NEWS ANALYSIS | Patrick Mwanza
There is a certain predictability to it now. A rhythm, almost.
Fanatical. Greedy. Corrupt. These are not new accusations, nor are they lightly made. They are the words critics have reached for as Malawi’s lawmakers return to a familiar pursuit: securing control of the Community Development Fund (CDF).
Earlier this year, President Peter Mutharika refused to assent to the CDF Constitution (Amendment) Bill No. 2 of 2025. His reasoning was measured and almost procedural as he called for stronger accountability, transparency, and fiscal discipline. But beneath his holding back was a more fundamental concern: the blurring of lines between oversight and control.
The High Court of Malawi had already spoken. Lawmakers, it ruled, are meant to oversee the use of CDF resources, not manage them. It is a distinction rooted in principle, designed to guard against conflict of interest.
Parliament, however, saw things differently. When the bill was first passed, all 199 members present voted in favour. Not a single dissenting voice. Consensus, it seems, is easiest to achieve when self-interest is on the table.
However, the story didn’t end there.
Last week, the government attempted to reset the conversation by outlining new CDF guidelines. A chance, perhaps, to restore order. But lawmakers were in no mood for restraint. This week, they rejected recommendations from a parliamentary committee, dismissing them as the imposition of a minority on the majority.
It’s a curious argument — this fear of “minority dictatorship” — particularly when it’s invoked to justify overriding judicial guidance and consolidating financial control.
And so, with the Speaker’s approval, the bill returns for reconsideration. A second bite at the apple.
This is the turning point where the risks increase. When a bill is presented to the president for the second time, the constitutional space for refusal narrows significantly. It is precisely this strategic reality that the bill’s sponsor, Mzimba South East MP Emmanuel Chilambulanyina Jere, alluded to after the initial rejection.
But beyond the procedural chess lies a more troubling question: what’s driving this persistence?
The answer may well be found in the numbers. The CDF, once modest, is now set to balloon, from K220 million to an eye-watering K5 billion per constituency. That’s not merely an increase; it’s an incentive. A powerful one.
And yet, even as lawmakers press forward, there are signs of unease. The relative silence of governing party MPs in openly backing the renewed push may suggest fractures under the surface. Whether this signals resistance or quiet calculation remains to be seen.
Still, one can’t help but wonder: if the same energy were directed toward solving the problems constituents face — food insecurity, failing infrastructure, strained public services — might the outcome look different?
Of course, Parliament isn’t alone in attracting scrutiny.
The judiciary, too, finds itself under increasing criticism, with calls for reform growing louder amid concerns over controversial rulings and delayed justice. An institution meant to stand above reproach is, instead, perceived by some as increasingly self-protective.
And then there’s the health sector, arguably where the consequences of systemic failure are most immediate.
President Mutharika has taken the unusual step of issuing a firm directive against the illegal practice of charging patients for services that are meant to be free. Reports of clinicians demanding payments, or diverting patients to private facilities in which they have interests, have clearly struck a nerve.
His response was clear: such conduct is unlawful, unethical, and unacceptable.
Public health workers have been barred from soliciting fees. Those with stakes in private clinics or pharmacies have been given 30 days to divest or face dismissal and prosecution. The message is straightforward. It says public service cannot coexist with private profiteering at the expense of citizens.
Yet even here, resistance lingers. Some health workers warn that the directive will undermine service delivery. It is a striking claim, considering the well-documented reality that divided loyalties have already eroded the quality of care in public facilities.
One is left to ask: what service delivery is being defended?
Across these sectors — legislative, judicial, and medical — a pattern emerges. Different actors, different justifications, but a similar gravitational pull toward self-interest.
And perhaps that is the deeper concern. Not any single decision or policy, but the normalization of a mindset.
If these practices don’t amount to greed; if they don’t edge into corruption; then the language we use to describe malfeasance may itself need revisiting.
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