The debate about the
expediency – or otherwise – of restructuring has increasingly become a
top-drawer issue, gaining momentum by the day and suggesting that it may be one
of the dominant issues of the 2019 election. The main political parties in the
country are now more or less, in my estimation, obliged to clearly state their
stand on the issue to be taken seriously in the next poll. The ruling All
Progressives Congress, which had been rather lukewarm about the matter despite
having devolution of power as a precept in its constitution, has hit the road
with its committee collating the views of its members across the country on
restructuring. The opposition Peoples Democratic Party is also said to be
weighing in on the issue.
On
September 7, many Yoruba leaders and leaders of socio-political groups in the
South-west gathered in Ibadan, the region’s political capital, to state their
position on restructuring. The highpoints of the deliberation contained in
their 16-point communiqué include a return to the 1960 and 1963 constitutions,
both of which espoused the regional structure and granted wide powers to the
regions. Also canvassed was overhaul of the revenue allocation formula that
will see 50% going to states, 35% to the proposed regional governments and 15%
to the central government.
While
it must be emphasized that it was not every stakeholder in Yorubaland that
attended the summit let alone agreed with the entire proposition, the question
whether this makes the submission any less valid is a moot point. In the North,
some of the region’s leaders including governors are also talking and demanding
devolution of powers and other variants of restructuring. Also, the National
Assembly, which had curiously dumped devolution of power as an item on its
constitution review plan, is now having a rethink.
The
fact that political leaders and stakeholders are talking and complaining loudly
about the present political structure suggests, in my view, that something is
awfully wrong with our situation and that an urgent remedy is required. And I
think we are gradually getting to that point where we must confront the
problem. At every turn, the popular mantra is now restructuring. Until last
weekend, the question which has been on nearly every lip is this: When would
the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, speak about the issue?
After bidding his time, putting together his views, consistent with what he has
always stood and fought for over time, Asiwaju eventually unfolded his position
last Saturday in a keynote address as Principal Guest of Honour at the 2017
Annual Dinner of the King’s College Old Boys’ Association (KCOBA). That speech
was further proof that Tinubu knows when to speak and how to do it with some
aplomb. As one commentator on a national television succinctly put it last
week: “Knowing when to speak and how to speak should now be added to the worth
of Asiwaju Tinubu, widely regarded as a consummate politician, strategist and
administrator”.
Asiwaju
spoke on both the economic and political imperatives of the moment. It was a
landmark speech, highlights of which bear restating here. In the lecture
entitled ‘A New Nigeria or A Better One: The Fitting Tools of A Great Repair,’
Asiwaju left no one in doubt that he desired a better Nigeria for the people.
“What I seek is a better Nigeria. I care not whether something is old or new
but whether it shall make us better”. He lamented that a nation as diverse as
ours had not taken the time to give our legal marriage its proper functional
underpinning. “We all lined up to call ourselves Nigerian without gathering to
discuss what it meant. Thus, we inhabit a nation that has not sufficiently
defined its governance. We may be defined by political borders and boundaries
but we have not glued ourselves to collective purpose and vision. Too many of
us are born in Nigeria but not of it”.
Nigerians,
he said, must listen to those clamouring for secession to determine what they
actually mean, explaining that many secessionists cry separation because their
personal ambitions would be better served by such. Expressing his belief in one
Nigeria, he argued that breaking up the country would solve no problems. He
concedes, however, that some problems remain in the nation which needs to be
fixed. “That I am a foe of disunity does not mean I have blinded myself to the
truth that our nation is in need of great repair,” he said. “We all see the
nation for what it is. Some look further to see the nation for what it is not
and they rush to condemn it. I choose to see the nation for what it can be and
thus seek to nurture and cultivate it so that this Nigeria may bring forth the
fullest blossoming of its riches, resources and ingenuity of its diverse people”.
Asiwaju’s
thematic prognosis outlines a foundation for a new Nigeria. And despite the
evident brilliance, he would rather see it as his humble initial contribution
to the long overdue discourse on how to mould and shape our political economy.
He condemned Nigeria’s over-dependence on oil revenue and on the rent-seeking
behaviour such revenues encourage. “Even at the best of times and with the
highest of oil prices, the economy was characterized by imbalance and
inefficiency. Widespread poverty, gross inequality and massive unemployment
described the condition”.
Among
his many remarkable prescriptions were the creation of an industrial capacity
that employs large numbers of people and manufactures a significant quantity of
goods for domestic consumption; national industrial policy that fosters
development of strategic industries that create jobs as well as spur further
economic growth; focus on manufacturing things that Nigerians and the rest of
the world value and want to buy; institution of a policy of tax credits;
subsidies that insulate critical sectors from the negative impact of imports
and lowering of interest to make credit available for business investments and
consumer credit accessible to the average person.
Others
included a national infrastructure plan, addressing the power problem to obtain
this vital ingredient to economic vitality, government-backed home mortgage
system, re-invigoration of agriculture with the reintroduction of commodity
exchange boards and agric mortgage loan corporation to help the common farmer
to improve output and income and a re-calibration of the revenue sharing
formula in order to give more funds to the states. Noting that the central
government was doing things the states can do better, the APC leader said giving
heed to the recommendations above will keep the federal government busy. It was
at this point that he restated his often-stated call for true federalism. He
argued that the imbalance between the roles of the federal and state
governments lies at the root of the nation’s difficulties.
Moving
many of the 68 items in the Exclusive List to the Residual List as was the case
in the 1963 Constitution will help ensure true federalism, he said. These items
include police, prisons, stamp duties, regulation of tourist traffic,
registration of business names, incorporation of companies, trade, commerce and
census. He said those eager to dispense with federalism in favour of “more rash
and impractical remedies should allow us to first truly practice federalism before
we deem it a failure”.
Sadly,
it has to be said though that the reportage of this speech in one or two
newspapers and commentaries by a few on social media seemed to have
misconstrued some of Asiwaju Tinubu’s standpoints. A few clarifications would
suffice here in that regard, as restructuring has now become a coat of many
colours with many espousing diverse and often self-serving versions of what
they term restructuring. First, Asiwaju’s advocacy has always been for a true
federalism. What he seeks is a re-balancing of the roles between the federal
and state governments to give more powers to the states to perform their
responsibilities as obtained in the 1963 Constitution. The APC leader is
convinced that the ongoing debate is healthy for the country and should help
produce a better system for Nigeria.
Second,
when Tinubu noted that not all change could be deemed to be good, it was
neither meant to disparage the APC which he helped found, nor a denunciation of
the party’s change mantra as insinuated by some on social media. That was sheer
mischief. He spoke in a context which clearly highlighted that what he sought
for the country was a better Nigeria and that whether something was old or new
was immaterial to him. For the avoidance of doubt, this is what he said: “What I seek is a better Nigeria. I care not
whether something is old or new but whether it shall make us better. Not all
change is good. Not every new thing shall be kind to us. Yes, Nigeria must
change, but some of the changes we need cannot be bought at the store of the
new. Many things we need are shelved in the warehouse of the old. Just as we
must learn new things on one hand, we must remember vital old wisdom on the
other”.
Taking
the comment of anyone, particularly leaders, that points a way forward out of
context would not help the ongoing democratic discourse. Their views should be
properly captured. Asiwaju’s paper has been published in full by some of our
national newspapers. The speech is on the internet and can also be glimpsed on
his Twitter handle.
Rahman
is media adviser to Tinubu.
Source: www.thecable.ng
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