PURSUANT to Section 135(2)(a) of the
1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended, President
Muhammadu Buhari would alongside some state governors complete their four-year
term on May 29,
2019, paving way for inauguration of new administrations as would
be determined and returned by the electorates and returning officers
respectively in the forthcoming general election.
By the resolve of the umpire,
Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to improve as observed at the just-concluded
Anambra governorship election, with no sign of interference from powers-that-be
as before; convincingly, votes of the electorates would seriously count in determining
who mounts the podium as next president and other leadership positions.
As a result, politicking is gathering
momentum in diverse dimensions and quarters with many defections, scheming and political-arithmetic
by ambitious politicians. For some in their defenses, especially for habitual
defectors, it was lack of internal democracy in their political party, for some
others, monumental failure of their party to meet aspirations of the masses. And
for new entrants, audacious claims on rescue mission over the economy writing off
the ruling class with endless commissions and omissions. Finally, for the ruling
party, consolidation of labored ground-breaking policies becomes the new mantra.
Of course, these are politics in action as long as campaigns are issues-based, devoid
of personal attacks and acrimony. Nonetheless, in the civilized world,
defection from party-to-party is rare, unethical and usually decodes a picture
of no political ideology, values and integrities.
By the development, the battle for
control of the federal power for next political dispensation will be relentlessly
contested between the All Progressives Congress (APC)
and erstwhile ruling party, Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) except new merger
surfaces which is unlikely at this juncture. Presently, APC
has upper hand, and undeniably with viable structures, increasing numerically
on daily basis leveraging on defections from other political parties particularly
its major opponent. On the other hand, few that are insecure and uncertain of actualizing
personal ambitions in the ruling party opt for exodus. However, the grumblings devoid
of appeasements aim at just one goal; to strategically emerge a candidate in any
political party in view of the general election, and peradventure the new
political party fails to expressly honour the ambition, it speedily faces its abandonment
with a new catalogue of accusations and criticisms.
Be that as it may, salient factors
that may play major roles in the 2019 presidential election include rotation of
the presidency which is of utmost national interest despite its no provision in
the constitution. By the apparent marginalization of the South-East
geopolitical zone especially the run-of-the-mill lamentation to also produce a president
of the country like others, calculatedly, the Igbos queuing en masse behind President
Buhari’s reelection bid in 2019 to complete the remaining term could actualize their dream quicker after his
second tenure in 2023, and closer than any other candidate from the north that,
all things being equal, will round off in 2027 as experiences have shown that
politicians particularly in third-world nations do not respect gentleman’s
agreement especially to relinquish political power voluntarily. Hence, any sweet-tonguing
promises pointing to run for only a single term is nothing but abracadabra, or
a good piece for kids in the tales by moonlight. Arising from this, this may
not be a good time for hate speeches along ethnic lines but to ponder meticulously,
responsibly and foresightedly before adopting a presidential candidate.
The most salient factor is the position
of economy under APC leadership in comparison with PDP previous governments, x-raying
from its position during the inauguration in 2015. Without a doubt, the economy
has not substantially ascended to the anticipated position in terms of
dividends of democracy but evidently, it is pointing towards that direction by
a whole lot of strategic policies starting with plummeting the massive
corruption the economy was fantastically subjected to over the years which led
to economic recession. With President Buhari’s proficiency in maneuvering the almost-collapsed
economy out of recession, it attests that the president has wherewithal to move
it to next level if given another chance. It therefore implies that Nigerians
cannot afford to enthrone political instability at this critical time. The
present administration indisputably took off at almost zero level except
long-lists of mismanaged, diverted public-funds in earsplitting figures in
foreign currencies, thus deserved adequate time to consolidate on its policies
for dividends of democracy in line with its manifesto.
Arising from the above and in the
overall interest of the nation, concerted actions should sensitively be geared
towards consolidating the developing policies in place alongside deploying
additional capable hands by the federal government in its workforce. If not,
the economy will inescapably recycle to square one by changing government
alongside policies haphazardly. Nonetheless, if PDP has the capability,
know-how and substantial message to convince and successfully wrestle back federal
power from the ruling APC knowing
that electorates can without aid produce a realistic profile and the party’s
philosophies through its 16 years in office, it is no taboo as long as it is by
PVC (Permanent Voters Card) and essentially, one-man; one-vote. Democracy is a
game of numbers.
Umegboro, a renowned public
affairs analyst wrote from Lagos and could be reached through: umegborocarl@gmail.com (07057101974 sms only)
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