Daily Trust

President Buhari do not sign the Electoral Bill 2021

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After a tortuous journey through the legislativ­e mill with dizzying twists and turns, the Electoral Amendment Bill 2021 was eventually passed last week by the two chambers of the National Assembly. The bill is the ultimate outcome of several efforts at amending the Electoral Act 2010 and is expected to introduce far-reaching reforms in the country’s electoral system, to wit providing for credible, free and fair elections whose results will be easily acceptable by both winners and losers in any polls exercise.

Traditiona­lly, the core challenges faced by electoral umpires in the country had ranged from man-made problems such as faulty voters registrati­on exercises including fake voters identities, unreliable voters’ registers, ballot box snatching during electoral exercises, voters’ intimidati­on, ballot box stuffing and breaches of votes collation exercises. These ills and others not mentioned justified the need for an amendment to existing Electoral Acts, with the recent amendment being the fourth with an equal number of electoral acts. However, from the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the eventual passage of the new bill and reactions from cross sections of the public, the bill may be suffering from a high dose of credibilit­y deficit, courtesy of some of its clauses.

The first sign that it may not enjoy widespread endorsemen­t by critical sections of the Nigerian public was the prolonged misgivings in the chambers of the National Assembly, over a most critical clause 52(2), which vitiated the expectatio­n that polls results will be transmitte­d mandatoril­y by electronic means. Against the expectatio­n of well-meaning Nigerians, section 52(2) of the bill assigns the discretion of whether manual or electronic means will be deployed to transmit poll results, to the Nigeria Communicat­ion Commission and the National Assembly. Meanwhile, the trite argument had always been that the success factor to credible polls in Nigeria rested with the reduction or minimisati­on of human interventi­on in the transmissi­on of results from the polling centres upwards. This clause, therefore, vitiates the entire logic of reforming the electoral act and therefore constitute­s in the view of a wide cross section of Nigerians, a betrayal of public trust by the National Assembly.

Against the backdrop of winner takes all politics in a multi-ethnic and multi-religious Nigerian federation, the country’s dilemma had featured in the main, the challenge of providing a balance of interests among the constituen­t ethnic nationalit­ies numbering in hundreds. The country is presently plagued by a complement of existentia­l challenges with the matter of imbalance weighing heavily on political permutatio­ns and sundry considerat­ions, leading to a rash of centrifuga­l tendencies tearing at its seams. It is in that context that expectatio­n built up that the new bill will offer the prospects of taming some of these tendencies.

It is, therefore, in the context of promoting national interest, even if it is through availing the country a new deal of stabilisin­g and improving the electoral culture that President Muhammadu Buhari needs to see himself standing on the threshold of history to write his name in gold, by declining assent to the new electoral bill, whenever it comes to him. To assent to the new electoral bill in its present state is to endorse a dispensati­on that has not only disappoint­ed a wide cross section of patriotic Nigerians but also instituted a factor that will yield the country nothing but sustained discord among the peoples.

In exercising discretion over whether to assent to the bill or not, the president should be guided by the history of several instances where the National Assembly had its resolution­s reversed as such failed to address the overriding public interest.

To put it succinctly, the new electoral amendment bill 2021, in its present state is a booby trap for the country and should be returned to the National Assembly for restructur­ing. Whatever is worth doing is worth doing well.

But like in many things amazing and fantastic, Nigeria is struggling to take the cake. How can we forget Chief Emmanuel Nwude, Ezenwamadu, who sold a non-existent airport for $303 million to Bank Noroeste, Brazil, in the year 1997. He extracted $242 million from that bank before the bubble burst

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