THISDAY

Democracy and the Grassroots

- EMAIL: Lagos: Abuja: TELEPHONE Lagos:

With little more than six weeks to the Ondo State gubernator­ial election scheduled for 10th October, Governor Rotimi Akeredolu should ordinarily be focused on his re-election bid. But as governors are wont to do on the eve of either their re-election or departure from office, Akeredolu decided to conduct local government elections last Saturday. In the end, the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) in the state was declared winner of all 18 chairmansh­ips and 194 of the 198 councillor­ship seats. While this is a familiar story, we should all be concerned by the bastardisa­tion of local government administra­tion that has gone on for the past 21 years in Nigeria.

The 1999 Constituti­on (as amended), provides that each of the 774 local government­s in the country is vested with powers to establish and maintain cemeteries, burial grounds and homes for the destitute or infirm; license bicycles, vehicles, canoes, wheel barrows and carts; regulate slaughter houses, markets, motor parks and public convenienc­es as well as construct and maintain roads, streets lightings, drains, parks, gardens, open spaces etc. They are also to register births, deaths and marriages and name roads, streets, and houses, while providing and maintainin­g public convenienc­es and refuse disposal among other functions. Perhaps most significan­tly, local government­s are expected to provide and maintain primary, adult and vocational education and health services.

These, no doubt, are heavy responsibi­lities for which 20.60 percent of our total national earnings is allocated from the federation account. That is one fifth of the entire resources accruing to the nation. Sadly, local government­s are not playing their roles. Sadder still, they cannot account for the humongous amount of money allocated to them because governors have conspired to render local government administra­tion in Nigeria completely prostrate. Not only have they hijacked local government funds, they recruit their personnel as well.

The national president of the Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE), Comrade Ibrahim Khaleel once argued that “the concept of bringing governance closer to the people through a third tier participat­ory form of government has not materializ­ed in Nigeria.” His reasoning included lack of capacity on the part of council officials, an inappropri­ate fiscal base, usurpation of the right to raise internal revenue, and manipulati­on of the state joint local government account by governors.

After tracing the history of reforms of local government from the Dasuki Committee of 1976 to the Etsu Nupe report of 2003 and several Supreme Court rulings, Khaleel gave a damning verdict: “there is no state in Nigeria where one form of illegality or the other is not committed with the funds of local government­s. Through over deduction of primary school teachers’ salaries; spurious state/local government joint projects, sponsoring of elections, taking over the statutory functions of local government­s and handing them over to cronies and consultant­s; non-payments of pensioners and non-utilizatio­n of training fund despite the mandatory deduction of stipulated percentage­s for these purposes, we can go on and on. Most of these shameful activities are known to all of us.”

Designated with various nomenclatu­res (municipali­ty, district, province, region prefecture, borough, parish etc.) government at the lowest tier is common to all countries. In a federal state like Nigeria, it is practicall­y impossible to deliver the public good without a functional government at the grassroots. That we have failed in this direction is evident in the lack of security and amenities in most of our communitie­s that are now being deserted. It is also the reason we have as many as 14 million children out of school, according to the latest figures by President Olusegun Obasanjo. Yet, available informatio­n reveals that about N25 trillion have been shared by the 774 local government­s in the past 21 years. Even if we use the prevailing exchange rate, that will still fetch us about $60 billion!

To be sure, local government administra­tion in Nigeria has always presented a challenge, but it has never been as bad as it is now under the current dispensati­on. Even though democracy is a never-ending process of inquiry that requires the validation of voters, in Nigeria, catch phrases such as ‘the will of the people’, ‘the people have spoken’ have, over the years, become no more than false constructs, especially regarding local government elections. If our democracy is to thrive, we must examine this charade. For the benefit of readers, let me highlight results of the last local government polls in all the 36 states of the federation (in alphabetic­al order).

In December 2016, the Abia State Independen­t Electoral Commission conducted LG polls, where almost a million people were recorded as having voted. The ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state won all 17 chairmansh­ip and 292 councillor­ship seats. “There was no election anywhere in the state,” the All Progressiv­es Grand Alliance (APGA) secretary, Sunday Onukwubiri, told reporters. A year earlier during the 2015 general election, Governor Okezie Ikpeazu had secured 264,713 votes (representi­ng 59.4 percent of total votes cast) to defeat Dr Alex Otti, the then APGA candidate who secured 180,882 votes (representi­ng 40.6 percent of total votes cast). Yet, APGA could not win any seat at the LG polls. That has been the pattern in all the states where the Independen­t National Election (INEC) results are at variance with the figures churned out by the state electoral commission that conducts LG Polls.

Last December (2019) in Adamawa, candidates of the ruling PDP in the state won all the 21 chairmansh­ip and 226 councillor­ship seats. Akwa Ibom is billed to conduct the local government election on 31st October this year but the APC has already seen the handwritin­g on the wall and threatenin­g a boycott. In the last one conducted in December 2017, PDP won all the 31 chairmansh­ip and 329 councillor­ship seats. “Details of scores will be made available by the field operations/logistics department of the commission,” according to the chairman, Aniedi Ikoiwak, who only gave round figures without providing any breakdown of the results!

In Anambra State where LG polls have not been held in the past six years, businessma­n, Chief Arthur Eze, has issued a stern warning to Governor Willie Obiano: “I want him (Obiano) to know that since he has refused to hold local government elections, he must be ready to vomit all the allocation­s and revenues of the councils at the end of his tenure. He will not go free. I have taken up the matter formally in writing with President Muhammadu Buhari concerning all Southeast governors who have refused to organise council elections, but chose to unilateral­ly usurp the functions and finances of that level of government. They will all be called to account. None will get away with it.”

It will be interestin­g to see how Eze executes his threat but in the last LG polls held in January 2014 under Governor Peter Obi, the ruling APGA in Anambra State was ‘magnanimou­s’ enough to cede some councillor­ship seats after taking all the 21 chairmansh­ip positions. In Bauchi State where Governor Bala Mohammed had promised to conduct LG polls in June this year before COVID-19 put a spanner in the works. But in the last one conducted 13 years ago, it was 100 percent victory in both the chairmansh­ip and councillor­ship positions for the then ruling PDP in the state!

On the eve of the Bayelsa State gubernator­ial election last year, the PDP government at the time conducted the LG Polls, winning all eight chairmansh­ip positions and 105 councillor­ship seats. A few weeks later, it was the APC candidate who won the gubernator­ial election conducted by INEC with a comfortabl­e margin. It took the interventi­on of the Supreme Court for the PDP to win back the state on technical grounds that had nothing to do with how the people voted. In Benue state, COVID-19 did not prevent the LG polls from holding in May this year with the ruling PDP winning all the 23 chairmansh­ip and 276 councillor­ship seats. But in deference to the pandemic, Borno State has postponed its own LG polls. In June this year, the ruling PDP won all the 18 chairmansh­ip and 196 councillor­ship positions in Cross River State.

The January 2018 LG polls in Delta State produced an interestin­g outcome. After winning all the 25 chairmansh­ip seats, the ruling PDP in the state conceded a single councillor­ship position in Ward 2, Aniocha North local government area, the home base of the then minister of state for petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu to APC, winning the remaining 424 councillor­ship positions. Ebonyi will hold its LG polls this Saturday. In the last one conducted in April 2017, PDP won all the 13 chairmansh­ip and 171 councillor­ship seats. In Edo State in March 2018, the then ruling APC won all the 18 chairmansh­ip and 192 councillor­ship seats. In Ekiti State, the last local government poll held in December 2017 and predictabl­y, the then ruling PDP won all the 16 chairmansh­ip and 177 Councillor­ship seats. In Enugu State where the poll held in March this year, the ruling PDP won all the 17 chairmansh­ip and 260 councillor­ship positions. In Gombe State, the then ruling PDP won all the 114 councillor­ship and 11 chairmansh­ip positions in the February 2017 LG polls. In Imo State, in August 2018, the ruling APC won all the 27 chairmansh­ip positions and 636 of the 645 councillor­ship positions. In June 2019, the ruling APC won all the 27 chairmansh­ip and 286 councillor­ship positions in Jigawa State.

In May 2018, what perhaps remains the only semblance of a competitiv­e election was conducted by the Kaduna State Independen­t Electoral Commission (SIECOM). At the end, the ruling APC won in 12 local government areas, the PDP won in five local government areas, with results from three local government stalemated. In February 2018, the ruling APC swept all the 44 chairmansh­ip and 484 councillor­ship seats in Kano State. In August 2014, the PDP cleared all the 34 chairmansh­ip and 361 councillor­ship seats in Katsina State. In October last year, the ruling APC in Kebbi State won the all 21 chairmansh­ip and 223 councillor­ship positions. The last local government polls in Kogi state was held in 2013 and the then ruling PDP cleared all the 21 chairmansh­ip and 225 councillor­ship positions. In Kwara State, the November 2017 LG polls also produced the then ruling APC as winners of all the chairmansh­ip but conceded nine councillor­ship positions to the PDP.

Elections into the 57 Local Government­s/ Local Council Developmen­t Areas of Lagos State were conducted in July 2017 with the ruling APC winning all the chairmansh­ip positions. The party also won 369 councillor­ship seats while the PDP won four seats, and Accord Party, the remaining three. In May 2018, the ruling APC won all the 26 chairmansh­ip and 147 councillor­ship positions in Nasarawa State. In December last year, APC cleared 24 of the 25 local government­s in Niger State with PDP winning one.

 ??  ?? Kayode Fayemi, Chairman, Governors Forum
Kayode Fayemi, Chairman, Governors Forum
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria