Malawi: For DPP to Win Next Year, It Must Replace APM - Otherwise MCP Sikubwera Mocheza

1 August 2024

The month of August is finally here. The month of party conventions for the 2025 elections. Komano a DPP mwalimbadi mtima kuti APM will be your candidate?

APM does not carry himself as a politician who is in any way preparing to win elections. I mean, he will have unseat a government, but less than 12 months to elections, the guy is always very quite and hiding at Page House in Mangochi. He behaves like a typical retiree not someone in active service.

If DPP needs seriousness, APM must not stand. DPP needs a candidate who is desperate for power. Someone who is desperate to win and will do anything to win. APM failed to campaign in 2020, and he is clearly not ready to campaign now. He is old and has been president already. As a result, he is psychologically not well motivated to get power because he loses nothing if he loses elections.

Problem is that DPP is scared to replace APM. But you know what, DPP has collapsed under APM's watch since he took over from Bingu in 2012. The party has failed to grow because of APMs leadership style.

As a matter of fact, APM lost government twice and got DPP shoved to the Opposition. First, in 2012 when Bingu died, APM had taken control of DPP but lost government to Joyce Banda. DPP moved to the Opposition because APM could not find a political solution with Joyce Banda to keep DPP in power. A solution could have been there but APM failed to find it.

Second was in 2020. DPP was shoved to the Opposition after winning the 2019 elections because APM had lost control of institutions and actors that matter for an administration to stay in power. He lost boma lowina wina kale because he is a poor political leader.

If DPP maintains APM they have a campaign without energy. A boring campaign. A campaign without presence and inspiration.

The way MCP is doing its politics, I can guarantee an embarrassing DPP loss next year. Replace APM and rebuild.

AllAfrica publishes around 500 reports a day from more than 100 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.

Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica. To address comments or complaints, please Contact us.