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In the last few weeks, I have not appeared on this page because I had surgery on my right eye. I am able to come back today because my eye has returned from the place of darkness. A lot happened during my absence. I will deal with them as much as possible but for this week it is meet and proper that I tackle the recent APC presidential primary, which was won by Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.
The carpetbaggers and other power elite must have told him he was wrong, that he needed to pick or push for the picking of his own man as the presidential candidate of the ruling party, APC, of which he is the national leader. As the day for the choice of the presidential candidate approached Buhari made a volte-face. He started pushing for a consensus candidate that would emerge from a crowded field of 23 aspirants from various parts of the country. It was a herculean task but he would try because choosing his own man, though undemocratic would suit his own purpose. So the political choreography was put on display and everybody had to dance as the permutations and jiggery-pokery went on display as well. Five issues were at stake. Let’s call them factors.
Factor number one: The Buhari government has a Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, who has served the President faithfully and efficiently. He has also articulated very eloquently the mandate of this government giving a sizeable dose of legitimacy to a government that has performed miserably on many fronts. They seem to work amicably. Some years ago when Osinbajo visited the Emir of Katsina, Abdulmumin Usman, during the inauguration of the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Clinic he said that the President treats him like his son. “I feel very much at home in Katsina. Moreso, because this is the state of the President who has taken me as a brother. In fact, the President has taken me as a son in the way he treats me,” the 60-year-old man said of the 74-year-old President. The Vice President continued: “The amount of responsibilities President Buhari has given me shows he seriously believes we can live together as brothers. I pray the Lord will preserve our President to continue to lead the nation as he has to do. He seriously believes in Nigerian unity,” said Osinbajo.
Factor number two: Chief Rotimi Amaechi, the immediate past Minister of Transportation was the Director-General of Buhari’s campaign organisation in 2015 and 2019. The logic is that if Buhari trusted him with such an enormous responsibility twice he can be trusted to protect Buhari’s legacy, whatever that may be. Besides, Amaechi had sited, to the discomfiture of many, several projects in the President’s hometown. One of them is a Transportation University planted in Daura, Buhari’s hometown. Also the Kano-Maradi Standard Gauge Railway was designed to pass through Daura. When the Emir of Daura turbaned Amaechi as Dan Amana Daura (the trusted son of Daura) many people speculated that it was Buhari’s way of saying “thank you” to Amaechi. And when Amaechi declared his interest in the presidency, many people thought “okay, a bigger thank you was about to come to Amaechi.”
Factor number three: Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the former Governor of Lagos State was the one who rallied people in several states, especially the South West to give Buhari the APC mandate to run in 2015. Actually, Buhari had said after failing three times to win the presidency that he was done with elections. So it is correct to a T to say that it was Tinubu among others who lured Buhari back to the political platform that had four parties cobbled together. Actually, Buhari has said publicly that without Tinubu’s help he would not have been President since he would not have been the flagbearer of the APC in the 2015 election.
And Asiwaju helped in shepherding the team to victory. So it was natural to think that Buhari may decide to pay back gratitude with gratitude since it is often said that one good turn deserves another. When it seemed obvious that some funny games were going on to possibly shut him out of the race Tinubu spoke out reminding all that he did Buhari a favour by helping to get him to the victory podium. It was also a subtle indication that Tinubu and his supporters were ready to take what may be thrown at them from any source.
It must be noted that Tinubu did not come into the fray like most of the other candidates unprepared. Some of the APC governors received his support during their governorship elections. Some of the members of the National Working Committee (NWC) of the party were beneficiaries of Tinubu’s largesse when they contested their elections in March this year. It was unlikely therefore that these Tinubu foot soldiers would simply stand at akimbo while there was a manifest attempt to unfairly turn the table against Tinubu.
Power is addictive, as addictive as sex and Jonathan was ready for the temptation and addiction. But the idea of the South holding power through Jonathan for just four years in order for it to return to the north was revolting to many Southerners. Don’t forget that the 17 governors of the South had announced at one of their meetings that presidential power must return to the South in 2023. Would they be ready to fight if that didn’t happen? No one knew, but it was obvious that it was a risky path to power. I had predicted that it would crash in my column titled: “Is Jonathan a beautiful bride?” And when it crashed I was not surprised.
Factor number five: As people were trying to unravel the Jonathan conundrum, Dr Ahmad Ibrahim Lawan, Senate President, strolled into the arena. He, too, wanted the job which already had more than 20 applicants. It was said that he was the northern joker card, the man around whom the north, all of the north, would rally around and knock out all the Southern Nigeria aspirants. The suddenness of his appearance shocked many who never had even an inkling of his presidential ambition even one month before he announced his arrival on the scene. There was obvious panic in many camps.
Then there was a reduction of the list to five. Again wahala showed its face. Some of the aspirants shouted fouls. Then Buhari thought if they could not have a consensus candidate, the number should at least be reduced to two or three. No dice. How would a party collect money from 23 people and then ask that the figure be reduced to two or three. I remember that a few years ago, the PDP was faced with a similar problem. It refused to sell its forms claiming that only one form was printed.
Our democracy is taking various unsalutary forms. It is worse in the states where the ruling party in each state scores 100% in the election, where governors just present someone of their choosing as the candidate of the party, with no valid primaries. But in the APC elections, the country was lucky that the APC governors stood firm on the side of democracy, and Buhari yielded in the interest of the ruling party.
Tinubu won fair and square because he was ready to win. He prepared for it and policed every movement. His victory is that of strategy over gerrymandering. The lesson here is that if democracy-loving people stand together to fight gerrymanders will always be the loser.