APC and emerging one-party rule

All Progressives Congress (APC)

Nigeria had a general election and candidates contested under the platform of different political parties, that is to say, Nigeria practises multi-party system and in a multi-party democracy like such she practises a government. Under this setting regimentation and dictatorship is guarded against.
Nigeria is a country made up of over 80 percent politically illiterate voters and, therefore, ignorant of the dangers inherent in a one-party rule that is gradually rearing its head on the ascending order of magnitude resulting from the activities of egocentric loners with an over-inflated sense of self-worth. As you can see, the present Nigerian regime in Abuja has tacitly launched a covert operation against the main opposition and Nigeria’s ruling party partisans are seen in wild jubilation without knowing what this would amount to in the end.

It is natural for political parties to seek power. As one of the ruling party supporters, I root for my party to win as many elections as possible. But I hope I am objective enough to recognise the incontrovertible fact that Nigeria would be ill-served by the concentration of political power in one party’s hands, regardless of which holds it.

Nigeria’s founding fathers doubtless awoke themselves to this danger and took steps to avert it by opting for a divided government via multi-party democracy immediately after independence. The major political parties had emerged in the late 1940s and early 1950s as regional parties with aim was control power in the regions. The Northern people’s Congress (NPC), Action Group and NCNC became the dominant parties in the North, West, East and Midwest respectively. Hence, we saw a government that by men over men that enabled it to control the governed, and in the next place obliged it to control itself.

Nigeria’s founding fathers were great and bright intellects who sought to limit the danger of one-party factionalism by establishing and fashioning out a political system with numerous checks and balances among parties and among the Legislature, Executive and the Judiciary. Nevertheless, we discover that even with obstacles in place, political leaders frequently run amok when power is concentrated in the hands of one party.

Today Africa’s biggest democracy is repleted with examples. The complete All Progressives’ Congress federal dominance, which is also being increasingly replicated in the states, is not healthy for our democracy all things considered. For a government that is supposedly involved in a fratricidal anti-graft war, a democratic one-party rule cannot account for the vast changes in our country, and once more, will bring about or lead to massive cronyism and corruption.

Throughout history, we have at various times experienced or heard about the consequences of unchecked, one-party dominance. In the USA, from 2001-2007, Republicans controlled both Houses of Congress and the White House. At the height of its power, following the 2004 elections, Republicans had a 55-seat Senate majority and a 232-seat House majority. Some party leaders got carried away and pursued policies that grew their own power at the expense of American taxpayers. Their unlimited power led to runaway spending, an explosion in obscenely wasteful and parochial earmarks, a lack of transparency, and all in all corruption. We see a similar scenario unfolding in Nigeria.

The beauty of every democracy is that it should be self-correcting otherwise the problem that corrections would mete out by an understandably outraged electorate could push the pendulum too far in the opposite direction. Nigerians will not be cowed into silence when things spirally go wrong in the hands of tin gods who are bent on subjecting everyone to their diabolic whims and caprices through seeming emergence of one-party rule in Nigeria. Last Saturday, the Rivers State Election Tribunal that sat in Abuja alleging electoral irregularities sacked Wike Nyesom. Wike is gone and gone for good and Peterside of the All Progressives Congress will be riding to power by the instrumentality of federal might.

Over the past five months, the All Progressives monopoly has expanded the federal government by historic proportions. After campaigning on a promise to end the PDP tenure, the present regime in Abuja instead of settling down to business has only embarked on policies that reward rampant irresponsible behaviour and hate campaign which is unarguably heating up the polity. It must be borne in mind that unchecked power pushes parties to excess regardless of which party is in power. It is an inherent part of both human nature and the nature of government.

The danger for our country is that with complete one-party dominance, much damage will be done before the next electoral self-correction. We call for and prefer a balance in Abuja and the states. Nigerians must understand this language even if it has to be spoken in Greek that too much concentration of power via one-party rule is a serious danger to the people.


source-->Dailytimes.com.ng