2028 after serving two ​five-year terms, and there has been a succession battle in the ruling ZANU-PF party over who will ⁠take over.

He came to power ⁠after a military coup ousted longtime leader ​Robert Mugabe in 2017, and opposition politicians have condemned moves ​by his party to extend his time in ‌office.

Jameson Timba, a senior leader in the southern African country’s fractured opposition movement, said in a statement that the cabinet’s approval of the changes was “politically destabilising”.

He said ⁠a group called Defend the Constitution Platform would immediately consult lawyers and brief regional and international partners as part of ⁠efforts to oppose ‌the changes.

ZANU-PF has ruled Zimbabwe since ⁠independence from Britain in 1980.

It has a ​two-thirds ‌majority in the lower house of parliament ​and also ⁠overwhelmingly controls the upper house through traditional leaders and other proxies who generally vote with it, allowing it to change the constitution.

(Reporting by Chris Muronzi;Additional reporting by Anathi Madubela and Nelson Banya;Writing by Alexander Winning;Editing by Tim ​Cocks, William Maclean)