Zambian government, policy and governance — the decisions that set the rules for everything else.
18 posts

Zambia's five-day presidential nomination window closes on 22 May 2026 at the Mulungushi International Conference Centre, with President Hakainde Hichilema filing for the UPND alongside opposition leaders Harry Kalaba, Fred M'membe, Brian Mundubile and Makebi Zulu. The Electoral Commission of Zambia validates each nomination against Article 100 of the Constitution before publishing the final candidate list. The next milestone is the opening of the campaign period ahead of the 13 August general election.

Once the Electoral Commission declares a presidential winner, the result is not automatically final. Under Article 101 of the Constitution, it can be challenged — but only by petition to the Constitutional Court, filed within seven days of the declaration, and the court must hear and decide it within fourteen. The compressed timeline has been the most contested feature of Zambian election law since 2016. Here is how the petition route works and why the clock matters so much.

The campaign for 13 August is governed by more than goodwill. Zambia's Electoral Code of Conduct is a binding legal instrument under the Electoral Process Act that sets the rules of the contest — barring violence and intimidation, hate speech, vote-buying and the abuse of state resources, while guaranteeing equal access to public media. The Electoral Commission of Zambia enforces it through conflict-management committees. Here is what the Code covers and what happens when it is broken.

Zambia does not elect a president on a simple plurality. Under the Constitution, a candidate must win more than 50% of all valid votes cast — the 50%-plus-one rule. If no candidate clears that bar on 13 August, the top two go to a run-off within 37 days. The rule, introduced in the 2016 constitutional amendments, reshaped Zambian presidential politics. Here is how the threshold, the run-off and the timelines actually work.

To stand for president in Zambia, a candidate cannot rely on a single regional base. The Constitution requires the nomination to be supported by registered voters from each of the country's ten provinces — a deliberate test of national reach. The Electoral Commission of Zambia ran provincial pre-processing of presidential supporters from 11 to 15 May 2026 to verify those backers before nominations. Here is how the rule works and why it exists.

The Electoral Commission of Zambia certified the Register of Voters on 4 May 2026 — the formal legal step that fixes the list of who is eligible to vote in the 13 August general election. Certification closes the register to further changes and becomes the single source of truth used at every polling station. It is one of the quieter milestones in the electoral calendar, and one of the most consequential: no name on the certified roll, no vote.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's decision to avoid the media during a Norway visit has set off a storm over press freedom in the world's largest democracy. The incident itself is minor — a skipped joint press conference. The reaction is the story: it crystallised long-running concern about the space for independent journalism in India. For readers tracking how democracies handle scrutiny, the episode is a useful marker, and the press-freedom question travels well beyond India.

Zambia's current IMF programme is winding toward its end, and Secretary to the Treasury Felix Nkulukusa says the government is confident of clinching a successor arrangement after the 13 August general election. The framing is deliberate: a new programme is being lined up for after the vote, not before it. For a country still consolidating a post-default fiscal path, the continuity of an IMF anchor is the variable markets and lenders are watching most closely.

The Electoral Commission of Zambia has extended the nomination period for National Assembly, mayoral and council-chairperson candidates ahead of the 13 August general election. The presidential window closed on schedule; this extension covers the down-ballot races. The move buys parties more time to finalise adoptions, but it also tightens the calendar that follows — objections, the courts and the gazette all have to happen before campaigning proper begins.

The Twelfth National Assembly is in its closing sittings before Zambia's 13 August general election dissolves it. A short list of bills is now in active progress through committee and second reading — the Public Gatherings Bill, the supplementary budget, electoral reform amendments and statutory instruments tied to the next fiscal year. What passes before August matters; what stalls waits for the Thirteenth Assembly that the election produces.

The Electoral Commission of Zambia opened the presidential nomination window for the 13 August 2026 general election on 18 May. The process runs five working days. The legal framework sits in the Constitution and the Electoral Process Act, the document checklist is specific and unforgiving, and what happens after a candidate is filed is a defined sequence of objection, adjudication and final acceptance.

LUSAKA — The Electoral Commission of Zambia opens a five-day presidential nomination window today, the formal start of the campaign period for general elections set for 13 August.

A Lusaka High Court witness has told the M'membe firearm trial that a search of the Socialist Party president's vehicle, after a 2023 by-election fracas in Serenje, uncovered a CZ97B pistol, 35 rounds of ammunition, a metal axe, a catapult and pepper spray.

Outgoing Energy Minister Makozo Chikote, departing cabinet to seek a fresh parliamentary mandate, says Zambia is "destined to become a major energy hub in the region" and that the team he leaves behind has plans for Middle East-driven petroleum disruption.

Secretary to the Treasury Felix Nkulukusa says the K26.3 billion supplementary budget came early because Cabinet will dissolve in June, MPs will be sworn in in August, and waiting until September would leave wages, allowances and farmer payments unfunded.

Zambia's National Assembly has passed the Public Gatherings Bill, with the threshold for required police notification amended at Committee Stage from three to seven persons. Critics call it the death of democracy; the government says it preserves order.

Zambia is accusing the United States of linking a $2 billion health assistance deal to access to its critical minerals, in a sharpening dispute that opens a window on Donald Trump's transactional approach to African aid.

Mainga Kabika, the civil-service head of the gender division in Zambia's presidency, says aspiring female candidates have reported being asked for sexual favours in exchange for selection ahead of August's general election.
Politics is the section where the rules get set. It follows the Zambian government and the National Assembly, the policy decisions that shape business and the economy, public-sector reform, governance and accountability, and the election cycle. The reporting stays close to consequence: less on the day's noise, more on the laws, budgets and appointments that change what is possible for companies, investors and citizens.