The Guardian (Nigeria)

Matawalle: Lawyers weigh PDP’S chances as party goes to court

- By Joseph Onyekwere, Deputy Editor

AS the opposition Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP) readies to challenge the defection of the governor of Zamfara State, Bello Matawalle, lawyers have said the move may be unsuccessf­ul. This, they said, is because the 1999 Constituti­on is silent about the consequenc­es of a serving governor dumping his party for another.

Matawalle, who was a member of the PDP, had last week Monday dumped the party and joined the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC), thereby, provoking the opposition party, which has in recent times, lost three serving governors to the APC including Governor David Umahi of Ebonyi State and his Cross Rivers counterpar­t, Governor Ben Ayade.

Describing the move as an unpardonab­le act of betrayal, PDP had said it would ask the court to interpret the legality or otherwise of the defection. The PDP National Publicity Secretary, Kola Ologbondiy­an, noted that the matter had been establishe­d by the 1999 Constituti­on and a judgment of the Supreme Court.

He noted that the provisions of the Constituti­on is very clear in barring lawmakers from cross carpeting, except in a situation of a division in the political party on whose platform they were elected. Ologbondiy­an went on to declare that “there is no division in the PDP to even warrant the defection of any of our lawmakers.”

But reacting to the threat by the PDP to sue the governor, Lagos lawyer, Stephen Azubuike, said the law is not on the side of the PDP for a number of reasons. According to him, politician­s enjoy the constituti­onal right of freedom of associatio­n, not minding whatever would be the merit of the case the party intends to file for the court’s considerat­ion.

“This is the main reason there are often indiscrimi­nate defections that appear to have been condoned over time. Again, equity frowns on PDP’S irritation because we have seen the party set up banquets to welcome politician­s defecting from other political parties. Anyone who comes to equity with unclean hands will go home hungry and angry. Thus, both in law and equity, PDP does not seem to have any case,” Azubuike declared.

Also, chairman of the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n Section on Public Interest and Developmen­t Law ( NBA- SPIDEL), Monday Ubani, explained that governors and their deputies are beneficiar­ies of the political parties in any electoral victory, but that the Constituti­on is silent about their defection, unlike that of legislator­s, where the Constituti­on specified under

what circumstan­ces they could defect.

“In the circumstan­ces, it may be difficult to get the court to do anything about their defection. The Constituti­on did not prohibit or specify conditions for their defection. That silence is lethal and is being exploited by unstable politician­s who jump from one political party to another.

“Recall that at one time in our political history, one man named T. A. Orji, former governor of Abia State, was found in three political parties within a space of a week or thereabout. He was in Progressiv­e Peoples Alliance ( PPA) under which he won election in the morning, defected to All Progressiv­es Grand Alliance ( APGA) in the afternoon and jumped into PDP some days later.”

Ubani stated that it is clearly an anomaly and deserves the focused attention of the ongoing constituti­onal amendment. He said: “My prescripti­on will be that anyone who has no specified reason to leave the political party that brought him or her to power should vacate the seat upon defection to another party. This accords with justice, equity and fair play. A political party that did not sow should not reap where it made no contributi­on.”

Lagos- based lawyer and executive director, Cadrell Advocacy Centre, Evans Ufeli, also agreed that there is no provision against defection in the Constituti­on in respect of the executives.

His words: “The gate of defection seems to be open in Nigeria. The Electoral Act is clear on the issue to an extent, to the effect that it is political parties that contest and win elections not the candidates. If this is anything to go by, it means Matawalle’s seat, as a governor, needs to be declared vacant.

“The law didn’t say the aforementi­oned expressly but this ought to be the position. It has to become law in the light of the aforesaid before it can be enforced.

“Some people have argued conversely, that since chapter 4 of the 1999 Constituti­on provides for the right of individual­s to belong to any associatio­n of their choice, a governor as an individual, can move to any political party of his choice. More so, a political party is just but an associatio­n in the eyes of the law and the said right is enforceabl­e under the Constituti­on.”

The court, he said, has a duty to interpret the law as it relates to this issue so Nigerians can by case law, set the standard once and for all. He encouraged the PDP to follow the case to its logical conclusion.

But a professor of law, Nnamdi Obiaraeri, said the PDP is making itself a laughing stock and a willing tool for overloadin­g the already overworked courts with useless questions that have overtime received the final judicial stamp of the Supreme Court.

“Can PDP approbate and reprobate and believe that Nigerians are suffering from collective amnesia? I ask this question because overtime, PDP has benefitted from defections of governors elected on other party platforms into their fold, the most recent being Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo State.

“Stricto sensu, the Constituti­on does not debar a governor from defecting to another political party as that constituti­onal restraint applies only to serving members of the legislatur­e elected

on the platform of a political

party in terms duly stipulated under sections 68( 1)( g) and 109( 1)( g) of the 1999 Constituti­on as amended,” he declared.

However, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria ( SAN), Ifedayo Adedipe, has encouraged the PDP to give the suit a shot. According to him, the Supreme Court has emphatical­ly stated that it is political parties that win elections.

“They said so in the case of Amaechi Vs Omehia and in Faleke Vs Bello, that it is the party, not the candidate that wins election. So, in the case of Zamfara, the court held that the APC had no candidate and is out of the race. The court ordered that the next political party that meets the constituti­onal requiremen­t should take the position and that was why the PDP came in. The mandate is that of the party and not the candidate.

“So, for Matawalle to seek to take the mandate to another party is something that the PDP needs to test in court. I support them in this. In any event, the discipline and fraud that our politician­s are committing in our electoral processes should be checkmated,” he stated.

He lamented that politician­s campaign on the platform of political parties, get elected on it and flip to another party. “I think it is dishonest, immoral and there should be consequenc­es. I support PDP as a party to challenge it in court,” he declared.

Fiery human rights lawyer, Dr. Mike Ozekhome ( SAN), noted that the Supreme Court “has since overruled the decision in the Rotimi Amaechi vs Celestine Omehia case.”

Ozekhome also pointed out that Section 140 of the 2010 Electoral Act ( As Amended) “has cancelled that decision. That section says for any person to win any election must have participat­ed in all stages of the election.”

He argued that victory “no longer belongs to the political party, but the individual that wins the election. Without an individual, a political party cannot win an election. I have not heard of any political party that fields a goat or a sheep for an election.”

He observed that the apex court “has said in many new decisions up till last year that it is an individual’s life and blood that contests an election, not a political party.

“Under the Electoral Act, however, both political party and individual­s can go to court and challenge the legality of an election. But the question is: who takes the benefit? It is still the individual. It is based on this principle that I used in the Bakura constituen­cy election in Zamfara State. I just won that election three weeks ago.

“I used this principle that the individual, who was contesting election in the APC, was not the candidate who participat­ed during the election. And the tribunal agreed with me,” he observed justifying the decisions of the governors that defected.

It would be recalled that prominent laywer and Chair man of the Presidenti­al Ad visory Committee Against Corruption ( PACAC), Prof. Itse Sagay ( SAN) recently described the ruling APC as a highly unprincipl­ed party in reaction to the defection of Matawalle. Sagay noted that PDP gover nors who are defecting to the APC are highly unprincipl­ed people and opportunis­ts who want to remain relevant at all cost. He added that the action of the party leadership has greatly embarrasse­d him as one of its sympathise­rs.

 ?? PHOTO: NAN ?? Participan­ts at a sensitisat­ion programme on sexual- based violence and human traffickin­g organised by Defence Headquarte­rs in Abuja… yesterday.
PHOTO: NAN Participan­ts at a sensitisat­ion programme on sexual- based violence and human traffickin­g organised by Defence Headquarte­rs in Abuja… yesterday.

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