Daily Trust Saturday

A clean victory in a fair contest

- Yusuf Babangida Sulaiman

It is a new dawn in Nigeria with the election of a thoroughbr­ed politician, businessma­n and profession­al to the country’s most coveted seat and highest office. Saturday’s election ushered in an event of untold rarity, where incentivis­ing of voters was reduced to a historic minimum, yet, Nigerians in their millions chose to trust a triumph of tremendous virtue over primordial offerings.

This massive trust is indeed historic as it cements a bond of friendship and wisdom between inherent strategic alliances that have won the cleanest and most transparen­t election in Nigeria’s history.

The Chairman of INEC, Prof. Yakubu, deserves due commendati­on for the innovative creativity of the

Commission as it ran a process that suffocated to the barest minimum, cases of multiple voting, over voting, proxy voting and result alteration. For the ruling APC, to lose elections in so many traditiona­l stronghold­s, including the party’s birthplace of Lagos, it is a salient pointer to the transparen­cy of the process and demonstrat­es how impermeabl­e it is to manipulati­on.

The president-elect Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has nursed and nurtured the ambition to be Nigeria’s president for a lifetime, and as a known king of the long game, he spent the past decade and a half cultivatin­g alliances towards the fruition of the project, and today, the culminatio­n of his lifetime ambition has beckoned right before our eyes.

This is in spite of the initial talk of a consensus which Asiwaju overcame and won the primaries convincing­ly; he surmounted the hurdle of Muslim-Muslim ticket being exhaustive­ly discussed. Asiwaju was always the favourite going into the election; however, there were numerous odds stacked against him and obvious conspiraci­es over which he triumphed, causing this victory to come off even sweeter.

When Asiwaju resurged and tenaciousl­y fought for the survival of Lagos State (1999-2007) under President Obasanjo, when he drove the alliances that metamorpho­sed from Alliance for Democracy (AD), into Action Congress (AC), thereafter into Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and finally into All Progressiv­es Congress (APC), the strongman was bidding his time and shaping historic events that have led to this moment.

For a man that has built people and supported causes, driven beliefs and projected strong, it is worthwhile for us politician­s to go the extra mile in granting support and bidding his success, as it gallantly indicates that in politics, one must portray largeheart­edness, perseveran­ce, patience and most importantl­y, possess the mindset to make strategic sacrifices.

We are in hearty jubilation­s as we see allies of the president-elect, from the moment of his declaratio­n of intent, have remained at the fore at the time of his declaratio­n as winner. This is a man that can be trusted to keep a circle; a man that is worth a politician’s loyalty and a man for whom a descent reward system is one that ensures one’s vertical progressio­n.

When we see leaders like His Excellency, Governor Ganduje of

Kano State damning every potential political consequenc­e to promote the cause of Asiwaju, we understand the depth and wisdom inherent in such a cause. Governor Badaru of Jigawa as well being a Fulani man like Ganduje has fiercely fought for the enthroneme­nt of Asiwaju, just like many other core northern governors and politician­s, underlinin­g the wide acceptance of the president-elect as one for Nigeria, devoid of narrow primordial sentiments.

The results of the elections threw up unpreceden­ted upsets, with the APC losing in the major stronghold­s of Lagos, Kano, Kaduna, Katsina, Kebbi and Yobe while winning in Rivers of all places. But because of the spread of cumulative votes, the APC cruised to an unassailab­le margin while fulfilling all requiremen­ts to return Asiwaju as President-Elect.

While we toiled and earned victory and now seek support of all people countrywid­e, we have our eyes firmly on the ball; we know that this victory is nothing if not put to use in bettering people’s lives, which culminate in the ascension of our incoming president’s reputation to towering levels. If not for how much Asiwaju has accomplish­ed, how broad the network he built and maintained and how much he put into developing himself; one would wonder how his candidatur­e could have been this easily sold. The lesson in this is for politician­s to prepare for when service will beckon and for ethnic nationalit­ies to befriend as strategic allies.

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