




PDP: The Day of Reckoning is Here
Dr. Aliyu U. Tilde …April 9, 2011
Parliamentary
elections are taking place in Nigeria today. In the polling booth just few
meters from me, it is expected that the ruling party, the PDP, will suffer a
terrible loss. Ahmadu, one of the busybodies in the village, just left here,
confirming my fears –- or say delight -– about the mammoth, saying, “PDP fa ta
tafi”, meaning PDP is gone. The story will be the same in many parts of the
North and the Southwest. What will permit it to linger on with some degree of
strength is the inability of other parties to field in candidates in many
constituencies, as someone correctly observed in an interview yesterday. It will
lose its dominance in the National Assembly if the elections are free and fair.
PDP will not
die right away. No. I do not think so, for two reasons. One, the opposition
parties are too weak to give it a lethal blow now. Two, it will reinvigorate
itself especially when the opposition fails to do better in office particularly
at the center. People would begin to compare the present with the past. And in
most comparisons between the two, human judgment has favored the past that it is
remote, forgiven and barely remembered against the present that is here,
dominant and biting. This has happened in Kano and Bauchi states where the ANPP
ousted the PDP, on both occasions with the help of Buhari, in 2003 and 2007 to
the extent that in Kano today, Kwankwaso, the former PDP governor, has bright
chances of winning the gubernatorial race. In Bauchi too, the masses are
anxiously waiting to humiliate their one time savior, Yuguda, and whom they have
dropped like a hot potato.
The opposition
must therefore know that victory is a burden. In Nigeria it should only
celebrate it briefly; thereafter, then it must rush to face the daunting task of
meeting the high expectations of Nigerians – who are as impatient as a baby
awaiting delivery. This is an area we will dwell on in later discussions.
If the PDP
loses substantial number of seats in the National Assembly but keeps the
Presidency by a small margin, it will serve its future well if it uses the next
four years to redeem its image among Nigerians. It must run a transparent
government with a clear commitment to break away from it's notorious culture of
corruption and incompetence. It must also give up its culture of impunity that
has generated so much hate against it in the hearts of citizens and prevented it
from meeting our expectations. In 1999, the expectation was that Obasanjo would
save the country from its path of collapse. We dubbed him the messiah, then.
However, in less than a year, his dictatorial tendencies and tolerance for
corruption made him lose every goal he aimed at and miss his every target he
set. His successors, who he handpicked, have not proved to be better
administrators either. Today, PDP at the centre has little to show in 12 years.
This failure was its greatest undoing. I, like many Nigerians, would not care
which party is in power, so long as it performs.
Then came the
anger the PDP generated from rigging elections. The party at all levels blocked
any attempt by Nigerians to peacefully register their protest at the polls in
2003 and 2007. Despite its dismal performance at the centre, the party continued
to wax stronger and stronger with every election until it was controlling at one
time 27 of the 36 states we have. Incumbency was at its worst. Now the people
have found their voice. In areas where they feel aggrieved, today presents them
the opportunity to unreservedly demand for their pound of flesh from the PDP.
Finally, the
opposition in the North has gained a lot from the zoning controversy in the PDP.
In fact, a lot of the votes the party would lose in this part of the country
will be as a result of Jonathan's intransigence. He has seen how he was coldly
received in every gathering he attended in the North, despite the billions he
doled out and the promises he made. It was a big miscalculation that he was
impervious to our advice when he assumed office as President: conduct a free and
fair election and leave, then return as a celebrated statesman in 2015 to be
received warmly across the country. Instead, he chose to use incumbency to win
the ticket of his party. If a northerner were given the PDP presidential ticket,
the opposition would not have garnered so much support. Many PDP supporters in
the region will now be voting for the opposition in the presidential elections.
Well, I will
not be surprised if the PDP tries its tricks once more in the following hours.
In the senatorial by-elections in Bauchi and Gombe states, we saw a rehearsal of
what is likely to happen today. The PDP will allow free and fair elections in
cities and semi-urban areas while it will rig them in rural areas where
traditional institutions are still strong and the population is less enlightened
about its right. Election officials and materials will be diverted to unknown
locations for ballot stuffing and people will be repressed if they attempt to
protest at collation centers. The government has not hidden its strong
disapproval of the vote protection strategy of the opposition. Money will be
used to induce election officials, of course. Many local governments have
already refused INEC trained agents, claiming that they have trained their own.
INEC at the bottom remains as rotten as ever. These were the flaws that
characterized those by-elections. Yet, INEC under Jega said they were free and
fair! I hope it will not be so this time. How successful will the PDP be in
executing its plan remains to be seen; but both the precept and the possibility
are here.
The outcome of
today's elections will give a lot of insight into the chances of the opposition
in subsequent elections. The strengths and strategies of both sides will become
clear. It is a legitimate source of worry that the opposition has not united
behind one candidate as we pleaded. Perhaps, the results of the elections today
will bring home the wisdom for such a unity.
Whatever
happens, we do not expect that the PDP will have a smooth ride this time. The
paper is spread and the ink that is chronicling its decline is already flowing
through the votes of the Nigerian masses.
(c) The Optimist Voice. All Rights Reserved.
