Day: October 14, 2025

  • The Battle for Hearts and Ballots: Election Campaigns in Cameroon

    The Battle for Hearts and Ballots: Election Campaigns in Cameroon

    The Battle for Hearts and Ballots: Election Campaigns in Cameroon

    By  Kassie Biya:

    Cameroon’s election campaigns are as complex as the country’s multicultural identity. With over 250 ethnic groups, two official languages (French and English), and a long history of political centralization, crafting and executing an effective election campaign in Cameroon is both an art and a high-stakes strategic endeavor. In a landscape where communication, perception, and public sentiment can make or break political futures, public relations (PR) and communications professionals play a pivotal role.

    This article explores the evolution of election campaign strategies in Cameroon, the unique challenges faced by political communicators, and how digital media is reshaping the electoral narrative.

    A Legacy of Controlled Messaging

    Since independence in 1960, Cameroon’s political sphere has been dominated by the Cameroon People’s Democratic Movement (CPDM), led by President Paul Biya since 1982. For decades, election campaigns were largely symbolic, with limited space for opposition or dissenting voices. Communication was heavily centralized, state-controlled media reigned supreme, and grassroots mobilization followed a top-down model.

    In this environment, PR was less about persuasion and more about visibility and reinforcement of loyalty. The party’s presence was emphasized through posters, rallies, and nationalistic rhetoric, with little room for policy-based debate or transparent discourse.

    However, the introduction of multiparty politics in the 1990s slowly opened up space for competitive campaigning, albeit within a still tightly controlled system.

    Messaging in a Multilingual, Multicultural Society

    Campaigning in Cameroon means speaking to a deeply diverse population, not just linguistically, but culturally and politically. Francophone regions dominate in numbers, but the Anglophone crisis in the Northwest and Southwest regions has highlighted the consequences of neglecting regional grievances in national messaging.

    To resonate with voters, political campaigns must localize their communication strategies. Language, symbolism, and even candidate selection are adapted to specific constituencies. For PR professionals, this means conducting in-depth cultural research and crafting messages that respect and reflect regional identities.

    For example, slogans in the Littoral region might emphasize economic opportunity, while those in the Far North might focus on security and agricultural support. In Anglophone regions, any campaign that fails to address marginalization risks alienating entire communities.

     

    Digital Awakening: The Rise of Social Media Campaigning

    Over the past decade, Cameroon has witnessed a slow but steady digital transformation. With internet penetration increasing (despite periodic government shutdowns), social media platforms like Facebook, WhatsApp, and TikTok have become critical tools for both ruling and opposition parties.

    For younger, urban voters especially, these platforms offer a counter-narrative to state media and allow political actors to bypass traditional gatekeepers. Opposition figures such as Maurice Kamto of the Cameroon Renaissance Movement (CRM) have used digital campaigns to galvanize support, especially among youth and the diaspora.

    PR consultants now work closely with digital strategists, content creators, and influencers to shape online discourse. Hashtag campaigns, viral videos, and livestreamed rallies are becoming standard fare. Yet, the digital shift also raises concerns about misinformation, hate speech, and cybersecurity.

    Challenges in Ethical Communications

    Despite advances, election campaigns in Cameroon are still marred by misinformation, political intimidation, and a lack of transparency. Fake news spreads quickly, sometimes orchestrated by political actors themselves, and fact-checking remains underdeveloped.

    Moreover, the lines between government communication and campaign messaging are often blurred, raising ethical concerns about the misuse of state resources for partisan purposes.

    For PR professionals committed to ethical practice, this environment poses dilemmas: How can you advocate for your client while maintaining integrity? How do you navigate censorship, surveillance, or politically motivated violence?

    The Road Ahead: What Next for Political PR in Cameroon?

    As Cameroon approaches the 2025 presidential election, the stakes are high. With growing discontent over unemployment, governance issues, and the unresolved Anglophone crisis, voters are more skeptical than ever.

    To win hearts and ballots, future campaigns must go beyond slogans. Voters demand substance, policies that address their daily realities, and candidates who listen. This is where strategic communications will be decisive.

    Campaigns that invest in research-driven messaging, community engagement, and transparent digital strategies will have a competitive edge. The days of one-size-fits-all campaigning are over. Political communications in Cameroon is entering an era where authenticity, adaptability, and accountability will be the ultimate currency.

    PR at the Heart of Democracy

     

    In Cameroon, as elsewhere, elections are not just about votes, they are about voices. And it is the role of PR and communications professionals to amplify, shape, and sometimes challenge those voices. Whether in Yaoundé or Bamenda, Douala or Maroua, the future of democratic engagement will depend not just on who speaks, but on how, and to whom, they are speaking.

     

    For communicators, the message is clear: in the race for political legitimacy, strategy matters. But trust matters more.

  • African Youth and Political Messaging: A New Era of Influence and Engagement

    African Youth and Political Messaging: A New Era of Influence and Engagement

    African Youth and Political Messaging: A New Era of Influence and Engagement

    By  Kassie Biya:

    In the age of digital activism and hashtag revolutions, Africa’s youth are not just consuming political messaging, they’re reshaping it.

    From #EndSARS in Nigeria to #FeesMustFall in South Africa, political engagement across Africa has taken on a new, dynamic form. Central to this evolution are young Africans, who now make up over 60% of the continent’s population. This demographic shift is rewriting the rules of political communication, forcing governments, political parties, and advocacy groups to rethink how, and where, they craft their messages.

    A Generational Awakening

    Historically sidelined in policy-making, African youth are no longer willing to be passive spectators. Increased access to education, mobile connectivity, and social media has elevated their awareness of civic rights and political accountability.

    Political messaging that once relied heavily on traditional media, radio jingles, party rallies, and newspaper spreads, now competes with sharp, socially-driven content on TikTok, X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, and WhatsApp. Young people are not just the audience; they are creators, influencers, and amplifiers of political discourse.

    Messaging That Misses the Mark

    Many political campaigns still underestimate this shift. When youth-focused messages are crafted without their input or understanding of digital culture, they often come across as tone-deaf or manipulative. Attempts to use slang, memes, or influencers without authenticity can backfire, creating ridicule instead of resonance.

    Worse still, messaging that ignores the real economic and social struggles of young people, unemployment, poor infrastructure, repression, alienates this powerful bloc. The continent’s youth want more than flashy slogans. They want substance, accountability, and platforms for participation.

    The Rise of Issue-Based Advocacy

    Rather than aligning with party politics, many young Africans are rallying around issues: police brutality, climate justice, education, gender rights, and unemployment. Political messaging that connects with these real-life concerns, and offers viable solutions, gains far more traction than party loyalty ever could.

    This is creating a golden opportunity for NGOs, independent candidates, and grassroots movements. Messaging that is community-rooted, inclusive, and delivered in local languages is gaining trust. Influencers, musicians, and comedians are also playing a pivotal role in shaping narratives, often becoming accidental opinion leaders through viral content.

    Lessons for PR and Communications Professionals

    Communicators working in political or civic spaces across Africa must rethink how they approach young audiences. Here are a few takeaways:

    1. Co-create, don’t dictate

    Collaborate with youth-led groups and digital creators. Involve them in the strategy, not just the rollout.

    1. Embrace digital-first storytelling

    Use visuals, short-form video, and authentic voices. Long speeches and outdated slogans don’t stick.

    1. Center lived experiences

    Frame messages around issues that young people care about, and present real, actionable pathways for change.

    1. Track sentiment, not just likes

    Engagement is more than views. Monitor online conversations, listen actively, and adapt to changing sentiments.

    1. Be real

    Authenticity wins. Young Africans can detect insincerity faster than ever. If it’s fake, they’ll call it out, publicly.

    The Road Ahead

    Africa’s youth are not just the future, they are the present. Political messaging that fails to reflect this reality risks irrelevance. But for those who listen, engage, and communicate with intention, the opportunity is immense.

     

    In this era, the messenger matters as much as the message, and increasingly, that messenger is a 22-year-old with a smartphone, a cause, and a digital audience of millions.

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