Just take the phrase: “impending” in the title
above with a pinch of salt. I use the word because in politics as in
life, things happen - as seemingly absolute situations become redeemable and what originally
appears impossible could be the catalyst for fresh opportunities.
Otherwise, the truth is that the ruling Nigerian political party, the All
Progressives Congress is already imploding, it has in fact imploded; the party
is in the throes of a debilitating illness. The implosion began almost as soon
as the party assumed power in 2015. The APC emerged as a special purpose
vehicle – composed almost entirely from second hand, used groups from the CPC,
the ACN, APGA, ANPP, and a break away faction of the PDP, known as new PDP (nPDP) – even
if there was nothing new about it, with the sole objective of taking power from
the then ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and the then incumbent
President Goodluck Jonathan.
Pro-APC persons described the
APC as a child of necessity. They were convinced that 16 years of being in
power had made the PDP complacent, arrogant and that its members had lost
focus. They also argued that the Jonathan government needed to be
changed by all means possible. Political coalitions often work when for one
reason or the other, the ruling party loses either credibility or legitimacy,
and the coalition gains the support of the people but the extent of the
coalition’s success depends on its level of preparedness for office, and the quality
of consensus among the partners. The APC coalition is not the first in the
history of Nigerian politics, but it is perhaps the most impactful- even if
driven by hate speech, populist propaganda and mass hysteria and hypnotism. It
was a question of politics meeting with the public mood, and an unstoppable
moment anchored on the symbolism of a strong man coming to “rescue” Nigeria.
The electorate that bought into this narrative and turned it into votes is today
full of regrets.
The APC began to unravel from
day one, particularly at the centre. It took the government that emerged about
six months to put a cabinet together, and almost two years to make
some other critical appointments. Members of the coalition struggled
for space, influence and power among themselves, and almost immediately, there
were issues over the choice of the leaders of the National Assembly. The drama
of the choice of the Senate president and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives left many power brokers out in the cold. If there was any
power sharing formula among the partners, somehow this was
ignored by the CPC arm of the coalition led by the President, all made worse by
the domination of the levers of government by CPC and Buhari loyalists.
Non-Fulani members of the APC soon began to sound as if they had been attacked
by a band of imported herdsmen. Party members including Governors and Senators,
and party officials expressed frustration openly.
In less than three years, some
of the bitterest criticisms of the party have come not from the opposition but
from within the party itself: Timi Frank perpetually complaining about party
processes, Shehu Sani and other Senators from Kaduna State at loggerheads with
their State Governor, personality conflicts in virtually every state, most
notably in Adamawa, Imo, Kano, Rivers and Lagos state, Governor Ortom of Benue
openly accusing the Federal Government of negligence, Governor El-Rufai,
Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and Senator Shehu Sani at various times sounding
notes of warning, Senator Dino Melaye assuming the role of an in-house critic,
and members of the ACN and the nPDP alleging that they have been used and
dumped. The APC wing of the National Assembly is divided among its ranks,
and has posed more threat to the Executive arm of government than the
opposition. The APC is also the biggest challenge to its own promise. In 2015,
the party promised to tackle three main issues: security, the economy and
corruption. It has since found itself in the uncomfortable situation of
disowning some other promises it made. It even took more than two years to
launch an economic blueprint. The party over-promised and under-delivered.
It is possible to argue that
differences and contestations are part of the democratic process and that this
is the only way political parties can grow. Except that in this case, the
conflicts are not ideas-based, even members of the APC themselves have no idea
what the party really stands for, but they all seem so sure of their personal
ambitions, hence the obvious lack of order and coherence. Knowing this to be
so, President Muhammadu Buhari, who is also the leader of the party, had set in
motion a reconciliation process, and appointed Asiwaju Bola Tinubu to lead
it. This has not worked as Tinubu soon found himself in the heat of
acrimony with the party Chairman, Chief John Oyegun and some of his own former
protégés.
The extent of this implosion
became more evident during the party’s recent state congresses. Parallel
congresses were held in more than 10 states, there were reports of boycotts,
violence and general confusion. Given the tone and nature of the conflict, it
seems obvious that the APC is a victim of its own lack of three things -
internal democracy, originality and sincerity of purpose.
It is a familiar scenario. The
APC leadership should learn from the example of the PDP and how that party lost
the 2015 general election. The first major crisis faced by the PDP was the
failure to manage the exit of the five Governors in 2013, and the subsequent
mischief over the 2015campaign process. Powerful forces within the
party for their own selfish reasons causeddisaffection among members particularly at the
grassroots level. Internal democracy was frustrated at all levels by those
who regarded themselves as powerful Abuja forces, the same drama that is now
being played out in the APC. The PDP went into the 2015 elections, as a divided
party, with fifth columnists among its ranks. The APC now faces the same
challenge. The nPDP wing of the APC has already served what looks like a quit
notice. There are cases in court. The usual attitude is for those who emerged
triumphant in the state congresses to insist that whoever wants to leave the
party should do so. It was this same attitude that messed up the PDP.
Failure has taught the PDP a bitter lesson:
the party is only now just in the process of reinventing itself. It is ironic
for example that the same PDP in the face of likely crisis in Ekiti state
recently ended up having a peaceful party primary, with the defeated
congratulating the winner and promising to work for the good of the party. In
Kaduna state, the PDP also put up an impressive performance in the recent local
government elections. It is important however that the PDP does not begin to
see the crisis within the APC as its own gain. It still has a lot to do to
convince the electorate that it can be taken serious again. In 2014, PDP
strategists worked on the permutation that the APC, being a community of
strange bedfellows would soon fall apart to the advantage of the PDP. It
was a bad strategy which did not work then and which is also not likely to work
in 2019. As things stand, the APC appears as desperate for power today as it
was in 2014, and those who have sworn that the Buhari government cannot be
replaced would do as much as they did last Saturday, to impose their will on
the Nigerian people. Politics remains warfare in Nigeria because it is
the surest ticket to power, cheap money and easy life. For the Nigerian politician,
winning is therefore everything.
If anyone thought 2015 was a
major turning point in Nigerian politics, the 2019 general elections may even
prove to be more eventful, and while the PDP may not fully resurrect, the APC
may suffer worse fate, paving the way for Nigeria’s new beginning…
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