Daily Trust

Governance: The legislativ­e perspectiv­e

- By Hassan A. Nguru

American political scene is always full of notable and frequent scolding of the congress and its members. A renowned writer, Mark Twain, bequeathed so many unpalatabl­e quotes about the congress in the late 1800’s. Though the US Congress was founded 231 years ago, within the US system of governance, the Congress still receives more scrutiny and more scolding. There are so many reasons why - all over the democratic world, the legislatur­e is perhaps the most open and most accessible to the people, and that is clearly the reason why the scrutiny is more intense.

Since Nigeria’s return to democracy, no arm of government receives as frequent bashing as the legislatur­e. Often, with fury, some even say the country can do without the legislatur­e. Of course, some of the criticisms have merit. But clearly, the open nature of the legislatur­e through legislativ­e sittings, public hearings and oversight visits, people know more about what is going on in the legislatur­e compared to other arms of government.

Just like in the US, the legislatur­e in Nigeria appears to be the ‘fall guy’ of governance. Some may say public fury at legislator­s in both the US and Nigeria is almost at equal scale, but an average US Congress man is more productive than his Nigerian counterpar­t. This line of argument can be right and wrong.

In the first place, how can a lawmaker’s performanc­e be appraised? What will be the yardsticks? In finding answers to these questions, Hegel comes in handy, in terms of “rational objectivit­y about reality.” Simply put, there is a context. What worked as good performanc­e of a lawmaker in the US Congress may not be relevant in Nigeria; though both countries run the same presidenti­al system of government. Some assess lawmakers based on the number of bills they sponsored. Good as it is, but the lawmaker is much more than the number of bills he sponsored - because of the context. The reality a senator faces in the US is not the same as the reality a senator faces in Nigeria. In the US, attending wedding ceremonies, naming ceremonies and turbaning ceremonies are not part of the yardsticks a voter uses to determine whether a lawmaker is good or bad.

In Nigeria, because of the context, it is not the number of bills that matters; it is the impact on people’s lives that makes a good legislatur­e.

Let me use a home example to make my point more clear. The senator representi­ng my Yobe north senatorial zone; comprising Bade, Karasuwa, Nguru, Jakusko, Machina and Yusufari, has been at the National Assembly since 1999 - and is currently President of the Senate. He sponsored dozens of high-impact bills and motions. But at home people hardly mention these legislativ­e achievemen­ts. People always attribute his being a good lawmaker and voting for him again and again because of projects he attracted to their communitie­s.

At home Senator Ahmad Lawan is considered a good representa­tive of his people because he has helped in securing employment for youths from across the six local government­s he represents in the upper chamber. He recently sponsored the training of over 1000 youths in the area of hardware, software and entreprene­urship developmen­t. Participan­ts in the training were drawn from the three senatorial zones of Yobe State.

Senator Ahmad Lawan was instrument­al to the location of Federal University, Gashua, where it is now – in Gashua. Locating the university in Gashua puts it in a strategica­lly accessible location for all the people of Yobe north senatorial zone. He also followed this up with ensuring that the Act Establishi­ng the university has been signed by President Muhammadu Buhari. Through his efforts, hostels that can accommodat­e 2000 students are taking up at the university. Already, work is ongoing for the establishm­ent of a 10-bed clinic in the university. The world class ICT centre the university now has was a result of the commitment of Senator Ahmad Lawan to educationa­l developmen­t of the zone. Our senatorial zone is one of the parts of Nigeria referred to as ‘educationa­lly disadvanta­ged.’

It is to the credit of Senator Ahmad Lawan that he facilitate­d the reconstruc­tion of Nguru-GashuaBaym­ari road which is nearing completion. For us the people of Yobe north and some parts of Yobe east, this road is the most important. Only those of us with an idea of the state of this road before the reconstruc­tion can appreciate how it can transform our communitie­s

On another social front, Senator Ahmad Lawan has built Islamiyya model schools in all the local government­s in his senatorial zone. He also sponsored the mass wedding of women from indigent families, which eased the social obligation burden on many families. Each year - from 2017 to date, he sponsors medical outreach in which people receive critical medical treatment free. Herders benefit from cattle vaccinatio­n he sponsors annually. He also has also influenced many TEFUND interventi­ons for tertiary institutio­ns in his zone and scholarshi­p opportunit­ies for many aspiring scholars teaching at these institutio­ns.

For a lawmaker who has been in National Assembly for over 20 years, these are only recent projects he attracted to his people. The reason why he keeps winning elections is that he has attracted these developmen­t projects to the area he is representi­ng.

Again, we go back to Hegel’s importance of being ‘rational.’ In Nigeria, of course lawmakers have to do more to deliver developmen­t, but clearly people never judge lawmakers by the number of bills they sponsor, but by the number of projects they attract to their people; the number of jobs they provide for youths and other key performanc­e indicators that can be out of place - and will never be the yardsticks of determinin­g a good legislator in the US. In Nigeria, no lawmaker goes to polls flaunting the number of bills he/she sponsored. People judge lawmakers by their projects, by their social interventi­ons and concrete developmen­t impact.

Hassan Adamu Nguru, Bulabulin,

Nguru,Yobe State

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