What kind of campaign is this, where Dr. Dalitso Kabambe of UTM is seen moving alone, like a general without an army? One must ask the UTM faithful: how can a man win government in September when he’s practically running a solo marathon? Even his predecessor, known for his thunderous oratory and commanding stage presence, ended up a distant third. What then of Kabambe, whose message barely ripples beyond his shadow?
Where are the lieutenants? Where are Njawala, Kaliati, or even the once-hyped Fredokiss? Silent. Invisible. They follow behind with no fire, no message, no purpose. This isn’t a campaign—it’s a funeral march. You don’t win a national election by walking alone in the crowd. You win it with a movement, with a team, with a structure.
Now contrast that with the mighty Malawi Congress Party. Engineer Mumba is pulling thousands on his own in one region. Richard Chimwendo Banda commands multitudes in another. And the President himself, Dr. Lazarus Chakwera, is relentlessly working the ground elsewhere. This is not coincidence. This is strategy. This is power. This is a party in motion, with a message, with a mission. And you expect MCP to lose? How? On what grounds?
And what of APM? The so-called torchbearer of DPP? He slumbers at PAGE House in Mangochi, frail, tired, and evidently out of touch. Leadership cannot be microwaved—it must be lived, breathed, and proven. Instead, he sends out reckless messengers like Norman Chisale, whose angry outbursts and unguarded statements are doing nothing but dragging the DPP deeper into the abyss of disgrace. Add to that the empty presence of Peter Mukhito, a man whose political relevance is as faint as a candle in a storm.
The writing is on the wall. Malawi is not buying empty rhetoric or solo theatrics. Malawians want results, unity, and a leadership that serves—not schemes. The MCP is not only ready—it is already delivering. And come September, all signs point to a resounding continuation of the Chakwera administration.
The people have seen the light, and they’re staying with it. 2030? Why not? MCP has earned the trust. MCP has earned the right. And MCP is not just winning—it is leading.