2 years on: Tanzania’s Magufuli isn’t a bulldozer. He’s a magician

MsemajiUkweli

JF-Expert Member
Jul 5, 2012
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The inauguration of John Pombe Magufuli as president of Tanzania on 5 November 2015 was no surprise.

Chama cha Mapinduzi (CCM) is a dominant party, and the election of its candidate in October had been the most likely outcome. Media attention had centred on his main rival Edward Lowassa, who had defected from the CCM to run against Magufuli. And even in the first days after the poll, the newspapers were focused more on the annulment of the election in Zanzibar than on Tanzania’s incoming president.

It was easy to underestimate Magufuli. He did not have a following before his nomination as CCM’s standard-bearer or much of a public profile. Indeed, many believed that he only won the nomination as a compromise candidate after divisive factional conflict.

What a difference two years can make.
President John Magufuli hasn’t just “pushed through” change. He’s achieved things that were considered all but impossible two years ago.

Since his inauguration two years ago, Magufuli has disturbed the status quo in Tanzania at its foundations. He has instilled a new creed of frugality in government. On his first full day in office, he marched unannounced to the Ministry of Finance, sending its staff into a spin. He redirected funds for Independence Day celebrations to anti-cholera efforts.

More disruptive still, he has waged war on corruption in Tanzania. He sacked the leaders of the Tanzania Port Authority. Next, he began a major shake-up of the Tanzania Revenue Authority. And then he began to root out “ghost workers” in government.

Soon, Magufuli became a symbol of thrift, decisiveness and integrity. One commentator joked that he solved a moral quandary by asking himself [HASHTAG]#WhatWouldMagufuliDo[/HASHTAG], and soon Twitter was thick with the hashtag, used in jest but also delight. To capture his direct and disruptive style, spectators resuscitated Magufuli’s old nickname, “The Bulldozer” – a reference to his reputation for building roads as Minister of Works, Transport and Communication. In endless political cartoons, the new president was sketched literally sweeping away the losers of his reforms: CCM elites, foreign companies, the media and the opposition, among others.

Since that time, people have learnt not to underestimate Magufuli’s capacity for action, but they continue to underestimate him in another way. “The Bulldozer” evokes an image of some brute, unthinking force, but in his two years in office, Magufuli has not only “pushed through” change. He has done things that were previously thought to be all but impossible.

Challenging money politics
Magufuli has also challenged the role of money in politics since coming to office.

Over the last three decades, Tanzanian politics has become steadily intertwined with big business. Many believe that both of the largest political parties have been captured by private interests. Like in much of the world, many Tanzanian politicians are rich men that have used their wealth to gain power, and their power to gain wealth.

It has become received wisdom in both academic and popular circles that politicians are trapped in this entrenched system of money politics. But Magufuli has challenged these supposed restrictions with great temerity. He has been tenacious in calling the bluff of both vested interests in CCM and international actors. There is a certain boldness about his presidency.

Amongst other things, Magufuli has defied the assumption that African states cannot take on big multinational corporations and win. This year, he sought out a confrontation with the mining companies, which eventually led Barrick Gold to agree to a deal that involves substantial concessions last month.

More magician than bulldozer
The moniker “The Bulldozer” does not do justice to all of these achievements. Bulldozers are machines, confined by the mundane laws of physics. In contrast, Magufuli has redefined what is possible. In this sense, he is more magician than bulldozer.

“Bulldozer” does Magufuli a disservice in another way, because bulldozers are hulking, slow-moving and mute, while many of Magufuli’s greatest achievements have been rhetorical.

Tanzanian presidents have been trying to rehabilitate CCM’s image for years. President Jakaya Kikwete, for instance, negotiated new deals with mining companies in an attempt to outflank the opposition. Both he and his predecessor, Benjamin Mkapa, introduced numerous initiatives to curb corruption in both the party and the state. But despite these publicly advertised efforts, CCM’s reputation was steadily tarnished.

Magufuli has succeeded where they failed. He has a knack for the dramatic and symbolic. His on-the-spot firing of officials, his off-the-cuff remarks, and his willingness to audaciously disturb the status quo have convinced Tanzanians of his sincerity in ways that previous presidents could not.

Last year, The Economist characterised his style as “government by gesture”. It was meant as a criticism, but in fact, they stumbled across one of his greatest strengths. Going after drug-traffickers and shisha-smokers burnishes Magufuli’s reputation for integrity. Declaring that teenage mothers should be kept out of school plays well to the conservative gallery in Tanzania. Magufuli is constructing a public narrative in which he rediscovers CCM’s moral compass.

Equally, Magufuli has succeeded in reframing issues in his favour. For instance, he has built his show-down with the miners into a wider narrative about “economic warfare”. He has suggested that voters put aside their political differences, and occasionally their political rights, in this patriotic endeavour. Magufuli is tying the ultimate success of his popular domestic agenda to closure of political space, an old trick of authoritarian nationalists.

In this sense too, Magufuli is a magician. He is a performer, adept in show business and displays of wonder. “The Bulldozer” is a guise that the public invented for him, an image of straightforwardness that cloaks the deftness with which he deals in words as well as deeds.

We ought to learn from Frank Baum’s novels, immortalised in The Wizard of Oz. Dorothy’s adventures in Oz are children’s stories, but also works of satire and deep wisdom. They contain an old truth that where there is a magician, or wizard, one should not only admire his accomplishments, but the look for the man behind the curtain, and see how his greatness is constructed, and what purposes it serves.

Source: Africa Argument Magazine.
Author: Dan Paget
Dan Paget is a PhD student at the University of Oxford, focusing on contemporary Tanzanian politics.
 
Hawa jamaa wa lumumba ambao wananufaika na huyu jamaa anayeitia hii nchi hasara wanakesha kumpamba huyu pacha wa idd amini wakati hapambiki
 
The inauguration of John Pombe Magufuli as president of Tanzania on 5 November 2015 was no surprise.

Chama cha Mapinduzi (CCM) is a dominant party, and the election of its candidate in October had been the most likely outcome. Media attention had centred on his main rival Edward Lowassa, who had defected from the CCM to run against Magufuli. And even in the first days after the poll, the newspapers were focused more on the annulment of the election in Zanzibar than on Tanzania’s incoming president.

It was easy to underestimate Magufuli. He did not have a following before his nomination as CCM’s standard-bearer or much of a public profile. Indeed, many believed that he only won the nomination as a compromise candidate after divisive factional conflict.

What a difference two years can make.
President John Magufuli hasn’t just “pushed through” change. He’s achieved things that were considered all but impossible two years ago.

Since his inauguration two years ago, Magufuli has disturbed the status quo in Tanzania at its foundations. He has instilled a new creed of frugality in government. On his first full day in office, he marched unannounced to the Ministry of Finance, sending its staff into a spin. He redirected funds for Independence Day celebrations to anti-cholera efforts.

More disruptive still, he has waged war on corruption in Tanzania. He sacked the leaders of the Tanzania Port Authority. Next, he began a major shake-up of the Tanzania Revenue Authority. And then he began to root out “ghost workers” in government.

Soon, Magufuli became a symbol of thrift, decisiveness and integrity. One commentator joked that he solved a moral quandary by asking himself [HASHTAG]#WhatWouldMagufuliDo[/HASHTAG], and soon Twitter was thick with the hashtag, used in jest but also delight. To capture his direct and disruptive style, spectators resuscitated Magufuli’s old nickname, “The Bulldozer” – a reference to his reputation for building roads as Minister of Works, Transport and Communication. In endless political cartoons, the new president was sketched literally sweeping away the losers of his reforms: CCM elites, foreign companies, the media and the opposition, among others.

Since that time, people have learnt not to underestimate Magufuli’s capacity for action, but they continue to underestimate him in another way. “The Bulldozer” evokes an image of some brute, unthinking force, but in his two years in office, Magufuli has not only “pushed through” change. He has done things that were previously thought to be all but impossible.

Challenging money politics
Magufuli has also challenged the role of money in politics since coming to office.

Over the last three decades, Tanzanian politics has become steadily intertwined with big business. Many believe that both of the largest political parties have been captured by private interests. Like in much of the world, many Tanzanian politicians are rich men that have used their wealth to gain power, and their power to gain wealth.

It has become received wisdom in both academic and popular circles that politicians are trapped in this entrenched system of money politics. But Magufuli has challenged these supposed restrictions with great temerity. He has been tenacious in calling the bluff of both vested interests in CCM and international actors. There is a certain boldness about his presidency.

Amongst other things, Magufuli has defied the assumption that African states cannot take on big multinational corporations and win. This year, he sought out a confrontation with the mining companies, which eventually led Barrick Gold to agree to a deal that involves substantial concessions last month.

More magician than bulldozer
The moniker “The Bulldozer” does not do justice to all of these achievements. Bulldozers are machines, confined by the mundane laws of physics. In contrast, Magufuli has redefined what is possible. In this sense, he is more magician than bulldozer.

“Bulldozer” does Magufuli a disservice in another way, because bulldozers are hulking, slow-moving and mute, while many of Magufuli’s greatest achievements have been rhetorical.

Tanzanian presidents have been trying to rehabilitate CCM’s image for years. President Jakaya Kikwete, for instance, negotiated new deals with mining companies in an attempt to outflank the opposition. Both he and his predecessor, Benjamin Mkapa, introduced numerous initiatives to curb corruption in both the party and the state. But despite these publicly advertised efforts, CCM’s reputation was steadily tarnished.

Magufuli has succeeded where they failed. He has a knack for the dramatic and symbolic. His on-the-spot firing of officials, his off-the-cuff remarks, and his willingness to audaciously disturb the status quo have convinced Tanzanians of his sincerity in ways that previous presidents could not.

Last year, The Economist characterised his style as “government by gesture”. It was meant as a criticism, but in fact, they stumbled across one of his greatest strengths. Going after drug-traffickers and shisha-smokers burnishes Magufuli’s reputation for integrity. Declaring that teenage mothers should be kept out of school plays well to the conservative gallery in Tanzania. Magufuli is constructing a public narrative in which he rediscovers CCM’s moral compass.

Equally, Magufuli has succeeded in reframing issues in his favour. For instance, he has built his show-down with the miners into a wider narrative about “economic warfare”. He has suggested that voters put aside their political differences, and occasionally their political rights, in this patriotic endeavour. Magufuli is tying the ultimate success of his popular domestic agenda to closure of political space, an old trick of authoritarian nationalists.

In this sense too, Magufuli is a magician. He is a performer, adept in show business and displays of wonder. “The Bulldozer” is a guise that the public invented for him, an image of straightforwardness that cloaks the deftness with which he deals in words as well as deeds.

We ought to learn from Frank Baum’s novels, immortalised in The Wizard of Oz. Dorothy’s adventures in Oz are children’s stories, but also works of satire and deep wisdom. They contain an old truth that where there is a magician, or wizard, one should not only admire his accomplishments, but the look for the man behind the curtain, and see how his greatness is constructed, and what purposes it serves.

Source: Africa Argument Magazine.
Author: Dan Paget
Dan Paget is a PhD student at the University of Oxford, focusing on contemporary Tanzanian politics.
Ask the writer to visit the real Tanzania instead of perusing the internet. Let him visit the court premises where money change hands like it was already christmas. Let him take a hundred kilometer trip and count how many traffic coppers will ask bottled water along the way and while at it count how many of them have parked they cars under roadside treeshades. The writer does not know what he is talking about.
 
Tumshukuru Jembe Kinana kwa kutuletea hii neema, iitwayo JOHN POMBE MAGUFULI. Kinana bar pia anasthili sifa za kuwa MKOMBOZI wa chama kilichotrkwa NA mafisadi kilichokuwa kinakufa,amekifufua
 
Wanasiasa washatufanya mpira wa kona unagombaniwa kupigwa vichwa miaka 56 ya Uhuru huoni mijadala moto moto kuhusu mihimili kuingiliwa,maendeleo ya Taifa na wananchi tunapenda matukio tutapewa tu.Week ijayo utasikia usajili ndani ya vyama vya siasa
 
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