Daily Trust Sunday

A whole new approach to our elections

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nother bout of painful and expensive legal blows has just ended in Nigeria, between the winner of February’s presidenti­al election, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu of the APC, and his two main challenger­s, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar of the PDP and Mr Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP).

Tinubu was declared winner of the election after claiming 36.61% of the total 25,286,616 valid votes cast in the election. Atiku and Obi had won 29.07% and 25.40% votes respective­ly. Tinubu also won at least 25% of the votes in 29 states, while Atiku and Obi won at least 25% in 21 and 17 states respective­ly. A candidate must win a simple majority and at least 25% of the votes in at least twothirds of the 36 states and the FCT to be returned.

However, both the former Vice President and Mr Obi had rejected the results, citing irregulari­ties and other issues they believed disqualifi­ed Tinubu, and headed to the Presidenti­al Election Petition Tribunal. Early last month, the tribunal had upheld Tinubu’s victory, ruling that the challenger­s failed to prove their claims of electoral malpractic­e. The case then went again to the Supreme Court of Nigeria, which last Thursday affirmed the tribunal’s verdict, bringing to a formal close the eight months’ legal tussle between the three parties.

Tinubu has since called his challenger­s to join hands with him to work for the country, even as they both expressed disappoint­ment with the ruling.

At Daily Trust, our interest in this moment lies not with the merits or demerits of the individual political combatants in this case but with the health of the political system itself. And on this, we single out three areas of concern and possible constituti­onal and institutio­nal interventi­ons for the future.

First, we believe that to safeguard the health of our democratic system, the Supreme Court should be made the court of first and last resort for all future presidenti­al elections. After a presidenti­al election, all petitions against the results by any parties should head straight to the Supreme Court, which in turn, should be able to decide the cases definitive­ly within a period of 30 days.

The way legal fisticuffs drag on for months after a presidenti­al election in Nigeria, some of them based on rather thin legal grounds as many experts have said, is poison to Nigeria’s democratic chalice. It robs the winners of the full legitimacy they need to govern at home, and weakens their position among peers on the global scene. It breeds political cynicism in the citizens which in turn fuels the everworsen­ing voter apathy in the country, where just about 30% of registered voters bothered to participat­e in the process in the last two general elections for example. And above all, such long-drawn legal challenges do little to deepen our legal and political systems.

Second, all attention needs to be focused on deepening the institutio­nal mechanisms around our elections. The Independen­t National Electoral Commission, INEC, has not always lived to the expectatio­ns of Nigerians. It has superinten­ded over some of the worst elections in Nigerian history since its inception on the eve of the current dispensati­on in 1998. Yet, there is strong evidence that since at least 2010, INEC’s methods, processes, and procedures have markedly improved the integrity of its general and off-season elections.

The 2022 Electoral Act signed by former President Muhammadu Buhari last year has also strengthen­ed not just the independen­ce and capacity of the Commission, but has also introduced new rules that, before this year’s election at least, most observers agreed would help deepen our electoral system. It therefore behooves all actors in the political system—political parties, politician­s, civil society organizati­ons, media, and voters, work to further consolidat­e on the gains in order to make future elections even more credible and acceptable.

Most importantl­y, Nigeria needs a whole new political culture around elections. Political parties, politician­s and voters must realize that they are also responsibl­e for a lot of the problems with our election. Elections in Nigeria are among the most expensive in the world because a large chunk of the election budget must go into paying for security, for printing expensive ballot papers, and more. Nigerian elections also involve the deployment of soldiers and policemen, perhaps more than in any other country in the world. Also, election results are subject to litigation­s, perhaps more than in any other country in the world. It is politician­s, their parties and supporters who stuff ballot boxes with fake ballot papers, it is they who encourage under-age voting and who entice voters to sell their voters. And it is they who recruit thugs to suppress voters or engage in other acts of election violence.

For Nigeria to have freer and fairer elections in the future, all these things must cease, and politician­s must play their part too. Therefore, as Nigeria looks to move beyond this contest to the next, all actors must work towards giving the country a whole new approach to elections. Our country deserves it.

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