Daily Trust Saturday

Despite mounting criticisms, more states drift towards off-season polls

Despite mounting criticisms over off-season elections, developmen­t from the ongoing adjudicati­on of electoral disputes across states have indicated that more states may be drifting into this circle, Daily Trust Saturday reports.

- Saawua Terzungwe

Commentari­es on the possibilit­y of Kano, Plateau and Zamfara states drifting into the league of states in off-season elections if the recent judgements of the Court of Appeal are eventually upheld by the Supreme Court have continued to dominate discussion­s across the country.

But some actors and key players in the country’s polity have emphasised the need to de-market off-season polls by putting a stop to all irregulari­ties that trigger it. Stakeholde­rs are particular­ly worried that if the trend is not checked, the presidenti­al election might be affected someday.

Speaking on the subject matter after casting his vote during the November 11 governorsh­ip election in Bayelsa State, former President Goodluck Jonathan asked the National Assembly to enact laws that would put an end to the trend.

He said, “I get worried about the issue of off-season elections. I will use this unique opportunit­y to plead with the National Assembly that we need to block these offseason elections. It is very odd. It is not global best practice. If we continue with this trend of off-season elections, based on the interpreta­tion of our laws by our judicial officers, it will come to a time that our presidenti­al election in Nigeria may be offseason.

“It almost happened in 2007 when I contested as a running mate to the late President Yar’adua. The seven justices that presided over the case, three of them held that the election be annulled, four of them sustained; and that is why we stayed. If one had crossed over, by now the presidenti­al election would have been off-season, and it is not the best for a country.

“We need to stop that, and where possible, these states too can be migrated back to fall in line with others. And the National Assembly can do that. That is my message for the National Assembly and Nigerians today.”

Similarly, an elder statesman and former presidenti­al candidate, Chief Chekwas Okorie, told Daily Trust Saturday in a telephone chat that though the 1999 constituti­on provides that a governor’s tenure starts from the day he took oath of office, the issue of off-season polls should be discourage­d.

Okorie, who also asked the National Assembly to wade into the matter, called for efforts at ensuring that election matters are resolved before winners are sworn in on May 29, stressing that the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC) must also wake up and do a proper job to nip the trend in the bud.

He said, “There is no doubt that this whole thing has caused so much confusion, including creating problems for even the electoral body because the same thing does not apply to people in the legislatur­e.

“My suggestion is that the National Assembly should bring back our elections to a uniform four-year tenure that would all start at the same time. Secondly, we need to ensure that we have all election matters resolved before the swearing in ceremony. Since our new government starts on May 29, we must design our elections and settlement of disputes, giving all the timeline in a manner that all would be done before May 29.

“But the thing is that the number of election litigation­s we have are indictment on the INEC. If the electoral body is doing a proper job, starting from monitoring primaries, political parties and all the processes, the issue of Plateau wouldn’t have occurred. This INEC cannot deepen democracy in Nigeria.”

Also, a former chairman of the Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC), Dr Yunusa Tanko, expressed worry over the trend. He said, “INEC did not conduct elections properly and it is the judiciary that is now declaring winners. This is shameful. INEC has failed to improve on its previous performanc­e.”

Schedule of off-season polls in 8 states

Already, Nigeria has off-season governorsh­ip elections in eight states. They are Anambra, Ondo, Ekiti, Osun, Kogi, Bayelsa, Edo and Imo. If Kano, Plateau and Zamfara eventually join, Nigeria will be having off-season elections in 11 states though at different times.

Daily Trust Saturday reports that since the return to democracy in 1999 after many years of military rule, general elections have been held in 1999, 2003, 2007, 2011, 2015, 2019 and 2023, while the May 29 handing over date has been sacrosanct.

But pundits said the trend of electoral fraud, violence, rigging of elections and intimidati­on of voters have gained traction over the years despite campaigns against them, thus, leading to litigation­s and consequent sack of some elected officers, including governors.

The developmen­t, analysts said had created scenarios where reruns are declared in some areas by the courts, while in some cases, elected officers are removed because their political parties failed to conduct primary elections or such elections were not monitored by the INEC or they were imposed by power brokers in their parties.

Already, INEC has announced that the off-season governorsh­ip election in Edo State would be held on September 21, 2024 while that of Ondo would be conducted on November 16, 2024.

The commission had in 2021 conducted off-season governorsh­ip election in Anambra State, where a former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Prof Charles Soludo, emerged winner. The commission had equally conducted off-season elections in Ekiti and Osun states on June 18, 2022 and July 16, 2022 respective­ly. This means that these states would be having their next gubernator­ial elections in 2025 and 2026 before the next general elections scheduled for 2027.

How it started

Specifical­ly, an off-season election in Nigeria was first experience­d in Anambra State in 2006 when the presidenti­al candidate of the Labour Party (LP) in the 2023 poll, Peter Obi, who contested the Anambra governorsh­ip election on the platform of the All Progressiv­es Grand Alliance (APGA) was declared winner of the election by the apex court and sworn in as governor.

Obi emerged governor after contesting the result of the 2003 election that brought Dr

Chris Ngige of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) into office in court. Since then, the governorsh­ip election in Anambra has been held three years after the general election.

After Anambra, other states followed in 2007 when election tribunals upturned several results in Bayelsa and Kogi, and elections were later held that year. Also, in Edo, Ondo, Ekiti and Osun, the winning candidates from different parties started their terms following court rulings in 2007.

Imo State is so far the latest that joined the league in 2019 after the apex court judgement which nullified the election of Emeka Ihedioha of the PDP and declared Hope Uzodinma of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) as winner.

Kano, Plateau, Zamfara next states to watch

All eyes are now on Kano, Plateau and Zamfara states as the Court of Appeal recently sacked governors of the three states in separate judgements.

The Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja had sacked Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf of Kano State. The panel upheld the verdict of the tribunal led by Justice Oluyemi Akintan Osadebay that sacked Yusuf on September 20, 2023.

The lower court had declared 165,663 votes of Yusuf, who contested under the New Nigerian Peoples Party (NNPP), invalid on the grounds that they were not signed or stamped by INEC.

The governor’s votes were then reduced to 853,939 while those of Nasir Ganuwa, his APC rival remained at 890,705. Yusuf had rejected the tribunal verdict, which he described as “unfair” and “a miscarriag­e of justice,” and headed to the Appeal Court.

But in its ruling, the Appeal Court held that Yusuf was not eligible to contest the election because he was not a member of the NNPP. He, however, announced that he was heading to the Supreme Court.

Criticisms had also trailed the sack of Governor Caleb Mutfwang of Plateau State by the appellate court, triggering reactions that the ruling APC is at work to run a one-party system in Nigeria.

The sack of Mutfwang was the third experience of the opposition in a space of four days. The Appeal Court had earlier sacked Governor Dauda Lawal of Zamfara State, who is of the PDP, declaring that the governorsh­ip election held on March 18 was inconclusi­ve in the state.

These recent court rulings leading to the sack of the three opposition governors had gotten Nigerians talking as they pointed to the APC as the mastermind. But the ruling party has consistent­ly denied the claims.

Mutfwang of the PDP had got 525,299 votes while his APC challenger, Nentawe Goshwe polled 481,370 votes in the Plateau governorsh­ip election. Goshwe challenged his victory at the tribunal, saying that Mutfwang did not comply with the Electoral Act as he was not validly nominated and sponsored by his party.

The panel dismissed the petition for lack of merit, but Goshwe headed to the appellate court. In its judgement, the Appeal Court headed by Justice Elfrieda WilliamsDa­wodu sacked Mutfwang for not being validly sponsored by the PDP for the Match 18 election.

Pundits said if the sacked governors’ appeals at the Supreme Court are dismissed, candidates of the APC, which were declared winners, would start a fresh tenure, thus, leading to a change in INEC timetable for governorsh­ip elections in the states. This would consequent­ly lead to a change of time in the conduct of the elections in the affected states, thus paving the way for off-season polls.

Off-season polls, product of democracy – Nkire

But despite its criticism, a member of the APC National Caucus, Chief Sam Nkire, told Daily Trust Saturday in a chat that the phenomenon of off-season polls being experience­d in Nigeria was a product of democracy.

He said, “I don’t see anything wrong with off-season elections. They are a product of democracy; and the number of states that may go for off-season elections doesn’t matter. If a governor cheated to win in an election he shouldn’t be allowed to continue in office to avoid off-season elections, he should face the wrath of the law. I don’t think there should be a legal framework to stop off-season elections.”

 ?? ?? INEC Chairman, Mahmood Yakubu
INEC Chairman, Mahmood Yakubu

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