Opinion
Leadership And Electoral Reforms
If there is any nation where topical issues are discussed on twenty-four hourly basis it is Nigeria. What has dominated discussions in the country of recent is electoral reforms. The fight for the reform of the electoral system of the country has been on the front burner in every discussion that ever holds in the country. The question of electoral reform has even gone beyond the political arena in recent times.
Owing to its importance, the electoral reform has become a subject of deliberations in social gatherings and religious circles. Not too long ago, religious organisations gathered in some parts of the country to register their concerns about the electoral crisis rocking the nation as well as the need to evolve a credible process capable of salvaging it.
The prominence given to electoral reform in the country is an indication that the nation needs to do something fast to address its electoral process to enable the citizens of Nigeria make their own choice of leaders, they will as well possess the courage to call such leaders to order, particularly when they perform below expectation. But when a leader rigs himself to power he is not obliged to be accountable to the people in any way.
I think the problem we are experiencing in our electoral process goes beyond the absence of adequate legislation. Although, it is important to legislate on our electoral system, especially, when loopholes are observed, the issue goes beyond that. If politicians in the country see their mandate as divine, they will not only realise that they owe man a responsibility to perform, but they owe God a sense of accountability.
Yes, the issue of electoral system in Nigeria must be addressed. Just envisage a situation where everybody can vote and be voted for and where these votes count and not just that the people are selected. What happen? Most certainly accountability is going to be the watch word. What the electorate should do now is to stand their ground and demand from our leaders these things that will advance the course of the nation.
The fundamental cause of our problem as a nation is leadership. Any nation that gets this particular factor wrong will certainly experience difficulties. In other words, any country where things do not go well, check what is wrong. It boils down to leadership question. Everything is on the table of the leadership. So, if we have the right leadership in Nigeria, we will be able to achieve a lot. Nothing is wrong with the geographical expression called Nigeria. It is Nigeria. It is Nigerians particularly our leaders or the political class that have failed the nation.
That is why we want an electoral process that will guarantee free and fair election which will allow the people themselves to hold their leaders accountable as against singing their praises even when they are leading them astray and running their destiny aground. But this is impossible if we do not work on our electoral system.
We are in a time when many countries are getting out of the woods in pursuit of development. And this is done by getting the right leaders to lead. The ongoing electoral reform if done thoroughly and transparently should enable us raise leaders that will be about to drive the vision that we have as a nation.
Nothing great happens without good leadership and if anything must change in this country, it is the leaders that must change it. If anything fails it is the failure of the leadership. Leadership can only thrive on capacity and so we have to build the capacity to lead failure of which will limit us on what we stand to achieve and we shall all become frustrated in the long run.
For quite some time now, the issue in the country has been how to reform our electoral system. Many Nigerians have been talked into believing that the mere reform of our electoral process will do the magic of changing things in the country. This is true partially. What is important for us now is for Nigerians to be in a position to choose their leaders and ensure that such leaders are not distracted.
Leadership in Nigeria lacks focus. People lead themselves rather than the people. Those who are called to lead are not prepared for it. And those who happen to be prepared for it are forced to go into it for a different reason. That is why we can’t be there.
Arnold Alalibo
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