Government of National Unity (Zimbabwe)
The Government of National Unity was the coalition government of Zimbabwe formed following the signing of the Global Political Agreement, which took effect on 11 February 2009. The discussions followed the 2008 general election, which had seen widespread violence and intimidation, and the MDC-T win a majority of seats in Parliament of Zimbabwe|Parliament]. President Robert Mugabe remained in office as President, while Morgan Tsvangirai was appointed Prime Minister - a post which had been abolished in 1987. The new ministers were sworn in on 11 February 2009, while deputies were sworn in on 20 February 2009.
History
The GNU was established under the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment Act, 2009, enacted on 13 February 2009. This amendment modified the executive structure to create the office of prime minister and allocate powers between the president, prime minister, and cabinet. It also required that ministers be members of Parliament, either in the House of Assembly or Senate, to ensure accountability to the legislature.This constitutional requirement led to the removal of Gibson Sibanda, a senior MDC–M figure initially appointed as Minister of State in the Deputy Prime Minister's office. Sibanda failed to secure a parliamentary seat in the 2008 elections and was not given one of the MDC-M appointed seats in Parliament, highlighting the strict application of the rule.
The GNU cabinet initially comprised 31 ministers, with portfolios apportioned among the three parties to reflect their electoral strengths and the GPA terms. ZANU–PF received 15 ministries, including key portfolios such as Defence, Home Affairs, Foreign Affairs, Justice, and Media. MDC–T held 13 ministries, including Finance, ICT, Health, and Energy. MDC–M received 3 ministries, such as Education, Industy and Commerce and Regional Integration.
The apportionment ensured representation but led to tensions over control of powerful ministries. Appointments were negotiated and announced by President Mugabe, with the prime minister chairing the Council of Ministers.
In June 2010, Prime Minister Tsvangirai reshuffled MDC–T ministers, replacing several in his party's portfolios, including those for Energy and Housing. This was the only internal reshuffle during the GNU.
The GNU ended following the 31 July 2013 general elections, in which ZANU–PF secured a two-thirds majority in parliament. The 2013 Constitution abolished the prime minister's office, restoring an executive presidency. Under the Constitution, Cabinet ministers retained their posts even after the dissolution of Parliament, until the newly elected President was sworn in, which occurred when Mugabe was sworn in on 22 August 2013. The period saw economic stabilisation through dollarisation and growth averaging around 10% annually, though political tensions persisted.