12 days to convergence: A statesman’s approach to coalition politics
By Dr Lawrence Mwelwa
DR CHRIS Zumani Zimba’s article presenting President Brian Mundubile’s 12-day offer must be interpreted through the lens of mature leadership rather than narrow political calculation.
In divided seasons, responsibility demands initiative that seeks convergence instead of prolonging fragmentation and rivalry.
Mature leadership begins with recognising reality. The opposition landscape remains scattered, with overlapping ambitions and parallel consultations. In such conditions, delay benefits incumbency.
By initiating structured dialogue, Mundubile signals awareness that time, not rhetoric, determines electoral viability and national readiness.
Setting a 12-day engagement window reflects decisiveness. Open-ended invitations often dissolve into indefinite consultations. A timeline establishes seriousness and discipline. It communicates that unity is not symbolic but actionable, and that responsible leadership requires resolution within defined, reasonable parameters.
Critics may interpret deadlines as pressure. Yet mature leadership distinguishes between coercion and clarity. Clarity prevents ambiguity from fermenting distrust. By outlining a timeframe, Mundubile reduces speculation and encourages focused deliberation rather than prolonged uncertainty within supporter bases across structures.
Institutional legitimacy remains central. Leadership validated through congress and organised structures provides constitutional grounding. By emphasising procedural mandate, Mundubile reinforces democratic order.
Mature politics strengthens institutions rather than improvising authority through informal conclaves lacking defined membership and recognized accountability.
The invitation extended to Hon. Makebi Zulu and Hon. Given Lubinda acknowledges their stature. It identifies them as priority partners in dialogue, not peripheral actors. Mature leaders do not fear capable colleagues; they create structured avenues for collaboration and shared responsibility.
Offering consideration of a running mate position demonstrates confidence. Authority secure in mandate can afford inclusion. Sharing executive space signals stability, not insecurity. It reflects understanding that coalition politics demands partnership frameworks that transcend individual aspiration and emphasize collective advancement.
Political maturity also requires confronting internal stagnation. Endless parallel campaigns within the same political family exhaust resources and confuse supporters. By inviting consolidation, Mundubile attempts to redirect energy from intra-family rivalry toward structured preparation for national contestation.
Chinese wisdom teaches that harmony requires order. Stability emerges when hierarchy is clarified without humiliation. In this approach, Mundubile does not deny alternative ambitions; rather, he proposes alignment within an established framework capable of sustaining coordinated national mobilisation.
Public articulation of alliance breadth is often misunderstood. Confidence in support base is not arrogance when expressed responsibly. It reassures supporters that unity discussions rest upon tangible organisational foundations rather than abstract declarations detached from institutional strength.
The reconciliation language cited in the article reinforces maturity. Healing internal divisions requires moral framing that elevates dialogue above personal rivalry. Mature leadership appeals to shared history and common purpose, especially within political movements shaped by longstanding relationships.
Furthermore, leadership demands timing. Strategic windows do not remain open indefinitely. By defining a period for engagement, Mundubile communicates urgency without hostility. Elections approach steadily; preparation cannot wait upon indefinite internal negotiation or speculative convening.
Institutional credibility enhances national confidence. Voters observing fragmented opposition question governability. Consolidation under transparent structures signals readiness for state responsibility. Mature leadership understands that internal order projects external stability and reassures citizens seeking predictable governance.
Addressing alternative selection mechanisms critically should be viewed as defense of order. Leadership emerging outside recognised processes risks instability. By underscoring congress-based legitimacy, Mundubile reinforces commitment to constitutionalism within party and alliance structures.
Leadership maturity also recognises psychological dignity. Invitations must preserve respect for counterparts. By framing engagement as dialogue among equals rather than ultimatum to subordinates, the offer attempts to maintain relational balance essential for sustainable coalition.
Decisive initiatives inevitably invite scrutiny. Yet history favors leaders who act to unify rather than merely observe fragmentation. Proposing structured convergence reflects willingness to assume responsibility for alignment rather than waiting for spontaneous agreement to materialise.
Coalitions succeed when anchored in clarity. Ambiguous partnerships collapse under stress. By articulating institutional grounding, timeline, and potential executive configuration, Mundubile outlines parameters that reduce uncertainty and enhance predictability within alliance negotiations.
Leadership must balance confidence with humility. Strength demonstrated through formal mandate enables generous gestures. Extending opportunity from a position of stability avoids desperation optics and instead conveys deliberate, measured statesmanship conscious of national expectations.
Ultimately, mature leadership is defined by stewardship. It considers broader movement interests above individual trajectories. Whether accepted or declined, the offer reflects a leader attempting to organise opposition energies into coherent architecture capable of presenting credible national alternative.
The coming days will reveal responses. Yet regardless of outcome, initiating structured dialogue under defined parameters signals responsibility. In moments of fragmentation, leaders are remembered not for preserving rivalry but for creating pathways toward disciplined, dignified unity.





















