Opinion
NASS Elections: A Litmus Test For APC
Any group of people must
often make decisions that will apply to all of them in common, as a group. A family must decide where to live, what sorts of rules to set for children, how to balance a budget and so on.
A country must decide where to locate parks, what allies to seek out in war, how to raise revenue by taxing its citizens, how to care for the helpless and many other things.
Each of these require the setting of common policy for the group, a single decision that affects all members of the group.
Not all human actions, of course, involve the making of a common policy for a group. This is where the All Progressives Congress (APC) has goofed. Nigeria is too large for a political party to decide on a common national policy. Those actions that contribute to the making of a common policy for a country constitute politics, and questions about those policies and the making of those policies are political questions.
This is why the earlier plan of the APC to discipline the duly elected Senate President, Bukola Saraki, the Speaker, House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara and its members for defying its directive on the election of the National Assembly leadership was in the wrong direction. Although the party has retraced its step, it is pertinent that member of APC should thread the path of rectitude.
The crisis members of the party generated over the emergence of Saraki and Dogara after their elections do not portray them as responsible politicians to talk about the behaviours of the lawmakers during the House elections. It should be known that when it comes to legislative matters, no party has any right to interfere. The distinctions always easily drawn because the making of common policies or laws for the whole country lies on the legislative arm comprising of the people’s representatives. The political parties have no formal role in the nations government, even though the government is entrusted to their elected or appointed members.
Decisions made by the lawmakers are to a degree binding on the country, including the political parties in as much as it involves a common policy for the country. Bukola Saraki and Yakubu Dogara and others won the positions with the voting and support of now opposition Peoples Democratic Party lawmakers, so the directive of APC on the elections is irrelevant. It will be absurd for APC to be monopolistic and to impose a leadership on the lawmakers instead of running an inclusive government since power consists of a wide variety of tools that help one person affect the actions of others. Politics involves the combination of people to get things done. It is no necessary to say that every office in the senate or House of Representatives must be headed by lawmakers of one particular party or the choice of the party leadership.
What should be uppermost in the minds of the party (APC) leders now is how best toleave the past and forge ahead, provide a single template that all will key into as well as defend the government they have put in place. War among themselves cannot solve any problem. Now that the issue of Saraki and Dogara’s elections has come and gone, it is expected that the masterminds who thought they would benefit politically from it, will support them to pilot a meaningful legislative cooperation.
There will be no gain displaying arrogance and disrespect for the dictates of the constitution by attempting to adjust the president’s promulgation order on the National Assembly and seeking to put their interest over and above the supreme law of the land. It was quite wrong for the president and his party to have fixed a meeting or him to address their legislators the same time he had directed the Assembly to be inaugurated in line with the constitution.
The respect for the independence and sanctity of the legislative arm must be upheld as a citadel of democracy in this country.
The APC having found itself in power after the 16 years of PDP rule should respect and protect the sanctity of the National Assembly and the country as a whole and not to undermine other democratic institutions and the people of the country. The country does not belong to any particular person or party, just as the president in his inaugural speech said that he does not belong to anybody but the everybody.
Saraki and Dogara should be seen as worthy partners in driving the legislative agenda of the country and should be given the desired support to transform Nigeria. Having the majority representatives in the lawmaking echelon should not intoxicate the leadership and members of the APC to ignore the intricacies of democracy and the motive behind Nigerians’ clamour for change in governance. We all as Nigerians must understand that the National Assembly belongs to the entire country and parties from both sides and have members in the Assembly.
The elections in the Senate and the House of Representatives of their leaderships into offices is a litmus test for the All Progressives Congress (APC) which claims to be an advocate of free and fair election. The leadership crisis rocking the National Assembly and the House of Representatives vis-à-vis the APC appears that 22 years after democracy’s return, Nigeria’s political leaders are yet to learn their lessons and are still motivated by personal ambition, power and greed.
The APC should not allow itself to suffer the consequences of the greed, lust for power and inordinate ambitions of their leaders. They should note that Nigerians have since moved ahead with the new leaders in the National Assembly and the country and stop wasting their energy on propaganda and blackmails to heat up the polity. All should accept the election of Saraki as Senate President and Dogara, Speaker, House of Representatives and other officers of the 8th Assembly for Nigeria to forge ahead. President Buhari has accepted to work with all of the elected officers so APC leaders should also follow suit.
Now that the 2015 general elections are over, every Nigerian needs to be more united in order to achieve the change we demanded. The APC is made up of people from other parties, including defector from the PDP so the issues that led to those cross-carpeting should not be easily forgotten. When a house is divided against itself, it cannot stand. What has just happened portends great danger to the good intentions of the change the APC has as its banner headline.
The party and its leaders should realise that they have committed an error of political miscalculation and misplacement and do everything possible to settle all issues amicably if they would be able to effect the change they had promised Nigerians.
Shedie Okpara
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