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Political branding in Botswana and Malawi: electoral competition and the welfare agenda, 1994-2014

Following the end of colonial rule in several southern African states, national leadership passed largely to neoliberal and patrimonial governments that proceeded to dominate the political landscape. Despite the widespread poverty that characterised much of post-colonial Africa, these governments di...

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Main Author: Hamer, Samuel Frederic
Other Authors: Seekings, Jeremy
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Political Studies 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hamer, Samuel Frederic
author2 Seekings, Jeremy
author_browse Hamer, Samuel Frederic
Seekings, Jeremy
author_facet Seekings, Jeremy
Hamer, Samuel Frederic
author_sort Hamer, Samuel Frederic
collection Thesis
description Following the end of colonial rule in several southern African states, national leadership passed largely to neoliberal and patrimonial governments that proceeded to dominate the political landscape. Despite the widespread poverty that characterised much of post-colonial Africa, these governments did little to expand welfare spending beyond what colonial administrations had provided. Endemic poverty, however, has forced ruling-party governments to change tack as opposition parties in more recent years have emerged to challenge their leadership. In two such countries - Botswana and Malawi - heightened electoral competition has accompanied the efforts of presidential incumbents to demonstrate new public commitments to poverty reduction through shifts in rhetoric, symbolism, and policy emphasis. I argue that incumbents have pursued this "branding" with respect to poverty reduction in order to effectuate greater voter support for their incumbency and party. The Botswana Democratic Party has ruled uninterrupted in Botswana since independence, but opposition parties have made significant inroads during recent elections. In the midst of this heightened political competition, President Ian Khama (2008- ) has sought to increase support for the party by remarketing the country's employment-based programmes to serve new governmental objectives around employment and poverty reduction. Khama's rebranding of public employment programmes (PEPs), especially the Ipelegeng Programme, has allowed government to target underserved beneficiary groups such as the urban poor, and provided more reliable incomes to out-of-work Batswana in rural areas. Critically, the rebranding of social protection programmes has resulted in their being publicly associated more with Khama himself than with government. Public displays of empathy for the conditions of the poor moreover, as manifested during Khama's visits to disadvantaged areas, reinforced the president's image as a poverty-sensitive leader. These programmatic and non-programmatic measures have together defined Khama's social protection 'brand'; or the public emphasis that the president has placed on his social protection agenda. For their part, opposition leaders have branded themselves around a "social-democratic" approach to poverty reduction. Since the 1990s, ruling and opposition parties have converged in their social protection ideologies as the BDP has "counterbranded" in response to electoral competition by adopting opposition policy ideas. Khama's branding around personalised PEPs, in conclusion, generated strong support for himself among the rural poor especially owing to popular preferences for low-wage work over cash transfers. Analysis of Afrobarometer survey data shows that Khama's branding was insufficient to maintain the BDP vote, as the party's poor performance in the 2014 election confirmed. Both Malawian presidents between 2004 and 2014, Bingu wa Mutharika and Joyce Banda, established new political parties while in office and opted to "brand" them as prioritising poverty reduction. These brands - which had programmatic, rhetorical, and symbolic components - allowed Mutharika and Banda the possibility of achieving a broader national appeal, whereas presidential elections before 2009 had been decided on the basis of regional patronage networks.
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/20049 Political branding in Botswana and Malawi: electoral competition and the welfare agenda, 1994-2014 Hamer, Samuel Frederic Seekings, Jeremy Politics Following the end of colonial rule in several southern African states, national leadership passed largely to neoliberal and patrimonial governments that proceeded to dominate the political landscape. Despite the widespread poverty that characterised much of post-colonial Africa, these governments did little to expand welfare spending beyond what colonial administrations had provided. Endemic poverty, however, has forced ruling-party governments to change tack as opposition parties in more recent years have emerged to challenge their leadership. In two such countries - Botswana and Malawi - heightened electoral competition has accompanied the efforts of presidential incumbents to demonstrate new public commitments to poverty reduction through shifts in rhetoric, symbolism, and policy emphasis. I argue that incumbents have pursued this "branding" with respect to poverty reduction in order to effectuate greater voter support for their incumbency and party. The Botswana Democratic Party has ruled uninterrupted in Botswana since independence, but opposition parties have made significant inroads during recent elections. In the midst of this heightened political competition, President Ian Khama (2008- ) has sought to increase support for the party by remarketing the country's employment-based programmes to serve new governmental objectives around employment and poverty reduction. Khama's rebranding of public employment programmes (PEPs), especially the Ipelegeng Programme, has allowed government to target underserved beneficiary groups such as the urban poor, and provided more reliable incomes to out-of-work Batswana in rural areas. Critically, the rebranding of social protection programmes has resulted in their being publicly associated more with Khama himself than with government. Public displays of empathy for the conditions of the poor moreover, as manifested during Khama's visits to disadvantaged areas, reinforced the president's image as a poverty-sensitive leader. These programmatic and non-programmatic measures have together defined Khama's social protection 'brand'; or the public emphasis that the president has placed on his social protection agenda. For their part, opposition leaders have branded themselves around a "social-democratic" approach to poverty reduction. Since the 1990s, ruling and opposition parties have converged in their social protection ideologies as the BDP has "counterbranded" in response to electoral competition by adopting opposition policy ideas. Khama's branding around personalised PEPs, in conclusion, generated strong support for himself among the rural poor especially owing to popular preferences for low-wage work over cash transfers. Analysis of Afrobarometer survey data shows that Khama's branding was insufficient to maintain the BDP vote, as the party's poor performance in the 2014 election confirmed. Both Malawian presidents between 2004 and 2014, Bingu wa Mutharika and Joyce Banda, established new political parties while in office and opted to "brand" them as prioritising poverty reduction. These brands - which had programmatic, rhetorical, and symbolic components - allowed Mutharika and Banda the possibility of achieving a broader national appeal, whereas presidential elections before 2009 had been decided on the basis of regional patronage networks. 2016-06-21T09:21:26Z 2016-06-21T09:21:26Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20049 eng application/pdf Department of Political Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Politics
Hamer, Samuel Frederic
Political branding in Botswana and Malawi: electoral competition and the welfare agenda, 1994-2014
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Political branding in Botswana and Malawi: electoral competition and the welfare agenda, 1994-2014
title_full Political branding in Botswana and Malawi: electoral competition and the welfare agenda, 1994-2014
title_fullStr Political branding in Botswana and Malawi: electoral competition and the welfare agenda, 1994-2014
title_full_unstemmed Political branding in Botswana and Malawi: electoral competition and the welfare agenda, 1994-2014
title_short Political branding in Botswana and Malawi: electoral competition and the welfare agenda, 1994-2014
title_sort political branding in botswana and malawi electoral competition and the welfare agenda 1994 2014
topic Politics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20049
work_keys_str_mv AT hamersamuelfrederic politicalbrandinginbotswanaandmalawielectoralcompetitionandthewelfareagenda19942014