HARARE — Opposition leaders, constitutional lawyers and human rights activists have formally launched a new civic alliance, the Defend the Constitution Platform (DCP), aimed at resisting any attempt to extend President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s tenure beyond the limits set in Zimbabwe’s Constitution.
The coalition, unveiled at a press briefing in Harare on Monday, said it would mobilise citizens, civic organisations and faith groups to oppose proposals linked to ZANU PF’s internal resolution seeking to keep the President in office until 2030.
DCP organisers said their campaign is anchored on the argument that altering presidential term limits without direct public approval would undermine the authority of the 2013 Constitution, which was adopted through a national referendum.
“Term limits are not an administrative detail; they are a democratic safeguard,” a spokesperson for the platform said. “Any attempt to change them without returning to the people would amount to a constitutional breach, even if it follows parliamentary procedure.”
President Mnangagwa, who first took office in 2017 and won elections in 2018 and 2023, is currently serving what is constitutionally defined as his second and final term, set to end in 2028.
The debate over tenure follows statements from senior ZANU PF officials indicating that the party intends to pursue constitutional amendments in line with its Resolution Number One, adopted at its annual conference. While party leaders argue that the Constitution allows amendments through Parliament, critics say provisions relating to presidential term limits carry special legal and political weight.
Several legal experts have noted that extending or resetting presidential terms would likely require not only a constitutional amendment Bill passed by a two-thirds majority in Parliament, but also approval in a national referendum. They argue that this is because term-limit clauses are tied to the foundational principles endorsed by voters in 2013.
The DCP said it would focus on public education campaigns to raise awareness about constitutional rights and the importance of leadership rotation. Organisers added that they plan to engage trade unions, student bodies, churches and professional associations in what they describe as a broad-based constitutional defence movement.
“This is not about personalities or parties,” another organiser said. “It is about preserving the principle that political power must change hands according to agreed rules.”
Human rights groups backing the initiative warned that weakening term limits could accelerate democratic backsliding in a political environment already marked by disputes over electoral processes, civic freedoms and the independence of state institutions.
The Government and ruling party officials have defended the amendment process as lawful, arguing that the Constitution explicitly provides mechanisms for change. They have also dismissed suggestions that the initiative is driven by the President personally, describing it as a collective party position.
Political analysts say the term-limit debate is fast becoming a central issue in Zimbabwe’s political landscape, with the potential to reshape alliances within both the ruling party and the opposition. Some observers believe the controversy could serve as a rallying point for a fragmented opposition and reinvigorate civic engagement around constitutional governance.
For now, the Defend the Constitution Platform says it is preparing for a sustained national campaign, signalling that the battle over presidential succession and constitutional limits is likely to dominate Zimbabwe’s political discourse in the months ahead.

