BUHARI’S MINISTERS AND THEIR MULTI-MILLION NAIRA NOMINATION FORMS
Political appointees that paid high nomination fees should explain their sources of funds, writes
Despite the public outcry against the exorbitant nomination forms of the dominant political parties, Abdullahi Adamu, a senator and national chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress, insisted earlier in the week that anyone who could not boast of N100 million in his account had no business wishing to govern Nigeria.
His arrogant response to a legitimate concern about the increasing closing of the political space to the vast majority of the people in a democratic dispensation should be the least worry of many Nigerians. The acquiescence by the political actors, many of whom are VHUYLQJ SXEOLF RFHUV VKRXOG XQQHUYH the teaming electorate whose choices have been decisively circumscribed.
,W LV VLJQLÀFDQW WKDW WKH FRPSODLQWV KDYH come from the media that has also yielded its platforms to the habitual social critics, calling for a substantial review of the fees. At the last count, 17 aspirants had purchased the N40 million presidential nomination forms of the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party, translating to an N640 million windfall for the party. The APC’s more expensive forms had attracted 15 aspirants, roughly N1 billion!
The total haul for the parties would be higher when the tally for the other positions including Senate, House of Representatives, governorship and Houses of Assembly is taken into consideration. According to THISDAY, the APC would have raised a princely N30 billion at the end of the nomination exercise. A hefty campaign war chest, the newspaper said. But this would come at a huge cost to the polity, the most important being the closure to the governance space of the otherwise sound and public-spirited people who have the concrete and relevant ideas to bail out the country from its prevailing cul-de-sac but do not have the cash to step forward.
Who are the people with the forms? The same people who have brought the nation to its knees, particularly in the last seven years; people whose performance LQ RFH SXW D FOHDU TXHVWLRQ PDUN RQ WKHLU capacity and integrity. In the APC, the OLQH XS LQFOXGHV ÀYH VHUYLQJ JRYHUQRUV seven former governors; three serving ministers, two of who were former governors; a serving vice-president and one person who has never held a public RFH
The PDP parades four serving governors; three former governors; one former president of the Senate; one former vice-president; one former board chairman and seven persons who have QRW KHOG SXEOLF RFH EHIRUH
There are three substantive issues to be interrogated: How the aspirants, particularly those who have been in SXEOLF RFH VLQFH FDPH DERXW WKH fees; why those of them in appointive positions have not stepped down in spite of Section 84 (12) of the Electoral Act 2022; and the value of their stewardship.
In its editorial, “Monetisation of Political Aspiration,” published on May 1, 2022, THISDAY went beyond querying the exorbitant fees, raising legitimate questions about the sources of the funds for the purchase of the forms. Stating WKDW WKH KXJH IHHV PLJKW RͿHQG WKH ODZ RQ FDPSDLJQ ÀQDQFLQJ WKH QHZVSDSHU raised the more important issue of the import of the law, which is to forestall SXEOLF RFLDOV IURP EHLQJ FDSWXUHG E\ shadowy interest groups.
+DYLQJ UHJDUGV WR WKH RFLDO SD\ RI WKHVH SXEOLF RFHUV DVSLULQJ IRU WKH presidency of the nation, it is obvious that they could not on their own have raised the funds for the forms. The transparency of the sources of the funds, therefore, becomes imperative.
For instance, Rotimi Amaechi, minister of Transportation, has been in public RFH VLQFH (OHFWHG DV D PHPEHU RI the Rivers State House of Assembly in
KH VHUYHG DV VSHDNHU IRU WZR WHUPV In 2007 he became the state governor without being on the ballot, courtesy of a protest judgment of the Supreme Court that was trying to curb executive lawlessness. He won re-election in 2011 and after his second term, he became a minister in 2015, securing a second term
1RZ KH ZDQWV WR EH SUHVLGHQW Chris Ngige, two-term Minister of
Labour, has had a shorter spell than Amaechi. He came into the limelight in 2003 when his namesake, Chris Uba, sponsored his gubernatorial bid in Anambra State. He was elected on the platform of the PDP. Three years or so later, the Court of Appeal found that the votes with which he ascended to the governorship were stolen. Peter Obi of the All Progressives Grand Alliance was handed the price. But in 2007, Ngige without atoning for the 2003 votes theft became a senator and in 2015 became a minister.
How much were Amaechi’s and Ngige’s salaries in those years of public service? Could they have saved up N100 million? But it is fair to suggest that having EHHQ LQ SXEOLF RFH IRU WKRVH \HDUV WKH\ would have made friends who should be able to raise the nomination fees for them. First, applying the campaign ÀQDQFH ODZ QR LQGLYLGXDO FDQ FRQWULEXWH more than N1 million. So, each of them would require 100 persons to contribute a million each. This is possible. However, should those philanthropists not be proud to be publicly listed for supporting their convictions? And should all other aspirants, in the spirit of transparency, not proudly exhibit the lists of their donors?
One of the reasons for Section 66 I RI WKH &RQVWLWXWLRQ DV DOWHUHG and Section 84 (12) of the Electoral Act
ZKLFK UHTXLUH SXEOLF RFHUV DQG political appointees to stand down before the general election and party primaries respectively, is to level the playing ÀHOG DQG GLVVXDGH SXEOLF RFLDOV IURP WDNLQJ XQGXH DGYDQWDJH RI WKHLU RFH Amaechi, Ngige, Emeka Nwajiuba, minister of state for Education; and Abubakar Malami, Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation, have determined to defeat the spirit and letter of the law by refusing to stand down without explaining their obstinacy to the protesting public.
What public interest would have informed their decision to stay put ZKLOH Y\LQJ IRU KLJKHU SROLWLFDO RFH" Nothing really. Meanwhile, their records of performance do not stand out. One could not secure a multi-billion US dollar commuter train; the other has not been able to resolve several labour disputes for seven years; yet another has been a disaster in terms of the quality of legal advice to the Muhammadu Buhari administration.
Who are the people with the forms? The same people who have brought the nation to its knees, particularly in the last seven years; people whose performance in office put a clear question mark on their capacity and integrity