Governor Fashola And Not Ex Governor Tinubu Is The Poster Boy For APC To Win Presidential Election By Femi Aribisala
‘’To be truly progressive, the APC
must not just talk progressivism, it must walk progressivism’’.
The fact that Nigeria is a country
with some 350 ethnic groups makes it imperative that we must always be
politically mindful of ethnic, religious and regional considerations. Failure
to do this on the idealistic grounds that the quality of our public officials is
more important than their ethnic and religious origin is bound to be
problematic.
Nigerians are yet to believe, if we
ever will, that the competence of a president is more important than his
ethnicity. In any case, the background of a president is without prejudice to
his ability. There is no ethnic group in Nigeria that does not have people who
can be excellent presidents. However, if issues of federal character and
ethnic-balancing are not addressed in Nigerian politics, even the best
presidential materials will become ineffective.
The average Nigerian is not a
sophisticated voter. Therefore, people like me will continue to analyse
Nigerian politics from the perspective of the need for regional and
ethnic-balancing.
Northern agenda
The APC is seen as a vehicle for
Northern domination of Nigerian politics and many people are implacably opposed
to this. Although the APC claims not to subscribe to zoning, everyone knows its
2015 presidential candidate must come from the North, otherwise the centre will
no longer hold. Certainly, all those insisting the North must regain power have
flocked to the APC precisely because they see it as the vehicle for realizing
their dreams.
There is also widespread perception
that the APC is sympathetic to the Boko Haram. Fani-Kayode, a former APC
member, complained that the APC is the political wing of the Boko Haram in the
same way that Sinn Fein was the political wing of the Irish Republican Army in
Britain. Indeed, for the longest time, some APC members were Boko Haram apologists.
Murtala Nyako even claimed the Boko Haram was a Southern hoax. He called it a
“phantom.” Muhammadu Buhari sought political amnesty for the Boko Haram;
demanding the insurgents should be given the same golden handshakes as the
militants of the Niger Delta.
Therefore, it will not be easy
getting non regionally-chauvinistic votes for a Northern APC presidential
candidate in 2015. If that Northerner is a Muslim, it would be harder still.
The Boko Haram insistence that Nigeria must become a Muslim Caliphate and the
systematic bombing of churches and killing of Christians in the North ensures
that religion will be a major factor in the coming election.
Southern strategy
While Muslims may have no qualms
voting for a Christian president, Christians are likely to see the defeat of an
incumbent Christian president by a Northern Muslim as succumbing to Boko Haram.
That feeling is unlikely to be assuaged by a Southern Christian vice-president,
in the same way that the demands of some Northerners for a Northern president
have not been assuaged by the fact that the current vice-president is from the
North.
The blunder of Atiku Abubakar in
stating that the North will not be voting for President Jonathan in 2015
betrays the Northern bias of the APC. If the North will not be voting for a
Southern candidate, why would the South vote for a Northern candidate?
A Southern Christian presidential
running-mate in 2011, in the person of Pastor Tunde Bakare, did not help
Buhari, who remains a hard sell in the South. Buhari was only able to muster a
measly 391,922 votes from the South, out of a total of over 38 million votes
cast nationwide. That is conclusive proof that fielding Buhari yet again as the
Northern presidential hopeful, on a fourth time lucky gambit, is bound to fail.
Chances are Buhari would get even less votes this time out than he did in 2011.
The challenge for the APC is to get
Southerners to vote for a Northern APC presidential candidate in 2015, in spite
of the current regional and religious polarization of Nigerian politics.
The APC desperately needs a Southern politician to balance its Northern presidential ticket. However, such politician cannot come from the South-East or the South-South.
The APC desperately needs a Southern politician to balance its Northern presidential ticket. However, such politician cannot come from the South-East or the South-South.
In spite of the presence of men like
Rochas Okorocha of the South-East, and Rotimi Amaechi of the South-South, the
APC has little chance of getting significant South-East and South-South votes.
These geopolitical zones remain Jonathan strongholds. Their voters are not
likely to agree to truncate Jonathan’s South-South presidency in exchange for a
Northern president and a South-South or South-East vice-presidency. If APC is
to get vital Southern votes in 2015, the answer lies in the South-West; a
region of residual APC/ACN political strength.
Game-changer
The APC needs a vice-presidential
candidate with sufficient political clout to galvanise South-West votes. There
is only one man in South-West politics today that can conceivably marshal bloc
South-West votes for the APC in 2015. That man is none other than Babatunde
Fashola! As far as the APC is concerned, Fashola is the game-changer!
This truth will be very bitter for
die-hard Tinubu supporters. But the fact is that Fashola, and not Tinubu, is
now the poster-boy for the APC in the South-West. In spite of having the
second-largest bloc of voters among the six regions in the country, the
South-West had the least number of voters in 2011. Only 34% of the South-West’s
14 million voters bothered to vote. Fashola could conceivably invigorate South-West
voters in a way no other politician currently on the horizon can.
Fashola as APC vice-presidential
candidate will do for a Northern candidate what Bakare could not do for Buhari
in 2011; he will clean up South-West votes. If nothing else, Fashola has a
legacy of eight years of tarring roads, building bridges and planting grass and
flowers in Lagos. Moreover, he does not come with the political baggage of Bola
Tinubu, who has become a political liability, even in the South-West.
Unlike Tinubu, Fashola has not
antagonized the Afenifere and the Yoruba Obas. Indeed, the coming regional
elections in the South-West are shaping out to be as much about the need to
bring an end to the domineering politics of Tinubu as anything else. With
Tinubu on the ticket, allegations of certificate forgeries, inordinate
land-grabs, nepotism, alpha beta scams, toll-gate deals and anti-democratic
manipulations will come to the fore. Therefore, in contrast to Tinubu, Fashola
is a breath of fresh air.
Neutralisation of Tinubu
A Fashola vice-presidency would have
the added political bonus of spelling the end of the political pretensions of
Bola Tinubu in the South-West. Vice-president Fashola will quickly upstage
“party leader” Tinubu. A Fashola vice-presidency would mean, to all intents and
purposes, the passing of the baton from Tinubu to Fashola. It would spell the
end of the self-appointed “godfather” of South-West politics. Therefore, Tinubu
can be expected to say to a Fashola vice-presidency: “over my dead body!”
But the fact of the matter is that
the APC only has a chance in the coming presidential election “over the dead
body” of Tinubu. Tinubu must be marginalized in any marketable APC equation.
Any attempt to accommodate him inordinately, as happened in the rigging of Oyegun
as party chairman with the collusion of APC governors, will turn far more ugly
and disastrous for the party than it was the last time. To have any reasonable
chance of success nationally, APC must have a viable South-West policy. That
means its presidential ticket must be built around one man: Babatunde Fashola.
Fashola as APC vice-presidential
candidate would be a stroke of genius for the APC in addressing yet another
liability of the party: its widespread perception as a Muslim party. This
perception has come about because Bola Tinubu’s ACN never ever fielded a
non-Muslim candidate as the governor of any South-Western state. When the APC
registered as a political party with INEC, 17 of its 18 board-members were
Muslims. For months until recently, all members of the APC national executive
were Muslims. Foolishly, the APC even rationalized its earlier plans for a
Muslim/Muslim presidential ticket on the pages of the newspapers.
However, the vice-presidential
candidacy of Babatunde Fashola would prescribe a Northern Christian as APC
presidential candidate, for the simple reason that Fashola is a Muslim. The
emergence of a Northern Christian as APC presidential candidate would open many
doors closed to the APC politically. In one fell swoop, it would dispel all
notions that the APC is the political arm of the Boko Haram because the last
thing the Boko Haram want is a Christian president.
Changing of the guard
APC fools no one by talking power
shift and then touting people like Buhari and Kwankwaso as its presidential
hopefuls. How does another Hausa-Fulani president of Nigeria speak power-shift?
This is Atiku’s bargaining-chip; that power needs to shift from the North-West
and the North-Central to the North-East. Unfortunately, apart from supposedly
having a fat war-chest, Atiku is not sell-able as president of Nigeria. He has
tried before and failed woefully. In any case, Atiku is a Muslim. There is need
for power shift in the North from Moslems to Christians in defiance of Boko
Haram threats.
A Northern Christian as APC
presidential candidate will achieve this. It will make the party more
attractive in the predominantly Christian South, where voters may be dissuaded
from voting for a Northern Muslim president in this era of Boko Haram
insurgency. It will also open the APC to Northern Christian votes which might
not be forthcoming otherwise. It must be pointed out that there are far more
Christians in the North than many realise. Adamawa, Benue, Nassarawa, Plateau
and Taraba all have majority Christian populations; while Bauchi, Borno, Gombe,
Kaduna, Kogi, Kwara and Niger have significant Christian populations.
For the APC to have even a look-in
in the coming presidential elections against an entrenched PDP, it needs a
fresh slate from the political has-beens of Atiku, Buhari and Kwankwaso that it
is still currently touting as its presidential hopefuls today. To be truly
progressive, the APC must not just talk progressivism, it must walk
progressivism. A Northern Christian presidential candidate will definitely give
political backbone to APC’s progressive pretensions; neutralising the damage
done by its earlier suicidal plans for a Muslim/Muslim presidential ticket.
Originally captioned ‘A Northern Christian
Presidential Candidate for the APC’ By Femi Aribisala
Governor Fashola And Not Ex Governor Tinubu Is The Poster Boy For APC To Win Presidential Election By Femi Aribisala
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
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