The Guardian (Nigeria)

Electoral Bill: Buhari’s withheld assent and way forward

- By Carl Umegboro • Umegboro, ACIARB, is a public affairs analyst and social advocate.

ON December 21, 2021, President Muhammadu Buhari alarmingly declined assent to the long- awaited Electoral Act Amendment Bill through a letter to the President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan and his counterpar­t at the House of Representa­tives, Femi Gbajabiami­la. From the tone of the memo, Buhari largely aligned with the Act amendments except the clauses that provided for mandatory Direct primaries for all political parties. Discernibl­y, the president amid the rebuff acknowledg­ed the energies, nonetheles­s urged the lawmakers to review the objected clauses, and also requested it be transmitte­d back for his assent after review. Least expected, Buhari’s major critic, Samuel Ortom, Benue State governor overtly backed the president’s decline of assent over the Direct primaries. Irrepressi­bly, the president’s action has continued to generate controvers­ies in the polity with the civil society organizati­ons ( CSOS) threatenin­g fire and brimstone and many public commentato­rs seething over perceived mischiefs and insensitiv­ity. On the whole, three categories of thoughts exist. Whilst one backs the president against mandatory Direct Primaries, the second group; mostly from opposition parties, endorsed it. Then, the third category which includes Nyesom Wike, Rivers State governor admitted the flaws but argued that the assent ought to scale through notwithsta­nding the defects for a review later as Buhari handled the PIB Act. This idea isn’t bad, however, the big question is; what will be the fate if after giving assent, the anticipate­d review hits the brick wall? It must be carefully noted that the Electoral Act, if flawed, can set the polity ablaze unlike the PIB Act due to vast interests.

In the legislativ­e zone, the experience is not different. While some accepted the developmen­t in good faith and progressiv­ely prepared for a critical review, the other side seemingly insisted on a supremacy battle to override the president’s veto. However, the leadership of the two chambers so far, astutely arrested the situation, and opted for wider consultati­ons. Be that as it may, Section 59( 4) of the 1999 Constituti­on,

Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended provides a window to override the president by the National Assembly where he withholds assent to a bill presented to him after 30 days.

Buhari’s divergence is the clause for mandatory Direct primaries for political parties citing the financial implicatio­ns on the Independen­t National Electoral Commission ( INEC) to monitor primary elections across all the wards. There are 8,809 wards in the federation. Buhari also argued that political parties must be given a free hand to determine how to elect their flagbearer­s within their strength, and also, that security factor must be put into considerat­ion underlinin­g that security agencies could be overstretc­hed in ensuring hitchfree primaries which may overheat the polity.

Ostensibly, many frowned at Buhari’s objection having vetoed the Bill earlier in 2018 ahead of the general election principall­y on grounds of wrong timing. In fact, a lawmaker while reacting on Channels Television fumed that a bill, overwhelmi­ngly passed by the two chambers after legislativ­e processes which he participat­ed in was ‘ insensitiv­ely’ rejected by the president; just one man. Logically, his concern was an ego thing, widely far from objectivit­y. Incidental­ly, that’s the rule of the game – democracy. Besides, the oversight of the lawmakers is glaring as the reasons adduced by the president against adopting mandatory Direct primary are compelling.

Possibly, the lawmakers didn’t look at it broadminde­dly. For instance, if signed into law, it will require INEC to seek a larger budget on logistics and allowances to monitor primary elections across the 8,809 wards in the country for each political party to validly choose a presidenti­al candidate. Let’s say twenty political parties plan to field presidenti­al candidates respective­ly, it will require INEC workforce to go round all the wards for each of registered political parties to ably elect a valid candidate which has a heavy financial implicatio­n. To conduct the 2023 general elections alone, INEC demands a whooping N305 billion from the treasury.

Sensibly, for INEC to monitor the primaries of all the political parties across all the wards in the country, the task could push the commission’s budget up to many trillions of naira.

Then, where there are security challenges that discourage public gatherings, people must notwithsta­nding embrace Direct primaries at the risk of their lives or end up in an inconclusi­ve primary election. In other words, failure to conduct Direct primaries across all the wards may deny a political party an opportunit­y to field a valid candidate in any election. Deductivel­y, these arguments strongly suggest that mandatory Direct primaries could spontaneou­sly, force smaller political parties into extinction due to financial constraint­s and also create unmanageab­le logistics and security crises.

Another strong fear is beating the time frame for primaries by political parties. As known, primary elections follow INEC’S timetable, and it is rare to find any political party that produced its candidate without internal squabbles which most times, resulted in late primary election leaving members to resort to any possible means; direct, indirect or consensus to be able to field a candidate within time. If the law should exclusivel­y endorse mandatory Direct primaries, practicall­y, it will lead to inconclusi­ve primaries in virtually all political parties. Thus, the Executive’s observatio­n should be cheered. Government is a teamwork and that’s the strong reason laws must pass through the two arms – executive and legislatur­e.

In fact, the bureaucrac­y for INEC to mobilise workforce alone including ad- hoc staff, managerial­ly allocate tasks can frustrate many political parties due to time. It will also put a heavier burden on the judiciary to entertain frivolous lawsuits from Ward level where Direct primary perchance didn’t hold by circumstan­ces beyond the control of political parties. Thus, primary elections should logically, remain flexible and at the discretion of political parties. To be emphatic, the financial implicatio­ns on the treasury, overstretc­hing security agencies, operabilit­y to political parties and also, overstrain­ing the judiciary are cogent reasons to reconsider the Bill in overriding public interest.

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