Evading Term Limits Needs to be a Red Line - Vanguard Africa - 0 views
www.vanguardafrica.com/...-limits-needs-to-be-a-red-line
Africa politics analysis opinion democracy authoritarianism

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A quarter of Africa’s 54 leaders have been in power for more than twenty years. To reach that milestone they have all either evaded or never had to bother with presidential term limits. And this trend has picked up steam. Since 2015, thirteen African incumbents have evaded term limits, reversing a two-decade trend of gradually expanding respect for term limits prior to this period.
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the erosion of term limits does not happen in isolation, but is part of a broader pattern to weaken democratic checks and balances and evade the rule of law
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Countries where African leaders have evaded terms are significantly less democratic, more corrupt, and conflict-prone compared to African countries where term limits have been upheld
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The erosion of term limit norms since 2015 is an outcome of term limited leaders calculating that domestic checks and balance are too weak and that international actors are too indifferent to stop the incumbent’s power grab
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There has been domestic organized resistance to the evasion of term limits in every African country where this has occurred since 2015. Citizens are invariably working against a stacked deck dealt by the ruling executive, though. It is crucial for regional and international democratic actors, thus, to do more to support citizens attempting to protect their democratic rights — and their gains — to make it more costly for incumbents to even try to evade term limits
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evading term limits is all about the abuse of political power and hijacking the democratic process. These regimes become increasingly unstable and anti-democratic over time. This outcome has regional and international implications, not just domestic
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By upholding term limits, African countries not only remove a key source of instability, but they also mitigate against predatory governance systems that all too often emerge when leaders stay in power beyond their two term mandate