Buhari, Osinbajo, Oyegun, Saraki at APC NEC meeting |
On Tuesday, the National Executive Committee
of the All Progressives Congress (APC) met and the fact that they did meet is
huge news. It should not have been big news because the body is supposed to
meet at least four times every year. However, for reasons that had never been
made clear, they had never met to discuss anything since they won the elections
two-and-a-half years ago. The ruling party decided that with power in their
hands, there was nothing to discuss and so nothing happened. It’s in reality a
huge statement about the powerlessness of a Nigerian ruling party that over two
in office, most political appointments into boards and parastatals have not
been made, party faithful have not been compensated, the competent people with
integrity that the party promised Nigerians would be appointed to replace the
corrupt officials of the previous administrations were never appointed. The
party, which everyone knows was full of angry and frustrated people in dire
need of meetings to address their frustrations, could not meet to discuss and
do something about their predicament. There cannot be a clearer statement about
the powerlessness of this allegedly ruling party.
The APC was, of course, taking its cue from
the president who made it very clear from the first day in office that he was
not in a hurry to establish his team and govern. Following his inauguration on
May 29, 2015, there was an eerie wait for things to happen but then nothing
happened for a long time. Well, he did request for approval to appoint 15
special advisers, which he obtained on June 3, 2015, just five days after his
inauguration. Two-and-a-half years later, he has succeeded in appointing five
out of the fifteen that were approved. Out of the five, he sent three to the
vice president and one to the minister for Budget and National Planning. It
took President Muhammadu Buhari five months after inauguration to appoint
ministers. The heads of most government agencies are yet to be appointed. It
appears the president must have been quite serious when he said political
appointees were noisemakers and those who do the real work are civil servants.
There seems to have been a change of heart on
this because on Tuesday, President Muhammadu Buhari disclosed that he would
expand the Federal Executive Council to bring in more supporters at the federal
level, with fresh ideas to be injected into the government. At present,
President Buhari has 36 ministers, one each from all the states of the
federation. The president even publicly regretted that he had not
re-constituted the boards of parastatals, as he had promised to do in 2015. He
reminded APC leaders at the meeting that he had given instructions since
October 2015 for this exercise of making political appointments to start but
that there had been inordinate delays through the activities of several
committees, in an attempt to get the balance right and make sure that all parts
of the country are equitably represented. Two-and-a-half years into a four-year
tenure is a long time to decide who to appoint, and the question today is: Why
are appointments back on the agenda, if indeed they are? Why did the president
promise that this time: “By the Grace of God, these appointments will be
announced soon. Especially now that the economy is improving, we will have the
resources to cater for the appointees”?
The new dimension on the political terrain is, of course, the maneuvering for the next elections, which has taken off in earnest. What has been surprising is that the president knew all along that he became head of state because of the delicate merger between three parties that allowed him to extend his votes beyond his traditional catchment area. The obvious implication was that he had to maintain this enlarged group and in politics, making appointments is a key instrument for keeping friends happy. Over the past two years, many barons within the party have been engaged in elaborate stratagems to take over from the president, while he, on his part, had refused to play the counter politics of keeping as many barons close to him. The question today is whether he has finally realised that he had been on the path to political suicide. I doubt that we know the answer yet. What we do know is that precisely because he is keen on his legacy, whether or not he is interested in a second term, he needed to play politics to ensure that the ruling party remains faithful to the tendency that would protect his legacy. The fact that he has consciously refused to even appoint a political adviser and to have strong politicians around him suggests he is intransigent about remaining an “apolitical’ politician.
The president appears unconcerned about a
political environment in which the Senate president, speaker of the House, the
party leader and many other barons of the party are not in his camp. At the
same time, most State governors who are extremely powerful on party and
electoral matters are also extremely upset at what they consider to be the
manner in which he had marginalised them. By refusing to engage with them for
so long, the challenge he would now face is that he might have to bend back
beyond what he would consider to be reasonable to get them back on his side, so
the standoff is likely to continue.
During the party meeting, the president reeled off his achievements in the last two years, which we can assume is the legacy he would like to protect. The list includes success on Boko Haram, Niger Delta issues, regular fuel availability, improved power supply, establishing the treasury single account (TSA), improved agriculture and fertiliser access, and above all, the knowledge that corruption will not be tolerated in government. He proclaimed that: “We all know there is CHANGE.” “Nigeria’s prestige”, he asserted, “has gone up. Nigeria is now credit–worthy, a clear testimony of which was the over-subscription of the Euro-Bond by four times.” For the politicians, however, these are not the real achievements they seek. What matters is for them to be in power and to remain in power. Too many leading members of the ruling party believe they won elections but never got the opportunity to be in power. They are likely to search for alternative routes that will take them to power.
The Constitution places the power of the
executive in one person – the president. Nonetheless, the Constitution also
requires that ministers, advisers and heads of parastatals are appointed to
help the president carry out the huge responsibility of executing government
policies. The problem with governance is that if you do not make political
appointments, civil servants make all the political decisions, including the
most important decision NOT TO MAKE DECISIONS. The slow pace of governance
under President Buhari is a direct result of his decision not to make most of
the political appointments that are due. It is well known that when civil
servants are in control, they do not want to make decisions, so that they do
not get noticed or disturbed as they enjoy the perquisites of power, including
the most harmful one of looting public funds. When, therefore, the president
does not appoint people to govern, those at the head of governmental
organisations create forms of governance linked to prolonging their temporary
positions. Achieving policy goals of the government cannot be their priority
because their logic is that they are there for a short time until the president
decides on who should do the job on a full time basis. As tenures of temporary
heads extend from weeks into months and years, confusion becomes the name of
the game. The temporary heads begin to envisage permanency on the jobs and
above all start working towards it. This means investing public funds at their
disposal to oil the process of retaining their positions and we all know what
that means. Today, the time for the show has begun as the politicians are
coming into the field, expressing themselves and acting on what they consider
to be the tragedy of winning an election but being kept out of power.
A professor of Political Science and development
consultant/expert, Jibrin Ibrahim is a Senior Fellow of the Centre for Democracy and Development,
and Chair of the Editorial Board of PREMIUM TIMES.
Source: https: Premium Times
No comments: