While the various political elements that formed the
victorious coalition, the All Progressives Congress, APC, gathered against the
former ruling Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, pundits had believed it was only a
matter of time before the gang-up would come unstuck. However, the various
constituents surprised everyone, sank their differences and worked together to
ensure the ouster of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, with Muhammadu Buhari as
the arrowhead of the grand coalition of the old North and the ruling political
mainstream of South West.
They were not expected to push through the threshold of
beating a ruling behemoth like the PDP, but luck was on their side because
Jonathan proved incapable of holding his party and government together to
achieve a successful re-election. But now that the APC is sitting pretty in the
saddle, it is obvious that the litmus test for it as a ruling party is still in
play. Two things will further challenge its viability as a ruling coalition
that can stand the test of time. Number one is power sharing among the various
political interest groups. Number two is the hot-button games towards 2019.
Let us pause and ruminate over a few issues. People always
say it is ideal to allow members of the National Assembly to choose their own
leaders rather than allow “external influences” to “impose” leaders on the
Distinguished Senators and Honourable Members. Before 2011 when the Seventh
National Assembly was empanelled to work alongside the Jonathan presidency, the
“external influence” that was obvious to all was the Presidency.
During the eight years of Olusegun Obasanjo in the
Presidency, he brazenly sought to dictate who emerged as the President of the
Senate and Speaker of the House of Representatives. He used every
“stick-and-carrot” trick in the book to get his preferred candidates in, and
when they outlived their usefulness, get them bundled out. In one of the
scandalous sessions, the Ghana-Must-Go bagfuls of raw cash he allegedly sent to
bribe members of the House of Representatives to remove Hon Umar Ghali Na’Abba
were displayed on the floor of the Green Chamber.
But in 2011, Jonathan tried to do what the APC just
attempted and met a disastrous defeat. He wanted to put Hon Mulikat Akande in
office as the Speaker of the House to complete the zoning formula of his Party
and give every geopolitical zone a share of the spoils of PDP’s victory at the
polls. But a new “external influence” popped up from an unusual quarter and
made total nonsense of the PDP zoning formula.
Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu was in ascendancy as a powerful
opposition leader. He went into the throng of PDP members-elect and sponsored
Hon Aminu Waziri Tambuwal (who brought in Hon Emeka Ihedioha as his Deputy) to
beat Akande to implant a rebel leadership in the House of Reps. Tambuwal
eventually led the revolt against the PDP from inside the House. It was a
masterstroke that helped Tinubu to midwife a successful takeover of power at
the centre later on.
Surprisingly, on June 9, 2015, Tinubu and the APC fell into
the same trap that he had set for Jonathan and the PDP in 2011. The number of
“external influences” increased. While the President, Muhammadu Buhari,
appeared to have learnt from the humiliation of Jonathan in 2011 and announced
early enough that he would not interfere in the choice of the Senate and House
leadership, Tinubu staged a Tony Anenih-like internal primary election that
worked towards a predetermined result in an attempt to impose his chosen
candidates: Ahmed Lawan for the Senate President and Femi Gbajabiamila for
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
If he had been allowed to successfully close that deal, he
would have entrenched himself in the National Assembly. By so doing, he would
have further edged out other stakeholders in the ruling coalition, including
elements of the All Nigerian Peoples Party, ANPP, Rochas Okorocha’s interests
and most importantly, the “new” PDP faction. In fact, the interests of Buhari’s
old Congress for Progressive Change, CPC, would have been subsumed under an
accreting Tinubu’s Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN, faction.
This was what prompted the vehemence with which the nPDP
faction fought back and defeated Tinubu. We now saw former Vice President Atiku
Abubakar, Governor Tambuwal of Sokoto State, Governor Okorocha of Imo State and
others closing ranks with Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso, Aliyu Wamakko and the rest
of them. They went as far as colluding with the opposition PDP, to which they
conceded the Deputy Senate President in efforts to put in their colleagues,
former Governor Bukola Saraki, as the new Senate President, and Hon Yakubu
Dogara as the Speaker, House of Reps.
The stage is set for a season of heated struggle for the
control of the APC. It is no longer going to be an all-Tinubu affair. He alone
is no longer going to be “the Party”. If he and his lackeys in charge of the
machinery of the Party push to make good their threat of sanctioning the
“saboteurs” who committed the “treachery” against “the Party”, they will have a
humongous fight in their hands. Tinubu will be ranged against the PDP faction
composed of tested Northern political hotheads who see him as nothing but a
mere upstart local champion (refer to how Saraki referred to Vice President
Yemi Osinbajo as a “mere commissioner”).
Unless the fallouts of the National Assembly polls are
wisely managed and the interests of all the coalition partners subsequently
factored into all the power sharing activities of the party, we may eventually
witness any of several interesting scenarios.
One may be that Tinubu, with the support of Buhari, could
eventually triumph over the nPDP and other rebels and push them to either
return to PDP for 2019, or form another, third political party to challenge for
power. The second could be that Tinubu may be defeated by a realigned coalition
of the North with South East and South-South, along with their PDP stalwarts
from the South West. In that case, Tinubu might be forced to go solo again with
his ACN faction.
The truth is that the power play towards 2019 is in full
swing. The virility of the APC coalition, as currently constituted, will be
sorely tested in a series of face-offs and standoffs for control. The North is
going to be very assertive. They are now in power, with 17 compared to Tinubu’s
five states. In fact, Tinubu has very little control over Edo State APC and its
local leader, Governor Adams Oshiomhole. When it comes to the crunch Oshiomhole
can pick and choose where he wants to pitch his interest, bearing in mind that
so far, Tinubu’s power sharing efforts has not factored him in.
Tinubu’s staying power in the Party will hang, in the main,
on his continued good relationship with President Buhari. And to remain in the
President’s good books and be welcome among the Northern hawks around him,
Tinubu will have to increasingly and openly concede the fact that, though the
APC has “many leaders” as Alhaji Lai Mohammed naively put it, PMB is the
supreme leader of the Party.
It is from PMB’s continued gracious approval that Tinubu
will sustain his position as the National Leader of the APC. (Vanguard)
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