Editorial
Putting Away 2015 Elections Hangover
The 2015 elections in Nigeria have been lost
and won and persons adjudged to have won the elections have been sworn into office, but the negatives of the electioneering season have continued with the ferocity that can undermine the interest of the ordinary citizen and the development of democracy in Nigeria.
Apart from the fact that the avoidable brickbats between the leading political parties tend only to heat up the polity, some actions of the government of the day at the federal level and in some states tend to sustain the electoral hate and defame democracy as a preferred system of government.
It is shameful that statements attributed to the rival political parties portray them in very low light. The recklessness, the venom and incitement from the very persons we expect to form the government of the country now assume the source of shame and global ridicule.
The holy Bible makes it clear that there is time for everything under the sun. We are persuaded that in the affairs of a nation, even politics, there is time for campaigns and time for elections. Beyond that is the time for service to fatherland and not time for aimless and protracted bad mouthing and vindictiveness.
More than three months after the elections, nearly every issue in Nigeria is still being subjected to divisions in politics. While Nigerians must condemn and walk away from the demonic politics that was brought into the 2015 elections, it must be clear in the eyes of everyone that the elections are over.
After every election, those who take office are expected to form the government, use the opportunity to serve and build for themselves the status of statesmen and honour the oath of office and of allegiance to the nation. Anything short is a colossal failure and no propaganda and falsehood can change the imminent historical account of the regime.
Given the messianic promise of the ruling party, no one expected to see the near absence of a formal government three months after elections. No one expected to see anything to complain about, but the chicken has come home to roost. Worse still, actions of the elected officers have tended to put a knife to the things that hold Nigeria together.
If reports attributed to the leaders of the day are true, it is most unfortunate that a ruling party would fail to see Nigeria as one constituency and all Nigerians as its responsibility. To dare to state that only those perceived to have voted for them would be favoured shows the childishness that is being brought to governance.
Already, the pattern of appointments at the federal level has been seen to favour only a region of the country. Similarly, the harassment of prominent persons by security agencies have also been traced to be against persons in rival political parties. If true, this is most regrettable.
Nigerians used to know that politicians in the country are bad losers, but time is giving the impression that there can also be bad winners. All patriotic Nigerians must remove their partisan eye-glasses and see the abomination being glorified. This electioneering hang-over must be condemned and shunned.
The truth is that the ordinary Nigerian has become victim of sorts: the economy is shut-in, insecurity is pampered and regional rivalry promoted. Indeed, if the military had not been mature and professional enough, the story would have been different because the political class has provided enough grounds for intervention, God forbid.
Even as patriots and believers pray for the continued peace and unity of Nigeria, the political class has done nothing but try to fulfill the satanic prediction that Nigeria may disintegrate in the year 2015. They have embarked on petty and volatile campaigns for ephemeral acclaims, without concern for possible cataclysmic consequences.
The original assumption is that politicians get in the contest for office to provide good governance and respond to the true yearnings of the citizens. It is also true that in any contest there must be a winner and a loser and that either of the parties can lose. It follows that when this happens, the nation and her people are not destroyed.
The essence of politics is to contest for leadership and form a government and serve the people. For those who fail, the rule is to provide constructive opposition that also helps the government to serve better. Anything less is evil and must be done away with.
Editorial
Task Before New Defence Minister
Editorial
HYPREP And The Collapsed Water Tank
Editorial
Resurgence Of Illegal Structures In PH
-
Business4 days agoCBN Revises Cash Withdrawal Rules January 2026, Ends Special Authorisation
-
Business4 days ago
Shippers Council Vows Commitment To Security At Nigerian Ports
-
Business4 days agoFIRS Clarifies New Tax Laws, Debunks Levy Misconceptions
-
Business4 days agoNigeria Risks Talents Exodus In Oil And Gas Sector – PENGASSAN
-
Politics4 days agoTinubu Increases Ambassador-nominees to 65, Seeks Senate’s Confirmation
-
Sports4 days ago
Obagi Emerges OML 58 Football Cup Champions
-
Business4 days ago
NCDMB, Others Task Youths On Skills Acquisition, Peace
-
Sports3 days agoFOOTBALL FANS FIESTA IN PH IS TO PROMOTE PEACE, UNITY – Oputa
