Daily Trust

Second term: Can Buhari reinvent himself?

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In our traditiona­l winner-takes-all approach to elections, and with Nigeria more sundered now than at any other time in our history, the only sane path to follow in order to heal poll-inflicted wounds and distrust and draw all back into the common ground, is a resort to an inclusive government President Buhari is talking about. He has also pleaded with his party members and supporters to be reticent in excitement.

He says: ‘’I would like to make a special appeal to my supporters not to gloat or humiliate the opposition. Victory is enough reward for your efforts.’’

What you do about the grief caused your defeated opponent is the real test of your integrity. No matter how the world rates the contest, free and fair or biased and compromise­d, managing your victory in the face of your fallen challenger counts more than all else. You push him farther afield if you don’t control your celebratio­ns. He goes back into his closet to start another battle just when you aren’t in the mood for new hostilitie­s. The real war starts when you have scaled the hurdle, as it were. Winning the peace after the war is the enduring victory. Otherwise your days after the triumph that should be bliss would be a blight.

So Buhari is not only morally right with the proclamati­on of sheathed celebratio­ns and a decision to go for inclusive government, but also, it is politicall­y correct to take that way in the interest of peace. But it would require him to reinvent himself and resist some hawks around him who would insist on the party cornering all the spoils of war as the reward due them after their ‘sacrifices’ to clinch the trophy. It is a weak and unsustaina­ble argument that collapses when we present the larger scenario of a faltering polity on its knees due to its politics of division. It isn’t a time to talk of a so-termed 97% versus 5% booty sharing policy.

So how would Buhari abandon the beaten track? The other day at a dinner organized by the youth and women of his party, All Progressiv­es Congress, he gave Nigerians an opaque and worrisome hint. He said those who would make his cabinet in his second coming would be ‘’men and women of integrity ‘’. He acknowledg­ed the ‘’significan­t role’’ these played in his reelection and declared he would not disappoint them.

There is no radical departure from the past if that’s all Buhari is going to do. It does not capture the notion of inclusiven­ess he lovingly embraced in the quote above. To meet the iron and noble demands of that principle of political strides towards mending broken bones, our president would need to build his cabinet in a walk with some of the stalwarts from the major and so-called minor political parties who challenged him.

Of course, the president can select from APC and friends he can trust for their integrity and unquestion­able commitment to patriotism. But he can find the same breed in the opposition fold as well as in the profession­s. He can give his nation an A-team that we require to launch us to the next level of greatness he squared his campaign on.

It’s Buhari’s turn to validate that truth as he ponders which way to go after winning the poll.

Banji Ojewale, Lagos

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