By Adonis Byemelwa
If you’re stepping into Tanzania’s digital space for the first time, you might be taken aback. It’s not a glitch—your feed is likely overflowing with one bold, unwavering message: No Reforms, No Election. It’s everywhere—stories, captions, comments, videos. This is not a trend fuelled by influencers or catchy music. It’s a movement. A cry. A stand.
At the heart of it is Chadema, Tanzania’s main opposition party, demanding sweeping reforms to an electoral system it argues has systematically failed citizens. The roots of this campaign run deep: candidates killed during the 2024 local elections, others barred from running in previous cycles, fraudulent ballots, and an electoral commission whose independence has long been questioned. These aren’t isolated grievances—they’re patterns.
The campaign, though organised by Chadema, has grown far beyond party lines. It has taken on a life of its own online, becoming more than just political messaging—it’s a cultural moment. Tanzanians across age, background, and political leaning are flooding comment sections of politicians, celebrities, and institutions, pushing the message with such force that administrators are scrambling—disabling comments, filtering hashtags, and blocking users.
What makes it even more powerful is where it’s showing up. Instagram reels, TikTok dances, even beneath light-hearted celebrity content. That’s not the usual space for Tanzanian political discourse.
Nevertheless, suddenly, politics is no longer reserved for press rooms and parliament—it’s on every phone screen, in every meme, every scroll. Even figures like U.S.-based Tanzanian activist Mange Kimambi, known more for gossip than governance, have put their platforms on hold to spotlight this campaign. That says something about the urgency felt by many.
Some critics, like Ansbert Ngurumo—a Tanzanian journalist living in asylum in Finland—have scoffed at the movement, suggesting that Chadema is simply afraid of the ballot box. But that view strips the conversation of its deeper context.
Chadema isn't running from an election—it’s refusing to legitimise a process that feels increasingly hollow. Their call isn’t about abandoning democracy, it’s about demanding that democracy works as it should.
To imply fear is to ignore the lived frustrations of many Tanzanian citizens who have voted, protested, and spoken up, only to watch rules shift mid-race, candidates disqualified, and votes treated as technicalities. This isn’t political theatre; it’s a stand born of fatigue and a desire for something more honest.
What’s unfolding is not a retreat, but a reckoning. A nation’s growing insistence that leadership must be earned, not engineered. The call for reforms is not a fear of voting—it’s a fight for a vote that matters.
If anything, the question should be turned back on those resisting reform: why defend a system that so many claim is broken, if not because it benefits you? If the polls are not rigged, then reforms should not scare you. Unless, of course, the truth is that rigging is what keeps you in power.
Even foreign entertainers are being swept into the storm. Nigerian singer Chella Boi found himself confused and overwhelmed after announcing his arrival in Tanzania—his comment sections were drowned in No Reforms, No Election.
“What’s going on?” he asked, visibly shaken in a video. That kind of viral spillover shows just how far and deep this discontent runs. People who usually shy away from politics are now standing up and speaking out.
The government’s response has been a mix of denial, defensiveness, and condescension. While President Samia has framed voter participation as a patriotic duty, she hasn’t acknowledged the elephant in the room—the widespread public mistrust in the system. Her message may resonate with some, but to many, it sounds tone-deaf: a call to queue up for a performance, not a real democratic process.
In response to the online wave, ruling party supporters launched a counter-campaign: #OktobaTunatiki—a call to “tick the box in October.” It’s polished, endorsed by celebrities, and has state backing—but it hasn’t caught fire like No Reforms, No Election. Perhaps that’s because it doesn’t speak to pain, to loss, to real lived frustrations. It doesn’t resonate because it doesn't challenge the status quo—it upholds it.
And then there’s the moment with government spokesperson Gerson Msigwa, who, during the Dodoma university event, was heckled with chants of No Reforms, No Election. He later claimed those shouting were drunk.
Nonetheless dismissing youthful political expression as drunken noise reveals a deeper problem—the refusal to listen, to take dissent seriously. When you ignore the voices calling for justice, you risk fuelling something far bigger than hashtags.
This campaign, raw and unfiltered, has become more than a rejection of flawed elections. It’s a reckoning. A demand for a future where power isn’t decided behind closed doors, but through transparent, credible systems. And in that sense, it isn’t just Chadema’s movement—it’s the people's.
Those who dismiss it might be choosing comfort over courage. But for many Tanzanians, silence is no longer an option. They’ve tasted the bitterness of exclusion, and now, they want something real. They want reform—or nothing at all.