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Section 96(2), resignations of VP

By Lovemore Madhuku The question, does section 96(2) of the Constitution apply to resignations of Vice-Presidents? has arisen in the following situation: After the resignation of Vice-President Kembo Mohadi, Presidential spokesperson George Charamba indicated, as a fact, that the Vice-President had handed in his written notice of resignation to President Emmerson Mnangagwa about a week earlier than the day the Vice-President publicly announced his resignation. President Mnangagwa, despite receiving the written notice, did not give public notice of his deputy’s resignation. The first time that the public knew about the resignation of the Vice-President was when Mohadi himself made the announcement. Some concerned citizens, on learning that the Vice-President had given written notice to the President a week earlier than his public announcement, expressed the view that the President had breached the Constitution by not giving public notice of the resignation within 24 hours as required by section 96(2) of the Constitution. In response to questions from two journalists, on separate and unrelated occasions, I expressed the following opinion, that section 96(2) of the Constitution does not apply to the current Vice-Presidents and that the section will only apply to Vice-Presidents after the coming into force of the running mate clause. My aforesaid opinion was widely reported and attracted various responses. One prominent response was that the opinion was a wrong reading of our law and that I had deliberately promoted that wrong view as an “enabler” to support and/or protect the President. Former Higher Education minister Jonathan Moyo appeared to have led this response in his tweets. A response of a qualitatively different type came from Alex T Magaisa. His response was not a mere tweet. In his “Saturday Big Read”, he wrote an article under the title “Mohadi resignation: did President Mnangagwa breach the Constitution?” In direct response to my opinion, Magaisa concluded as follows: “The argument that it does not apply to the current Vice-Presidents, therefore, promptly falls away”. The conclusion in the Magaisa article is the direct opposite of the opinion I expressed. Judging from the vigorous Twitter debate that followed the Magaisa article, there are now two prominent and mutually exclusive opinions on section 96(2): does it apply to current Vice-Presidents? On March 6 2021, I responded to a tweet by Moyo in which he was accepting the opinion by Magaisa and saying: “ @ProfMadhuku should be professional and admit he was wrong”. My response, was as follows: “The opinion I gave to the media, that section 96(2) of the Constitution only applies to a VP who is a running mate (and thus not applicable to current VPs) is the better view of the law. With respect, I find the article by @Wamagaisa shallow and simplistic, unless meant for Twitter”. I promised to post a detailed argument showing the scholarly basis of the opinion I hold. What follows below is the detailed argument. For the sake of completeness, I must say that the

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