COALITION FOR NIGERIA MOVEMENT: LONG & TOUGH ROAD TO TRAVEL
The emergence of a third force which former President,
Olusegun Obasanjo heralded in his recent famous letter to PMB is ordinarily a
good development for Nigeria's polity. For now, OBJ recommends that it remains a movement, a
coalition of Nigerians who dislike both APC and PDP or who do not trust that
any can save Nigeria from its present dysfunction and descent to anarchy.Or
those that do not see any good candidate emerge from these parties in 2019. Or
could it be a movement of people who want political power but can not find any
space in APC or PDP? Or is it just a movement to ensure PMB does not try 2019
and that if he insists, then the coalition will ensure he does not succeed? For
me the idea is good but for it to succeed the motives must be altruistic, not
parochial, not selfish.
In most nations of
the world with two strong parties, there is always a third significant party
where those who lose out in the two parties find shelter. It is also a place where
those who do not agree with the philosophies of the two leading parties find accommodation. At times, it is a mid-way home for those whose minds are not made
up on which of the two leading parties or their candidates to support. In the
USA, the two dominant parties are the Democratic and Republican Parties. But we
have the Independent Party or Libertarian Party which act as the third force.
Similarly in the UK we have the Conservative and the Labour Party as the two
dominant parties while the Independence Party serves as the third force. In
Germany, the Christian Democratic Party (CDU) and the Social Democratic Party (SDP) dominate the political space while the Alliance for Germany (AfD) serves as
the third force.These third force parties hardly win the Presidency or major
elections. Their major place is always to sway support from one of the major
parties to another. In some climes like Germany and the UK this third force can
align with one of the two major parties to form the government especially if the
third force party has won significant seats in the legislature.
But the Nigerian
third force which I believe is a most welcome development has many challenges
and contradictions which may make its mission very difficult if not impossible.
The first is: what is the third force or the Coalition for Nigeria? Is it a
movement as is being canvassed by OBJ or is it a political party in formation?
OBJ who just registered as a member in Ogun State last week following the
national launch in Abuja earlier in the week insists it must remain a movement
and must not become a political party, otherwise he would resign. For me that
is the first major challenge that could render the force ineffective in
achieving its stated goal of redeeming Nigeria from APC and PDP. This movement
hopefully will be organized as an NGO with Board of Trustees or will it be just
a free flowing coalition of members who
share the ideals of the movement without rigid structures? How will this kind of
organization garner the force to change the status quo? I think If I am asked,
the best option is to form a political party to truly compete for power. As is
often said, Power is never given, it is taken, not by wishes, dreams, flowery
speeches or grandstanding. A mass movement can only get power through mass
revolution as happened in the Arab Spring.If the mission of this third force is
not to lead a mass revolution against the status quo in Nigeria, then it had
better become a political party to contest for political power.
Secondly, who will
fund the movement and or the party when it eventually becomes one as some of
the proponents have indicated, in contradiction to OBJ's design? We who live in
this country know what it takes to win a local government Chairman's seat, not
to talk of the presidency and what is more to displace an incumbent President
with cult following from the North. The Movement or party will of necessity
need tonnes of cash to organize and to
campaign and win an election. The time left between now and the elections next
February seems too short to raise that kind of money. From the look of the
front line leaders of this movement, none seems to present with deep pocket.
With OBJ's proverbial stinginess, it is inconceivable that he will release that
kind of money assuming he has it.
The third challenge
is,what is the character and political weight of the leaders of the new
movement? Looking at the faces and voices at the launch last week in Abuja, one
could identify two known politicians- Col Olagunsoye Oyinlola and Mr Donald Duke. Oyinlola was a military
administrator in Lagos, was civilian Governor of Osun State, was a staunch
member of PDP, in fact secretary of the party at some time, then changed, joined
the NEW PDP that fused with other parties to form APC, which in essence was an
alliance. Now, he is seeking a new alliance. Does he present the new face that
will attract strong following and evoke confidence in something new and
revolutionary that many Nigerians yearn for? Can people trust him to stay long
with this alliance before he seeks another? Donald Duke,former governor of
Cross River State, is a fine politician who indeed should represent the new
face of Nigeria's politics. But we all know that he has harboured presidential
ambition and may be,this is the opportunity to give vent or new impetus to this
ambition. Without this movement becoming a party, it will be very difficult for
him to realize this ambition. He knows more than me that you need solid
political structures across the Nation and heavy financial chest to win the
Presidency in the best of times. Now, these are not the best of times, so the
odds are heavier. I saw Olisa Agbakoba in the crowd and I have heard his voice,
but he is essentially a professional, great civil liberty advocate but a
new-entrant to Naija politics which is a distinct brand. Though I did not see
them in the Abuja event as shown on TV, I have heard other names like my
brother Pat Utomi and my sister Oby Ezekwesili as belonging to this movement.
These are great Nigerians with large following on twitter and Facebook. They
indeed represent the new face that Nigeria badly needs. But do they have the
political weight in the Naija perspective? Do they have the financial
resources? Tough questions. We all know that many of the elites who speak the language
that this genre speaks do not vote. Many of the real voters in Nigeria are
neither in Instagram or LinkedIn. They dwell in the cash and carry political
market. Ask Professor Chukwuma Soludo, he has been to this market sometime in
the past and was astounded by its dynamics. Can they change and listen to rhyme
and logic? Yes they can. But one year is too short to achieve the conversion.
The fourth challenge
is the anti-third force virus that will emerge or may have already emerged. We
are not aware that Olagunsoye Oyinlola has resigned from APC, nor Donald Duke
from PDP. That they appeared on the podium on the day of the launch of the
movement immediately marks them down as enemies of their parties. If they held
offices in their respective parties, it means they have already forfeited the
positions. If they were looking forward to any it means such expectations are
over and if they were doing contracts, it will be assumed that such contracts
have been terminated as such would no longer be funded. No one funds his
political adversary, no not in Nigeria! Perhaps that is why we did not see more
faces of many the politicians in office at the launch because of the fear of
reprisal. I guess that many are secret members bidding their time to see how
the movement garners steam or watch it transform into a formidable and
election-winning party before they come out fully to identify.
My point is that this
movement is good for Nigeria. We certainly do need a third force or third
strong party so that we are not often left with choosing between the devil and
the deep blue sea. Currently the third biggest Party in Nigeria - APGA is
essentially a regional Party. If it could become a National Party it may have
played the role of being the third force. Therefore, now a critical need
exists, more so in creating opportunities for the younger and fresher faces.
But it has a lot of challenges to face and many hurdles to cross before it can
achieve its mission. Its mission must be altruistic not narrow political
interest framed as National interest. It must adopt a structure that will
enable it endure and deliver on its vision. It must be prepared to go the long
haul as 2019 is just by the corner.
Mazi Sam I. Ohuabunwa
OFR
sam@
starteamconsult.com
Comments
Post a Comment