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Of cabbages and King Cobra: Populist politics and Zambia's 2006 election
Authors:Larmer  Miles; Fraser  Alastair
Institution:Miles Larmer (m.larmer{at}shu.ac.uk) is Lecturer in Post-1945 Global History at Sheffield Hallam University in the UK.
Alastair Fraser (alastair.fraser{at}politics.ox.ac.uk) is a DPhil candidate in International Relations at the University of Oxford and a research affiliate of the University of Zambia.
Abstract:Zambia's 2006 election was won by incumbent President Levy Mwanawasaand his Movement for Multi-Party Democracy (MMD). However, itis argued here that the most important outcome of the campaignwas the successful articulation of a new populist politics byMichael Sata's Patriotic Front (PF), which won a significantmajority in urban areas. Sata's attacks on foreign investors(particularly from China) for their abuse of the workforce andtheir supposedly corrupt relationship with the MMD resonatedwith urban Zambians, already angered by the negative impactof economic liberalization. PF's campaign injected popular socialdemands into what had become a moribund political debate. TheMMD government is now adopting PF policies in an attempt torestore its own urban support base. The article describes thecampaign and its outcomes, contrasting the political discourseof the MMD and PF and analysing the differences in voting behaviourbetween rural and urban Zambians. It argues that recent reliefof 92 percent of Zambia's international debt, along with therenewed profitability of the copper mining industry, have createdconditions for the re-emergence of a nationalist-developmentalpolitical framework.
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