The Open Area Studies Journal

2011, 4 : 96-103
Published online 2011 June 3. DOI: 10.2174/1874914301104010096
Publisher ID: TOARSJ-4-96

Elections in Botswana: A Ritual Enterprise?

Mokganedi Zara Botlhomilwe and David Sebudubudu
Department of Sociology, University of Botswana, Gaborone, Botswana

ABSTRACT

Botswana has the reputation of being Africa’s longest surviving democracy having held uninterrupted elections at five year intervals since the pre-independence elections of 1965. The latest elections were held in October 2009. Although in democratic discourse it is assumed and/or expected that the holding of regular free, fair and competitive multiparty elections should provide an opportunity of regime change, this has so far not materialized in Botswana. The country is therefore a dominant-party system with only one political party, the Botswana Democratic Party (BDP), having won all the elections held so far. This paper argues that there is nothing inherently undemocratic with people voting for the same political party provided the political playing field is level. A number of factors are advanced to explain the dominance of the BDP in the country’s politics. These include, inter alia, the perceived delivery of the ruling party, the politics of patronage, advantages of incumbency and other factors related to the culture of Batswana. Having said this, it is concluded that recent political events in the country point towards the emergence of a new undemocratic culture which may result in the reversal of the system of one-party dominance. Thus, it is argued that the dominance of the BDP in the country’s politics is likely to be seriously challenged in the not too distant future.