Tag: parties

  • Parties, second term and zoning dynamics

    NIGERIAN politicians have not given any indication that they are prepared to grapple with the problem of how zoning and second term struggles skew both political development and the entrenchment of democracy. It requires enormous courage to grapple with these issues. Most states have factored the governorship seat to rotate between their senatorial districts in order to, as they imagine, engender inclusive politics. On the surface, this means every district will not feel left out. This artificiality, it has turned out, is executed right down the line, even to state legislative seats. Of course, despite its many embarrassing lacunas, including its presumptive and encapsulating opening declaration, the constitution is smart enough not to attempt to enthrone rotation or zoning as a principle of power sharing.

    But because of the aggressive and often bitter competition for office between Nigeria’s major ethnic groups, or the now more convenient geopolitical zones, political parties have instituted an informal, extra-constitutional arrangement for rotating power. Both the informality of the rotation and the zoning arrangement itself do not indicate depth of thinking, but zoning has seemed to serve the country somewhat gingerly well. It is short-sighted; yet this device has now been taken as a political constant, a given with which the political class appears to be at peace. That such an offensive device has further complicated and subverted the intention behind the principle of zoning is severely ignored by politicians hungry for office.

    Take, for example, the office of the president. It does not matter whether at a given time a geopolitical zone has produced a very competent and charismatic aspirant; once his zone is not expected to produce the president, none of the major parties would give him a hearing, let alone a chance. Worse, even after the ‘right’ zone has produced a president, his zone and his supporters would still insist he must serve a second term regardless of his demonstrable lack of capacity, and lack of judgement and charisma. The same disease afflicts the governorship position, and to some extent other legislative positions. No one has successfully argued why a president or governor must be given a second term simply because it is the turn of his zone. Why not limit the irrational formula to only one term, with the second term plausible only because that elected person had shown proof of incomparability?

    In 2019, notwithstanding the accolades heaped on him by his fanatical supporters, or his demonstrable lack of capacity as ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo put it, President Buhari of the APC will be presented by his party both because they see him as the man to beat and because every zone that produces a president is expected willy-nilly to complete two terms. This farrago of nonsense is now hardening the arteries of Nigerian politics, and the country may have to contend with that sclerosis for a long time to come.

    The saner issue of a polity amply and foresightedly restructured to endure for centuries, and to help unleash the potential of the people in an atmosphere of healthy competition and peace, is completely subordinated to the cause of maintaining artificial and untenable balance. It does not matter to the people that a second term should be earned only to the extent that a more energetic and endowed visionary from another zone could not be found. In fact, the country, and particularly the APC, seems eager to sacrifice the pruning fork of presidential debate necessary to help the electorate assess the ideas and capacity of a candidate. But they must be compelled to debate and showcase their talents.

    No thought has been paid to the frustrating fact that Nigeria is running out of time to reinvent itself. Nigerian leaders and politicians seemed to have embraced the unhistorical argument that the country will endure forever because God, not the British, put it together, and that no amount of incompetence and elite indolence could cause it to unravel. If their celestial logic is right, perhaps they should tell the country who put the Roman Empire, Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, British Empire, and other great empires, together. Engrossed in such nonsensical logic, Nigerian leaders have abdicated their responsibility to the nation, a responsibility that should see them genuinely searching for political and economic formulae to cobble together a fairly perfect union, a union not run along intolerably expensive lines and superfluous number of elected officials.

    The zoning perversion and all its attendant support organs will predominate in 2019. But this atrociousness will only guarantee, both in the states and at the centre, that mostly the wrong people will be elected or re-elected into office. They will rule like monarchs, scoff at democracy and the rule of law, waffle over the concept of restructuring which they have imbued with dozens of facile interpretations, and fiddle with jaded developmental paradigms that are neither original and coherent nor sustainable without foreign loans and foreign dictation and goodwill.

  • Akpabio: The strangest of strange bedfellows

    A wise saying recommends you never judge a man until you’ve walked a step in his shoes. So, I would be the last person to condemn politicians switching parties as they battle for survival.

    It is even harder to be judgmental because virtually everyone – All Progressives Congress (APC), Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and sundry others – have benefitted from the seasonal migration.

    In the last couple of the weeks, following the movement of 15 senators and three governors from the ruling party, it did appear as if the opposition was headed for a crushing victory in the defection Olympics. Rumours of even more exits from a supposedly sinking APC ship must have sounded like sweet music in the PDP camp.

    But in this column, I had observed that the defections were certainly not going to be one-way traffic given that the factors driving them were largely local ones, differing from state to state, from institution to institution.

    Whereas the calculations in the Senate were comforting enough to encourage Senate President Bukola Saraki to jump ship, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, has not been so fleet of feet, knowing how precarious his own position is. So, despite his expected exit from APC being one of the worst kept secrets in the political space, the Bauchi legislator has wisely chosen to fly under the radar for now.

    Without question, the PDP has been the biggest beneficiary numerically in the gale of the defections – a development that gave the party some momentum in recent times. But whatever wind it must have gathered in its sails has been largely deflated by just one movement in the opposite direction. I refer to the decamping of erstwhile Senate Minority Leader, Godswill Akpabio.

    If you want to gauge the shock and devastation felt by the PDP leadership over his departure, you only need to check the vitriol that has trailed his action. He has been called a traitor, Judas and a coward – and those are the more complimentary words used against him.

    But it is not just the PDP which has suffered this embarrassing PR blow that is stunned. As a political commentator, I am shocked.

    For months, when reporters filed stories about a supposed rift between Akpabio and incumbent Akwa Ibom State Governor, Udom Emmanuel, I would treat them with a spoonful of salt. I would turn them back to go and crosscheck their information. Many times I felt vindicated when the feuding sides – with straight faces and plastic smiles – would deny any problems. Frankly, most politicians possess greater Thespian skills than the so-called Nollywood stars.

    Even when tales of Akpabio’s imminent defection to APC picked up pace, I preferred to be cautious. After all, all the seers were so sure Kaduna State senator, Shehu Sani, on account of his bickering with Governor Nasir El-Rufai, was set to abandon the ruling party. Imagine our collective shock when he smugly sat back in the company of the devil he was accustomed to.

    It wasn’t until the former Akwa Ibom governor began appearing in chummy photos with APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and President Muhammadu Buhari, that I accepted that something was indeed afoot. Today’s reality is that Godswill Akpabio is now a member of the ruling party!

    He may have taken one momentous step as an individual, but for the party of which he used to be a key leader, it is several steps backwards in the battle to wrest power from the APC.

    Akpabio was as PDP as they come. He was one of the pillars that made the South-South zone an impregnable fortress for the former ruling party in the last eleven years. Even when the then Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, pulled out because of his troubles with former President Goodluck Jonathan and his wife, Patience, his efforts helped shore up whatever loss the party suffered in the brief period Rivers State was not within its ranks.

    If he helped the party, PDP also reciprocated. In 2015, the party’s caucus in the Senate bent the rules to allow the newcomer to fill the Minority Leader slot – a position that would ordinarily have been occupied only by a ranking senator.

    Irrespective of what might have transpired within the PDP in Akwa Ibom, very few would have boldly predicted that Akpabio would now be making common cause with a band of politicians he derisively referred to four years ago as “expired drugs” – a play on the acronym ‘APC’ – the name of a once popular analgesic in these parts.

    He and others were equally vociferous in dismissing those who midwifed APC as a bunch of strange bedfellows who could never work together.

    So what on earth could have made him hop into bed with those many would consider strange bedfellows to him? Let’s not forget that he’s now locked in awkward embrace with some of those he edged out of the PDP in the heat of the succession battle of 2015.

    For instance, Umana Okon Umana, one-time Secretary to the State Government and now Managing Director, Oil and Gas Free Zones Authority (OGFZA), quit the PDP when it became apparent that Akpabio was bent on installing Emmanuel who he had headhunted from Zenith Bank, as his successor. The parting between erstwhile political allies was bitter.

    In APC, Akpabio now has to caucus with the likes of John Akpan Udoehehe, his bitter rival for the gubernatorial seat who has long fancied himself the real leader of the party in Akwa Ibom. How would he respond to the assertive ex-governor who is not noted for taking the back seat?

    Some have suggested that Akpabio’s defection is a ploy to get the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) off his back. But I doubt this theory because nothing on the ground would encourage any savvy politician to bet his house on this sort of arrangement.

    Ask Orji Kalu if his praise-singing of Buhari and APC has slowed down the prosecution of his graft case. Perhaps former Plateau State Governor, Joshua Dariye, believed at some point that his membership of the ruling party would somehow ameliorate his legal woes. Today, in the anonymous prison where he’s serving time, he’s certainly wiser.

    Or could it be ambition? It is not inconceivable that the top job in the National Assembly could be on offer – especially if the APC succeeds in toppling Saraki. But this, again, is unlikely as it would mean upturning the zoning arrangements locked into place by the ruling party.

    The answer clearly lies elsewhere. It is true that politicians have a very low suffering or humiliation threshold, but something truly traumatic must have happened between Akpabio and his godson Emmanuel to have caused him to flee into the embrace of those he once fought with unrelenting ruthlessness.

    It must have been something quite grievous if he’s willing to bear being painted as the face of treachery by his one-time confederates in Akwa Ibom and Abuja.

    Whatever it was, the fallout between Akpabio and Emmanuel is an object lesson to incumbent governors who believe that by installing those they think would be their poodles, they are guaranteed a peaceful retirement where they would be governing from the back seat. This is another example that Nigerian gubernatorial ‘poodles’ have a nightmarish way of morphing into Frankenstein monsters.

    Akpabio has taken a bold but risky step driven by calculations which only he can properly explain. He is just one individual and we must be careful not to ascribe too much power and influence to him. Still, in the context of today’s politics of defections, the APC which lost more in numbers would welcome this one significant movement in its direction.

    A few weeks ago, the seemingly one-way defections were being interpreted by some as a bellwether for likely 2019 outcomes. But the unscripted reverse decamping by Akpabio is a significant psychological blow for the PDP and a coup for the APC. As we await the next act in the unfolding drama, wise men won’t go placing bets.

  • Apetumodu vacant stool: Court orders parties to maintain status quo

    An Osun State High Court, sitting in Osogbo, the stat capital, yesterday granted a preservative order to maintain status quo in a chieftain suit filed by Princes Julius Abiodun Taiwo Ayoola and Omogbolahan Ayoola on behalf of members of Elewa Royal family.

    The duo approached the court to challenge the choice of Prince Joseph Gbenga Oloyede of Latimogun’s Compound by the town’s kingmakers to fill the vacant stool of Apetumodu of Ipetumodu.

    Joined as defendants are: the governor of Osun State (first), Attorney General of Osun and Commissioner for Justice (second), Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs (third), Ife North Local Government (fourth) and the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi (fifth).

    Other defendants include the Asalu of Ipetumodu; Chief Afolabi Adedeji (sixth), the Moleefon of Ipetumodu, Chief Adesoye Babalola (seventh), the Olukotun of Ipetumodu, Chief Titus Olanrewaju (eighth), the Warrant Chief,  Kehinde Orosanya (ninth) and Prince Joseph Gbenga Oloyede (10th).

    They were elected by the kingmakers to fill the vacant Apetumodu’s stool.

    Counsel to the plaintiffs, Yemi Abiona, argued that “the fifth defendant, despite being served with the originating process and motion for interlocutory injunction, still requested the fifth defendant to give consent to the purported selection of the 10th defendant”.

    He added: “As a result of this development, the sanctity of the court should be maintained. I humbly apply that the court should grant a preservative order that parties should maintain the status quo, most especially the fourth and fifth respondents. The purpose of the preservative order is to maintain status quo and the state has nothing to lose if the order is granted.”

    But the counsel to the first, second and third defendants, Jide Obisakin, who is also the State Director of Litigations, opposed the application for a preservative order by counsel to the plaintiffs.

    According to him, the order was targeted at ambushing the defendants in the suit.

    He said: “We have an application before the court, which has not been taken due to the fact that the parties have not been served. I am of the view that the basis for the request is doubtful. It is an attempt to ambush other defendants. I am requesting your Lordship not to grant the application against the first to third defendants.”

    In her ruling, Justice Kudirat Akano granted the application for preservative order, pending the hearing and determination of the motion on notice and interlocutory injunction.

    The judge adjourned the matter till September 4 for further hearing.

     

  • 2019: INEC reviews guidelines for parties, others

    THE Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has begun the review of the electoral guidelines for political parties and actors ahead of the 2019 general elections.

    It opened a five-day workshop for the exercise in Kaduna yesterday.

    INEC National Commissioner and Head of Election and Political Monitoring Department Prof. Anthonia Simbine said the commission had a number of guidelines and regulations by which it carries out its functions.

    Prof. Simbine said: “We have several changes in the process and management of activities of political parties as well as politicians.

    “We think that we should revise the guidelines in a way they respond to the observations and that’s what this group is doing today.

    “The review comprise of staff elections and party monitoring department as well as staff of legal and alternative dispute resolutions directorate of the commission.

    “One or two relate to the monitoring process of the activities of the political parties, the monitoring of party congresses or conventions as well as campaigns at their rallies, “she said.

    According her, “there are guidelines for monitoring these processes. We have been monitoring these activities since the last four years, since the 2015 general elections and we have made certain observations. We expect this review will look into that as well as put in place instruments for the monitoring process.

    “We also have larger number of political parties compared to what we had in 2015.

    “We will see how the guidelines will respond to the wider scope of the participants in the electoral process,” the commissioner said.

    The guidelines, which are expected to undergo the five-day review process, include:

    *Regulations for the conduct of political campaign by political parties, candidates, aspirants and supporters; and

    *Guidelines for regulation for political parties 2015 and guidelines for regulation of political parties 2014.

    Also included for the review is INEC guidelines for election observation as well as manual for monitoring of political parties, congresses, conventions and party primaries.

    Project Director, European Center for Electoral Support (ECES) David LE Notre said the review would enhance proper mechanism for monitoring political parties to ensure compliance with extant regulations and guidelines that conform to Democratic norms and practice.

    Kaduna State Resident Electoral Commissioner Abdullahi Kaigama, Director of Voter Education and Publicity Oluwole Uzzi and Director of Elections and Political Party Monitoring Department Mr. Aminu Idris are among those attending the workshop.

     

  • Looters list should cut across parties,says ex-ICPC Chairman

    Pioneer Chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) Justice Mustapha Akanbi has  urged the Federal Government to release the full names of all that have looted the country’s treasury.
    The former Appeal Court President said the naming of corrupt Nigerians should cut across all political parties in order to give credibility to President Muhammadu Buhari led administration’s efforts in fighting corruption.
    Justice Akanbi told reporters in Ilorin, the Kwara state capital shortly after a special prayer organised for him by members of Muslim Charitable Women Association of Nigeria founded by the wife of the Emir of Ilorin, Hajia R.A. Zulu Gambari at Justice Akanbi residence, Agbadam street, G.R.A Ilorin.
    According to him, the announcement of those who looted government money should not be limited to members of opposition party (PDP) alone but should cut across members of ruling party too if government is sincere about war against corruption.
    Justice Akanbi who said the release of looters of Nigerian funds was long over  due stated.
    “If there are members of APC or any other political parties, they should mention them so that there will credibility to what they are doing because fighting corruption should not be one sided.
    “I have always said that why do they have to hide the names of those who have looted the nation’s treasury.
    “If you know they have looted nation’s fund, let the public know and then take them to court so that people will feel confidence in what you are doing” he added.
  • 2019: Cracks in opposition as parties ask PDP to change name

    • Say Nigerians associate party with corruption
    • No way – PDP scribe
    • Party to raise committee for coalition modalities
    • Atiku, Lamido top search chart
    • PDP elders move to checkmate Wike, Fayose

    The Peoples Democra-tic Party (PDP) is under massive pressure to change its name as alliance talks intensify between it and some other parties, the Coalition for Nigeria Movement (CNM) and key political figures ahead of the 2019 elections.

    The alliance is aimed at denying President Muhammadu Buhari a second term in office.

    The participating groups say a change of name by the PDP is desirable to give everyone a sense of belonging.

    But with 13 states under its control, the former ruling party does not want merger, preferring only collaboration that will unite all opposition parties, groups and political leaders.

    Nonetheless, the PDP plans to  raise a committee soon to work out modalities for coalition with other parties and interest groups like ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo’s CNM.

    Some elders and governors elected on the platform of the party have also initiated moves to curb the influence of Governors Nyesom Wike and Ayo Fayose on the party such that the other groups will not be scared away from working with the PDP.

    Highly placed party sources said last night that ex-Vice President Atiku Abubakar, ex-Governor Sule Lamido, Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso and Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo are leading the search chart of PDP.

    The party is not relenting in wooing Governor Aminu Tambuwal of Sokoto State and Senate President Bukola Saraki back to its fold.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) is not less busy.

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s strategists  and some APC leaders are understood to  be working on  the possibility of reaching what a source called an  “accord concordiale” with some PDP governors and respected leaders of the party during the 2019 polls.

    One of the leaders that Buhari’s strategists are mounting pressure on is ex-Governor Ibrahim Shekarau whose return to APC is believed can whittle down the influence of Kwankwanso in Kano.

    Investigation by our correspondent revealed that PDP leaders are anchoring their plan to oust the APC from power on propaganda and forging a grand coalition against the ruling party.

    The coalition part of the plan has seen the party reach out to other opposition parties, the CNM and some key political figures in the six geopolitical zones who are against Buhari’s re-election.

    However, it was gathered that the PDP is finding it difficult to rally international support against Buhari, whose integrity is still being trusted by world leaders.

    The party  is counting solely on ex-President Obasanjo  to do the ‘damage’ but the one-man international campaign against the President  does not seem to be having the expected result yet.

    Findings revealed that a recurring issue in the ongoing secret talks, covert negotiation and lobbying by PDP, is the demand by affected parties, groups and leaders that it should change its name.

    Giving an insight into the development so far, one of the sources said:”These opposition parties, some leaders of the Coalition for Nigeria Movement (CNM) and  some key political figures in all the six geopolitical zones are asking PDP to change its name in order to enable more Nigerians identify with it.

    “Those interested in the coalition with PDP said the party’s name has been battered because of alleged massive corruption when it was in power for 16 years. They said the electorate might not want to associate with it.

    “A few other parties do not want to lose their identities. They want a sort of merger like the case with APC.

    “In fact, Obasanjo’s CNM would have loved to identify with PDP but the hijack of the party by some governors at the last national convention foreclosed a wholesale adoption of the opposition party. The CNM would prefer a change of name by PDP for effective coalition against APC.”

    The source said the PDP has made it clear to those interested in working with it that it will not change its name or symbol.

    The party believes that any change in its identity is an easy technical way of killing it for a new set of ownership.”

    A PDP leader said: “The National Working Committee sees the demand for either merger or a change of name as a booby trap to kill PDP by some forces.

    “The timeline does not favour a change of name or merger. It is like starting afresh.

    “Why should PDP which has about 13 governors lose its name? We believe our party is in a position of strength and should be allowed to enjoy the privilege in a coalition.

    “If we go for another name, won’t they say the same people in PDP are in the new party like the case now with the Social Democratic Party?

    “You don’t change a party’s name on the basis of losing election

    “We are also suspecting that some of those who left the party are plotting to return to PDP through the backdoor. This is why they are giving this condition of change of name.”

    The National Publicity Secretary of PDP, Mr. Kola Ologbodiyan said yesterday that the challenge before the party is “not about the name, it is a perception issue.”

    The party has no image challenge, he said when contacted.

    He added: “We would allow Nigerians to choose our candidate for 2019 presidential poll; we will not interfere with the process.

    “At the end of the day, we will ensure the emergence of a credible candidate who will accord priority to national unity and development and the reshaping of the nation’s economy.”

    PDP to raise committee to work out modalities for coalition

    In spite of the tethering challenge, it was learnt that the PDP will soon raise a committee to “work out modalities for coalition with parties and groups.”

    A member of the Board of Trustees of PDP said: “We are interested in coalition; we will soon inaugurate a committee on how to go about it, what we should offer and what we should reject.

    “So far, it is clear that unless we team up with Nigerians and groups of like minds, it will be difficult for PDP to defeat APC alone.”

    The source also confirmed that the party might still need to “do more work internally” by checkmating some of its leaders like Governors Nyesom Wike and Ayo Fayose.

    “We are aware that we have internal challenge especially the overbearing influence of some leaders like Governors Nyesom Wike and Ayo Fayose. They operate as if they own PDP,” he said.

    “Some elements in CNM and a few incoming coalition partners have also told us to return PDP to its democratic structure instead of allowing Wike and Fayose to be behaving as if they have the party in their pockets.

    “At a point, we will all mobilize support for the party leadership to assert itself. We know some PDP governors are equally uncomfortable with Wike and Fayose’s attitude. You will see what will happen soon. We want to win in 2019, we won’t bow to the whims and caprices of some party leaders.

    “By the time we enter into negotiation stage with groups and individuals, the overriding interest of the party will take the centre stage.”

    What party has in stock for Saraki, Tambuwal

    The source said the PDP is “ready to bend backwards for the President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki if he is ready to defect to APC.”

    Saraki, according to him, has been “advised to forego his presidential ambition” and PDP “won’t mind returning him as the President of the Senate because the performance of the 8th Senate, which he is heading, has been outstanding in terms of bills already passed.

    “You can see why PDP is giving him a major backing. But we have not got any commitment from him.”

    Saraki has however not shown any sign of defection from PDP to APC in spite of the fact that the main opposition party is his major pillar of survival in the Senate.

    The source ruled out the possibility of the party giving its presidential ticket to Governor Aminu Tambuwal of Sokoto State who is being actively wooed by some PDP governors.

    The source said the best the PDP can offer Tambuwal is re-election ticket as governor.

    “Except for a few governors who wanted us to woo Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal from APC based on his democratic credentials, most of our leaders and governors are not keen on him because of his likely imposition by some PDP leaders,” he said.

    “We are open to Tambuwal but let him go and seek re-election as governor on the platform of PDP if he is fed up with APC.

    “Tambuwal is a presidential material for the future even though Wike will not want to hear this from our governors and leaders.”

    Search for credible presidential flag bearer intensified

    Party leaders and governors are gauging the mood of political leaders across the six geopolitical zones on a credible PDP presidential candidate.

    A member of the National Caucus of party named ex-Vice President Atiku Abubakar, ex-Governor Sule Lamido, Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso, and Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo as those currently topping the search chart.

    But he said Atiku has an edge on account of his “solid and enduring structure,” and a major obstacle: Ex-President Obasanjo.

    His words: “His only problem is ex-President Obasanjo who might fight him to a standstill. The alternative is for Atiku to eat his vomit and beg the ex-President.

    “We underrated Lamido until our leaders went for a rally in Jigawa during the week.

    “The rally was an eye opener that this 2019 poll is going to be tough. The performance of Dankwambo has been appreciable too. He has age and vision on his side as well.

    APC working on its own strategy

    Strategists of President Buhari and the APC are not sleeping either.

    An APC source said: “One of the windows being explored is the ongoing reconciliation being coordinated by Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. We know that the President and the party would have to shift grounds to reunify some APC leaders.

    “The outcome of the reconciliation will determine many things.

    “We have also identified fluid states and tough election battlefields and how to make amends. Along the line, some PDP governors and leaders have faith in President Buhari’s aspiration for a second term and we are trying to consolidate on this.

    “It will be akin to what the famous politician, the late Chief K.O. Mbadiwe described as ‘accord concordiale.’

    “Even within the APC, some strategists have identified those who may glorify PDP by defecting to the opposition. In such states, we are working on Plan B in the light of the vote margins between PDP and APC in the affected states during the 2015 general elections.

    “One of the PDP top shots, which the APC has extended its olive branch to, is ex-Governor Ibrahim Shekarau (of Kano) who had always been an ally of the President until the two leaders had a political disagreement (not personal problem).

    “The strategists of the President are prevailing on Shekarau to forgive and forget. He is yet to respond to overtures from these strategists. If he does, Kano will become winnable without Kwankwanso.”

    Responding to a question, the source added: “We know that the headache of PDP is getting a credible candidate like President Buhari. We are awaiting their choice or any party’s choice in order to define the battle.”

     

  • Parties’ proliferation and Wike’s troubling allegations

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) recently raised the alarm that the number of registered political parties in Nigeria had ballooned to 68. Its concerns bordered on the inherent challenges of such surge, which include complicated and expensive logistics. Newspaper editorials and Radio/TV flagship shows have subsequently followed suit, highlighting the implications of the proliferation and thus confirming INEC’s concerns. Indeed, the aggregate of opinions points to the same direction: the party system implosion would put a heavy strain on our already diminished public pulse and electoral process.

    But last week, Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers State took a reverse lane on the matter, alleging that the “mass registration of new political parties is a deliberate plan by INEC to manipulate elections in three states”, his state inclusive. The allegation, in my view, flies straight in the face of both fact and logic. My fear is that if unproven and wild allegations like this are allowed to fester ahead of the next general election, the outcome may be very sad. The political temperature is already getting high. We don’t need politicians to invoke a volcano, in the interest of us all.

    For starters, I will take a historical look at the implosion in our party system since the beginning of the Fourth Republic. In 1999, there were only three parties during the general election. It wasn’t that there were no agitations for more parties, but INEC refused to register them. Human rights activist and legal icon, late Gani Fawehinmi, had dragged the electoral body to the court for his party to be registered. On November 8, 2002, the Supreme Court finally granted his prayers and voided INEC’s guideline which had prevented the registration of more parties.

    The Supreme Court agreed with Fawehinmi that “INEC had no power to make guidelines on how an association can become a political party in so far as the constitution has covered the field in section 222”, stating that “to restrict the formation of political parties weakens the democratic culture”. This judgement gave birth to the surge in political parties ever since.

    Few months after the court ruling, INEC was forced to register 27 additional parties, bringing the number to 30 during the 2003 general election. In the next general poll in 2007, 20 more parties were registered, and by 2011, the number of political parties in Nigeria surged to 63! In an apparent bid to curb this galloping increase, the federal lawmakers empowered the electoral umpire to de-register political parties. Thus, on August 17, 2011, the election body delisted seven parties and on December 6, 2012, it ceased to recognise 28 more parties. This trimmed the number of parties in the country to 28. The action provoked reactions from the affected parties, some of them accusing then INEC boss, Prof Attahiru Jega, “of exploiting the deregistration exercise to settle personal vendetta with his foes”. Some of them actually challenged this action in court and defeated INEC. Ever since, the surge has rebooted.

    The registration of two new parties on August 16, 2013 brought the number to 30, ahead of the 2015 general elections. On October 21, 2016, INEC registered 10 parties. The latest registration of 21 parties, which increased the number to 68, understandably sparked debates about the challenges it portends for INEC in the next general election. Unfortunately, some politicians, such as Governor Wike, have feasted on this and included it in their ‘battle strategy’, should they lose.

    The reality is that the proliferation of parties will not abate unless an amendment is effected on section 222 of the Constitution. The requirements for party registration as contained in the section are so simple that nothing stops a family from registering their own party. According to section 222 of the constitution, all that a would-be party need to do is to ensure that, “(1) the names and addresses of its national officers are registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission; (2) the membership of the association is open to every citizen of Nigeria irrespective of his place of origin, circumstance of birth, sex, religion or ethnic grouping; (3) a copy of its constitution is registered in the principal office of the Independent National Electoral Commission in such form as may be prescribed by the Independent National Electoral Commission; (4) any alteration in its registered constitution is also registered in the principal office of the Independent National Electoral Commission within thirty days of the making of such alteration; (5) the name of the association, its symbol or logo does not contain any ethnic or religious connotation or give the appearance that the activities of the association are confined to a part only of the geographical area of Nigeria; and(6) the headquarters of the association is situated in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.”

    Those are the six requirements needed to compel INEC to register a political party.

    After the Supreme Court ruling in 2002, INEC can’t refuse to register any political association for any other reasons beyond the ones stated above.  It is sad that our lawmakers did not deem it fit to amend section 222 during the recent constitution amendment. Instead, they preferred to smuggle in the ‘order of elections’ for obvious self-interest, even though it was never discussed at the public hearing as specified by the constitution.

    In the United States, for example, for a party to be included on the ballot, it must meet specific requirements in the affected state. A requirement in some states is that you must have 10,000 registered members that are verifiable. So for you to have your logo in a presidential ballot, you must prove that you have 10,000 registered members from each state of the federation. That is why only the Democratic and Republican parties contest in presidential elections. Just imagine amendment to our constitution in the semblance of this proviso. How many of these mushroom parties in Nigeria do you think can show that they have at least 360,000 registered members, with 10,000 from each state? Until our laws are amended, the upsurge in party registration will continue unabated.

     

    • Ossai is an Abuja-based newspaper executive.
  • Hegemonic Parties and their Discontents

    Hegemonic Parties and their Discontents

    The Fourth Republic came into being in a profound crisis of the Nigerian post-colonial state. Otherwise known as the Obasanjo Settlement of 1998, it was designed to placate a major section of the country which felt aggrieved about the way Abiola’s electoral victory was handled. But it was also designed to reassure another section that its interest will not be jeopardised as a result of its role in the national tragedy.

    Described by one of his most brilliant sector commanders during the civil war as a man with a unique sense of history, Obasanjo’s choice and particularly the purpose could hardly be faulted: he was a safe pair of hands who could not be pressurised into taking wrong decisions or panicked into premature hostilities. Above all, he was regarded as a political orphan among his people and was not expected to unduly favour them with contentious preferment or undue patronage.

    The Fourth Republic was thus conjured into existence through a deliberate and delicate balancing of elite sensitivities and geo-political affinities. Twice, during the civil war and the NADECO insurrection, Nigeria had almost disappeared in a maelstrom of ethnic hostilities. As it was to be expected, the Nigerian kingmakers were more concerned about elite cooperation and national stability rather than justice or equality. Hence the foisting on the polity of a big, all-inclusive party to act as national umbrella just as it was the case in the earlier republics.

    It will be recalled that upon the demise of General Sani Abacha, his successor, General Abdulsalaam Abubakar, actually wanted to continue with the discredited transition programme before he was swiftly countermanded by those who had put him there. An unambitious and apolitical officer who quickly wanted to hand over to civilian and head home, it was obvious that Abubakar was unaware of the damage done to the Nigerian political fabric by General Abacha’s draconian crackdown.

    Now eighteen years down the line and despite the remarkable elite pacting, it should be obvious that the Fourth Republic is beginning to fray at the edges and frazzle at the folds as new realities and unforeseen circumstances settle in which require urgent reconceptualization and a possible re-invention of the nation. Elite spoil-sharing can never address the hierarchy of needs of the average individual, nor can it foresee potent flashpoints in unitarist contentions.

    The greatest threat of military rule to the democratic evolution of society is the rupture of civil institutions and their normal pattern of growth. Of the three arms of government, the legislature is usually the worst hit. While the two other arms manage to function even under the most despotic military rule, the legislature is completely truncated. You cannot legislate from your bedroom.

    Consequently each time civil rule resumes, the old rules and procedures have to be relearnt and mastered all over again. The situation is not helped by a sudden shift of templates such as happened when Nigeria adopted the American presidential system over the British parliamentary model that was in place before independence and civil war. In a swift genetic modification, the parliamentary primus inter pares was expected to mutate into an omnipotent presidential Caesar.

    Yet despite their political grandstanding, not a single one of Nigeria’s past military leaders was so politically radicalised as to sacrifice his professional career for deep social engineering and political reconfiguration such as happened with the Nassers, the Mengitsus, the Ghaddafis, the Sankaras and ,nearer home, the Rawlings.

    None of them had the courage, the confidence and the deep conviction to exchange their military boots for civilian shoes. Even while relentlessly upstaging the civilian class and psychologically undermining them, they considered themselves first and foremost as professional soldiers on civil posting.

    But while holding the country by the political jugular, their professional hustling and foray into military politics was to lead to a fracture of military cohesion on more than one occasion. It was a situation of double jeopardy for the nation. The militarization of the polity has eventuated in the politicization of the military institution itself.

    A polity and its political parties are not made forever.  In a multi-ethnic society still shedding the garb of prolonged and prohibitive military rule, hegemonic party formations are said to be in crisis when none of the dominant political parties in contention can gain nation-wide traction in terms of its mastery of urgent national issues or the ability to secure an emotional identification of the people with its programme through sustained surrender to its authority or universal endorsement of its legitimacy.

    When viewed from this perspective, there can be no doubt that Nigeria is in the grip of a major crisis of hegemonic party formation. This in itself may be a symptom of a more fundamental crisis of political leadership or even a manifestation of an endemic crisis of nationhood and the post-colonial state itself.

    Whatever it is, the pan-Nigerian electoral momentum which carried General Mohammadu Buhari to the gates of the presidency has all but evaporated. Indeed, were elections to be held at this moment, it is possible that the Daura-born retired general may still prevail but with the wild enthusiasm that marked his first coming now restricted to his far north ethnic stronghold.

    The smell of elephantine decay is in the air and last week as distressed elephants began roaming the Nigerian political forests in number, there was widespread feeling that another endgame was approaching. One did not have to wait for long. The world shook and trembled as the main elephant or major mammoth delivered himself of a bombshell which tore through the land. General Olusegun Obasanjo has struck again. The Fourth Republic will never be the same again.

    As a national political gadfly, General Obasanjo is used to a level of public opprobrium and scathing indignation. This is not the first time he is attracting considerable odium and revulsion from sections of the populace as a result of his opinion. His book on Major Nzeogwu was burnt in public places in the north and mildly ticked off even by a loyal subordinate like the late Shehu YarÁdua.

    But since last week, something is beginning to happen to the Owu born war-lord which may presage a momentous change of tide in Nigeria’s post-military politics. In most controversies that he has been embroiled, there has always been a fine equilibrium between Obasanjo’s die-hard adversaries and his avid enthusiasts.

    This time around, the balance of forces has evened up in such a way that makes Obasanjo appear very vulnerable and subject to complete demystification. The bombardment has been relentless. The way many have pounced on Obasanjo suggested a bi-partisan initiative that is well-rehearsed and well-oiled.

    By midweek, what would have been Obasanjo’s talisman against invectives and political adversity, the launch of the new Coalition for Change, arrived with a thundering whimper. It was a damp squib from Ota. As far as launching a new political initiative goes, this was a catastrophic miscue. To seal its fate as a visionary and progressive initiative as well as Obasanjo’s career as a political messiah, the great soldier went and conscripted a blue-eyed boy of military autocracy to front for him as the putative commander in chief. The party and parade were dead on arrival.

    The Coalition for Change may yet be galvanized into a mass movement as events unfold and the unforced errors of the ruling party become more and more pronounced with each passing day. But for now, it appears the main aim of its sponsors is to de-market and delegitimize the dominant parties in a way that could lead to a major state convulsion.

    While the APC’s flip flop and opportunistic floundering on the issue of restructuring do not portray it as a party with a sense of mission and destiny, the PDP remains a burnt-out case of moral leprosy without any possibility of redemption in the nearest future. Unfortunately, events of last Friday also compel the conclusion that Obasanjo’s considerable talents do not include mass mobilization.

    This is where Obasanjo’s bombshell begins to assume a negative importance for reasons other than what he has to tell us. No matter the merciless excoriation, one thing no one can take away from Obasanjo is his uncanny ability to connect with the political pulse and temperature of the nation particularly in moments of grave political adversity. How he deploys this uncanny ability, whether for opportunistic self-monumentalization or for genuine state empowerment and nation-building is entirely a different matter.

    What Obasanjo has handed down to us is a glimpse of a society in deep political trauma; a nation slouching its way towards Apocalypse itself. No matter the merciless excoriation, no one can take away Obasanjo’s political clairvoyance. The political prophet is often a combination of shrewd judgement and merciless deduction from circumstantial evidence and privileged information.

    As the first military and civilian ruler of the nation, Obasanjo has access to confidential briefings from national and international “spook” circuits. Those who are asking us to ignore Obasanjo as a vexatious nuisance and concentrate on the forthcoming elections should ask themselves whether elections are possible or even realistic in the face of continuing mishandling of the National Question. Elections, as this column has repeated ad nauseam, do not solve fundamental issues of nationhood such as the current conundrum between farming and animal husbandry.

    Since you cannot give what you don’t have, Obasanjo’s prescription for the national malaise has shown him at his politically weakest and intellectually most vulnerable. It is like prescribing Aspirin for deep brains injury. At the lunch of Coalition for Change in Nigeria, there was no deep reflection on the National Question, no fundamental interrogation of the crisis of nationhood that hobbles Nigeria, no message of hope based on a rigorous intellectual dissection of the astonishing wealth and biodiversity of the nation. The occasion was entirely taken up by theatrics and empty grandstanding.

    It is a measure of the grave enormity of the crisis that around the time this political tomfoolery was going on, the Ghanaian president was delivering a brilliant and moving tribute in the home of the South African musical legend the recently departed Hugh Masakela. Up till this moment, there has been no comparable tribute from Nigeria. In a country that measures progress by rice pyramids and yam tubers, matters of culture must take a back seat.

    It is just as well that by the end of the week, Obasanjo had backed away for now from the formation of a new party describing the putative coalition as a movement rather than a political party.  But judging by the performance of the two hegemonic parties and their miserable failure to address the fundamental structural deficiencies of the nation in a forthright manner, it will take exemplary political skills and statesmanship to head off a crisis of the state arising from a meltdown of existing party formations.

  • Osun govt hails parties, OSIEC, others for peaceful council poll

    Osun govt hails parties, OSIEC, others for peaceful council poll

    The Osun State government has hailed political parties, the State Independent Electoral Commission (OSIEC), security agencies and the residents for allowing peace to reign before, during and after last Saturday’s local government election.

    The government expressed satisfaction with the outcome of the poll, saying it reflected the minds of the people.

    In a statement yesterday in Osogbo, the state capital, by his Media Adviser, Sola Fasure, Governor Rauf Aregbesola expressed gratitude to residents of the 71 wards where the election took place for electing leaders who will steer the ship of governance at the grassroots.

    The statement reads: “Governor Rauf Aregbesola, on behalf of the state government, will like to thank the good people of the state for the peaceful and successful conduct of parliamentary election into the local government areas, Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs), area councils and administrative offices in the state, last Saturday.

    “Governor Aregbesola expresses profound gratitude to the people of the state for voting for all the candidates of the All Progressives Congress (APC), as they have always done in the past.

    “The pattern of the voting is a demonstration of their unflinching support for the progressive cause. It is a faith that served our fathers, beginning from Chief Obafemi Awolowo and the Action Group (AG) and Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) in the First and Second Republic respectively.

    “This has served us also through Chief Bola Ige and Chief Bisi Akande to our present administration under which great and unprecedented developments came.”

  • INEC gives parties Oct 7 deadline to pick presidential candidates

    INEC gives parties Oct 7 deadline to pick presidential candidates

    Political parties have been given an October 7 deadline to produce their presidential candidates for the February 16, 2019 presidential election.

    Governorship, National/State Assemblies candidates are also to have been picked on the same date.

    Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman Prof. Mahmoud Yakubu released the time table and schedule of activities for the 2019 general elections in Abuja yesterday.

    He reaffirmed that Presidential and National Assembly elections will hold on February 16, 2019; Governorship/ state Assembly/ FCT Area Council elections are slated March 2, 2019.

    The parties have between August 18 and October 7 to pick candidates for all the elections.

    The Presidential election campaign will start on November 18 and end on February 14, 2019 while the governorship/state assemblies’ campaign will hold between December 1 and February 28, 2019

    Parties are expected to collect forms for all the elections at the INEC headquarters between August 17 and 24.

    All the duly filled forms for Presidential and National Assembly candidates are to be submitted latest by October 18 and forms for governorship and state assemblies to be sent in by November 2.

    Parties have between November 7 and December 1 to withdraw/replace candidates.

    INEC will publish the list of nominated Presidential and National Assembly candidates on January 17, 2019; Governorship and Assemblies elections January 31, 2019.

    The commission also fixed January 2, 2018 for the publication of notice for all elections while January 7, 2018 is fixed for the publication of official register of voters for the election.

    The political parties are also expected to submit names of their agents for the elections on February 1, 2019 for presidential and National Assembly eections.

    Prof Yakubu said INEC would be conducting elections for 1558 constituencies made up of one presidential constituency, 29 governorship constituencies out of 36 as seven governorship elections are staggered, 109 senatorial districts, 360 federal constituencies, 991 state assembly constituencies, 6 Area Council chairmen as well as 62 councilor ship positions for the FCT.

    The INEC boss urged all the political parties and all and sundry “to eschew bitterness and conduct their activities with decorum.”

    He also assured the country that the commission was determined to better the 2015 general elections which became a watershed in the history of the country’s democracy.

    “The commission is determined to build on this legacy by ensuring that our elections keep getting better,” he said, adding: “The decision of the Commission to fix election dates is to engender certainty in our electoral calendar and enable all stakeholders to prepare adequately for elections, as is the case in any mature and developing democracies.”