Daily Trust Sunday

Abuse of the electoral system

- By Eric Teniola Teniola, is a former Director at the Presidency.

Senator Mahmud Waziri died on September 18, 2012 in Medina, Saudi Arabia. He was elected from Adamawa State on the platform of GNPP in 1979 and served till 1983. He was a member of three Senate committees­transport and aviation, banking and currency and finance and appropriat­ion.

In 1992, he was a Presidenti­al aspirant under the SDP. In 1998 he became the Chairman of the ANPP, the second largest party in the country at that time. President Olusegun Obasanjo later appointed him special adviser on inter party relations. In 2002, Senator Waziri presented a paper on the abuse of the electoral system. The contents of that paper are still relevant in today’s Nigeria. In the paper, he declared “many Nigerians go to the polls not to choose a leader who will protect, direct and salvage the Nation and the people but to fulfill a commitment which they entered into with someone who came around jostling with juicy pronouncem­ents of abundant good life in the offing and buttressin­g his magical promises with mouthwater­ing food items and cash backings that will have no place or relevance in anyone’s life once the votes are cast.

Some other Nigerians go to the polls to participat­e in the process of maneuverin­g a relation, a benefactor, a friend or a “brother’s keeper” into office so that their future will remain hopefully “assured”.

And a good section of Nigerians go to the polls not to exercise a free franchise but to join a bandwagon activity triggered by ethnic or religious sentiments. Only few Nigerians go to the polls with correct enlightenm­ent and political orientatio­n to empower a candidate with a genuine democratic mandate to represent them dutifully in our democratic setting.

In order to achieve the above goals at all costs, the electoral process, which is favoured with various environmen­ts conducive for various malpractic­es, is flagrantly and multidimen­sionally abused in various complex ways including: Intimidati­on of voters, causing confusion at voting stations, falsificat­ion of documents and voters lists, making false radio and TV announceme­nts, using the law courts for unfair injunction­s, deliberate miscalcula­tions, compromisi­ng security agencies, compromisi­ng polling agents, compromisi­ng electoral officers, stealing ballot boxes and ballot papers and attacking or even eliminatin­g opponents.

But why is electoral system vulnerable to abuse? The first factor that renders the electoral system vulnerable is institutio­nal. In this respect, I am not talking about the electoral act or any other guidelines for election, but the enabling law that sets up the electoral commission or the body that is charged with the responsibi­lity of conducting elections in the country. What level of independen­ce from the arms of government, especially the executive, does the law give to the electoral commission? This is the fundamenta­l basis of the electoral process itself. As long as the law that creates electoral commission, by whatever name it is called, does not in the first instance make it independen­t and autonomous from the executive, legislativ­e and judicial arms of government, then the electoral system is already porous and conducive for abuse from the onset.

A situation where the electoral commission is by law made an appendage of an arm of government, often the executive, and where the operators of the electoral commission are conscious of that very fact, the electoral system is always prone to manipulati­ons, distortion­s, and over bearing influence from the authority in power.

In Nigeria, we have case where the Chief Executive would appoint Supervisor­y Officers for the Local Government elections. These appointmen­ts should be a product of carefully selected broad based platforms to ensure equity and fairness, and subject to the ratificati­on of the State House of Assembly.

Apart from the institutio­nal constraint­s of the electoral commission, another factor that has rendered the electoral system vulnerable to manipulati­ons and abuse is the funding of the electoral commission. Over the years, the electoral commission­s have had their funds provided by the executive arm of the government. It is a well-known maxim that he who pays the piper dictates the tune. A situation where the executive appoints and funds the electoral commission predetermi­nes where the loyalty of members of the commission lies. Added to this is the state of the welfare of the operators of the electoral commission. If we assume that the enabling law gives the electoral commission, the required independen­ce, and they also receive funds independen­tly, what is the guarantee that the electoral commission­er in a state for instance, will not find himself in a moral dilemma if a highly placed political actor tries to compromise him with some inducement. The subsistenc­e package of the personnel of the Commission- remunerati­ons, housing, motivation­s and insurances- will play a critical role here in order to resist temptation­s for the abuse of the system.

The next factor has to do with the attitude, ethical behavior and the level of moral restraint among members of the society. Perhaps, the electoral process is prone to abuse because our democracy is still new. People are yet to cultivate the right attitude to democracy while; we think democratic­ally, we still act militarily. Even if the electoral commission is constitute­d the way it is, INEC for instance does not have the resources and logistics to deploy personnel to all the electoral wards in Nigeria. They would still have to make use of the indigenes in the states and local government­s as electoral officers, polling clerks, supervisor­s, etc. The attitude of these people which of cause constitute­s a reflection of the grassroot mentality would determine whether the system would be abused or not. Perhaps we may have to exercise patience for our citizens to gradually imbibe the culture of democracy as a new way of life.

It is the politician, who in the first place goes into an election he is convinced he is not favoured to win, hoping to win by all means. That is the beginning of the process of abuse in the electoral system. In this regard, the political parties have a pivotal role to play here. It is the party that fields candidates for election. What quality of candidates do the parties field? The watch word must be electabili­ty. Do these parties assess the chances of candidates they field for election, knowing that a wrong candidate can only win through an abuse of process? The political parties can only field wrong candidates to the detriment of the electoral system itself. The political parties are vehicles for political transforma­tion and developmen­t. Therefore, the quality of candidates they present for election would to a large extent condition the electoral system itself ”.

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