Daily Trust Sunday

Now Tinubu has finally won…

- [PENPOINT 0805 9252424 (SMS only) with Monima Daminabo email: monidams@yahoo.co.uk

In a ruling that did not surprise many, the Supreme Court of Nigeria (SCN) finally sealed the tenure of President Ahmed Bola Tinubu, thereby laying to rest, months of post-election legal battles between him and his two closest political rivals Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP) both of whom contested against him as the presidenti­al candidates of their respective parties in the February 25, 2023 presidenti­al polls. As is easily recalled, the Supreme Court ruling was in respect of an appeal by Atiku seeking the disqualifi­cation of Tinubu as duty elected, on the basis of alleged discrepanc­ies in the latter’s academic records. To prove his point Atiku Abubakar had procured the involvemen­t of the Chicago State University (CSU), to attest to the records so designated. However in its ruling, the Supreme Court, made among other pronouncem­ents, that Atiku’s spirited enterprise was “tardy”; which means that such came too late to be relevant. Granted that Atiku’s enterprise was elaborate and unearthed significan­t incongruit­ies of public interest on Tinubu’s academic records, the court’s ruling that the effort was tardy, remains most significan­t as it defined a statutory end point to the man’s venture.

Reactions trailing the ruling have been varied with the immediate past President

Muhamadu Buhari calling it the last bus stop in an eight-month long legal battle, with the expectatio­n that the country should be left to address itself to the numerous challenges facing it. The PDP, through its National Publicity Secretary Debo Ologunagba slammed the ruling as eroding public confidence in the country’s judiciary. For much of the rest of the country, this however should be a season for looking into how to move on with life, and the reinventio­n of the Nigerian State.

Just as well, by this ruling public take on Tinubu’s presidency has assumed the status of a paradox of sorts whereby what his traducers expected to crash one way or the other, has now become a reality that is not only standing immovably erect but also has powerful teeth to bite at will. In one vein a man whose public image had suffered significan­t battering on several grounds, and had been deemed to be unfit for the office of the president, now enjoys irrefutabl­e legitimacy - courtesy of the omnibus powers of the law.

Hence, while many Nigerians may still be ruing the sordid drama of Tinubu presidency, the truth of the matter is that it is time for the country to smell the coffee, and move on.

Meanwhile, considerin­g that it is trite knowledge in developmen­t discourse, that a society breeds its own type of leadership, it remains out of place for Nigerians to expect an angel to drop from heaven, to serve as president. At least the nation’s laws never prescribed such. Hence the country’s president must be a Nigerian; and so has Bola Ahmed Tinubu emerged as one.

They way forward for the country now depends on what Nigerians make of the situation which features the challenge of reversing the current state of affairs. For as far as many Nigerians are concerned, of more relevance to them are daily burdens and pains like the falling value of the Naira, escalating price of fuel, and not the puritanica­l expectatio­ns of the country’s electoral process by both Atiku Abubakar and Peter Obi.

Courtesy of the serial failings of the political class, most Nigerians see the country’s political culture with emotional detachment. Many will even swear that even if Atiku Abubakar or Peter Obi had won the polls, hardly will anything be done differentl­y as they are all part of the decrepit Nigerian partisan political establishm­ent. This is akin to asking the question - can anything better than Tinubu come out of the Nigerian political establishm­ent. Hence Nigerians for now are more interested in Tinubu’s ability to change the country than his touted, ‘tainted’ credential­s. As far as most Nigerians are concerned, the question on their lips is “na Tinubu certificat­e we go chop?”

The truth of the matter is that Nigerians are not much besotted by any politician seeking any office in the land, on the premise that such a person will create or turn the country into an Eldorado. Rather they see any politician come to office to pursue parochial interests, along the concentric progressio­n of self, family, kindred, close friends, ethnic roots and finally the large society. Hence as soon as a leader emerges there is a subconscio­us guide for expectatio­ns of benefittin­g from the office according to the aforementi­oned framework.

With Tinubu’s partial victory, the question now is how far the country will fare for Nigerians across the nation, with each concerned with what he or she will get from the system. It is this dispositio­n that drives the crass opportunis­m that manifests in the character of Nigerians at every stage, with some fingers pointed at him as President as the role model in this situation.

A cardinal considerat­ion of developmen­t dynamics is that sustainabl­e progress is often driven by the thought leaders of a designated community. For Nigeria, is it the political class? Is it the traditiona­l rulers? Is it the religious leaders?

Notionally, the political class is the only one that enjoys constituti­onal sponsorshi­p and ascendancy, and should provide thought leadership. They are supposed to be the light and salt of the world. And as the Bible states, if they fail to light up and give savor to the world, they become not better than mere dross, and worthless for use.

Tinubu’s success in his tenure depends on his assumption of the thought leadership of the country along with his political leadership. That will depends on how far he resolves the moral baggage around his persona and dexterity in governance to change the country sustainabl­y for all Nigerians to see.

If he does that he may not need anybody to start dangling the prospects of a second term even when he has yet to consolidat­e on his first tenure. His sterling performanc­e in thought leadership towards a better Nigeria will easily secure a second term for him, unaided.

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