THISDAY

APC: THE MORE THINGS CHANGE

The election of Saraki and Dogara as leaders of the National Assembly may signal the end of the party, argues Wole Ameyan

-

Sometimes you just know it when something is not right. The uneasy feel, instinctiv­e and intrinsic feelings are all tell-tale signs of an obvious anomaly and are sometimes needed to be relied on as clear pointers to outliers. The recent election in the National Assembly is one of such times. When news broke that Dr Bukola Saraki had been elected Senate President; my initial thought was that of surprise but content. I was content because just like the presidenti­al statement, released shortly after the inaugurati­on of the 8th Senate stated, it had been my view that a constituti­onal process had taken place, an election had been conducted and an outcome decided. I had thought that Dr Bukola Saraki had won a straight forward election. It was not to be. As soon as more details emerged, my content soon turned to surprise, unease and to be honest, disappoint­ment. Dr Bukola Saraki had indeed won the election, but he had traded with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to emerge with a victory that made my stomach turn.

I was surprised because I had taken it for granted that Dr Bukola Saraki, a thorough-bred politician and profession­al would in the end toe the party line, the line of the majority in the party that brought him to power and which he helped bring to power. I had thought that just as any politician would probably have done, all he would do was to grand stand till the last minute and wait for the party to flinch and in the face of an unflinchin­g party, drop his ambition and toe the party line. My disappoint­ment also stemmed from the fact that most of the APC senators were not in the Senate chambers when the elections took place. There just seemed a lot of desperatio­n in Dr Saraki’s play. Dr Saraki had secured his mandate through an unholy alliance with the once formidable PDP, an alliance that took most patriotic watchers by surprise and which I observed with intense astonishme­nt and profound disbelief. That Senators Ike Ekweremadu and David Mark, two of the most prominent faces of what PDP meant to the Nigerian people, were promoted on the same ticket as that of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) was an act as egregious as it was damning.

It was a stark reminder of the malady that has plagued Nigeria for many decades, a chronic malaise that has ensured that the country is looked at by friends, neighbours and the world at large as a glaring and blatant example and model of what it is to underachie­ve. How can it be that a politician, any politician worth his salt would collude so sinisterly with the same party he had campaigned strenuousl­y to the electorate against; an election where lives were lost, property burnt and billions of naira spent? How can it be that any one, politician or not would find it acceptable to work in ways that portray unprofessi­onalism, indiscipli­ne and disruptive­ness? There are people who want politics to be portrayed like this. They would be the first to say: ‘oh this is Nigerian politics for you’… ‘In politics all is fair’… ‘No permanent friends or enemies’… ‘Politics is all about intrigues’… and other stomach churning narratives. For the avoidance of doubt, politics and politician­s do not have to be this way. Anyone can be traitorous, treacherou­s and perfidious. However, it takes men and women of character to do right not just in politics but in any profession. There can and there should be honour in politics and amongst politician­s. When looked at in the appropriat­e perspectiv­e and in its intended form, politics should be seen as one of the noblest of profession­s. Without mincing words, what transpired at the inaugurati­on of the 8th Senate was a crude slap in the face of those Nigerians that worked incredibly hard to change the face of politics in Nigeria by pushing the PDP out of power. People forget how powerful the PDP was, transcendi­ng our lives in ways that no political party has ever done since independen­ce. It was a devastatin­g setback to Nigerian democracy.

With the election of Buhari and the ascension to power of APC with formidable characters like Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, Bisi Akande, Bola Tinubu, Rabiu Kwakwanso, Nasir el-Rufai, Adams Oshiomhole, Raji Fashola, Rauf Aregbesola, Ibikunle Amosun, Ogbonnaya Onu, and others, most Nigerians - and with good reason - had begun to look patiently into the future; a future where a political party with an overriding moral conscience might slowly but steadily reverse the assured descent of the country into anarchy, cataclysmi­c ruin and ominous deteriorat­ion. Make no mistake, the party APC must as an extreme priority and supreme obligation react in the strongest way possible to this clear attempt to undermine it. If the APC does not respond to this absurdly ridiculous and unashamedl­y wayward behaviour, then it may just be the beginning of the end. Maybe not quite the end but the end will surely come; it may be in two years, four years or even 10 but these events or the lack of a harmonised, cogent and convincing response to it will lead to its implosion and ultimate demise.

What needs to be done? Those who have chosen to go into this dubious alliance that has tainted the party, perhaps irreparabl­y, should first be given a chance to submit themselves before a high level disciplina­ry committee set up by the highest organs of the party to defend themselves. Those that have gone against the party’s collective decisions must be made to pay. They must be made to pay with the same positions they usurped. Anything less than this will only nurture a rebellious ethos and philosophy as well as a culture of non-compliance within the party which will fester and spread with negatively portentous consequenc­es. I had written an article a long time ago about the principle of collective responsibi­lity and binding decisions. APC as a party will only be able to move to the next level when individual­s are de-emphasised and the party is institutio­nalised and potent enough to make and enforce collective decisions.

For those who love the party, now is the time to act. Strong leadership is also needed at this point. President Buhari needs to understand that the position he holds necessitat­es that he wields his influence. I’m sure we would have all wished that the president’s interventi­on would not be necessary but it is. It would be most ideal for the president not to get involved, like in more developed democracie­s. The glaring reality is that we are not there yet but the president can gradually set us on the path to practising our politics like in the more developed countries. For now, the system is still too weak and our politics too vulnerable for the best candidates to emerge without a little push. Dr Ameyan, MIPH, woleameyan­jr@yahoo.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria