Where’s the ‘third force’?
It was former President
Olusegun Obasanjo that, in recent history, touted the doctrine of a third force
in Nigerian politics.
In a fiery open letter
to President Muhammadu Buhari last January, he shredded the incumbent’s performance
credentials and pitched in against his seeking another term of office. Obasanjo,
however, sensed he was up against a brick wall with his gratuitous counsel as
far as it pertains to the president and the ruling All Progressives Congress
(APC); but he also foreclosed a return to the old path of nationhood when the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was in the saddle. And so, he threw up the idea
of a third force as his proposed alternative.
The former head of state
said the PDP now in opposition had not shown better behavioural traits than
when it was in power. “As the leader of that party for eight years as president
of Nigeria, I can categorically say there is nothing to write home about in
their new team. We have only one choice left to take us out of Egypt to the Promised
Land, and that is the coalition of the concerned and the willing – ready for
positive and drastic change, progress and involvement,” he wrote.
Obasanjo didn’t seem to
think through how the third force would emerge as a veritable force,
independent of the first and second forces he sought to consign to the history
bin. Besides, his conceptualisation of the new force was notoriously foggy. But
he did make some attempt at sketching its rudimentary profile, saying the force
should be a movement that need not be a political party – one to which all well-meaning
Nigerians can belong. “That movement must be a coalition for democracy, good
governance, social and economic well-being and progress, a coalition to salvage
and redeem our country,” he explained.
Although he granted that
nothing should in the course of time stop such a movement from satisfying
prescribed conditions for fielding candidates for elections, the ex-president
said he would, for his part, relinquish its membership at that point so that he
could personally remain non-partisan.
In other words, Obasanjo
presented his idea of a third force as a civic action and public-centred
movement, even if only in the short to medium term by his envisioning. His
motives have never been widely trusted to be altruistic, and he seems already
fixated with a sole agenda to orchestrate Buhari out of power. But we must
isolate the third force idea, which on face value touts a promise to widen the
scope of citizens role-playing in the political space. Few other groupings have
touted a similar promise, like the National Intervention Movement led by
eminent rights lawyer Olisa Agbakoba and the Red Card Movement inspired by
respected civil activist Oby Ezekwesili. None has, however, galvanised the
political renown of Obasanjo’s proposition.
Apparently owing to the
ex-president’s dubious agenda, the third force idea was still-birthed on
arrival and Obasanjo is himself back in the partisan fray. But that is to be
expected, because from the moment he broached the idea, noting has stayed true
to its avowed fundamentals. On the heels of Obasanjo outing with the proposal,
for instance, his political ally and former Osun State Governor, Olagunsoye
Oyinlola, stepped up to arrowhead a membership drive. But like Oyinlola,
notable responders were mainly political actors recycled from this country’s
inglorious past.
‘Political power ideally
reposes in the people, it is only delegated and could well be withdrawn from
partisans during elections’
In apparent desperation
to get into electoral action, the purported movement was hastily collapsed last
May into a political party, namely the African Democratic Congress (ADC). And
the ADC itself has since then pooled with a number of other political groupings
to integrate their 2019 aspirations with that of the PDP through a recent
memorandum of understanding. Consequently, nearly all the presidential
aspirants on PDP platform have staged random pilgrimages to Obasanjo at his
Abeokuta, Ogun State, base to seek his blessings. On the other hand, some other
parties have signed up to a working alliance with the APC in pursuit of
Buhari’s re-election bid in 2019. And so, the political space remains dominated
by two-force contestation.
It isn’t really that our
country is under-served in terms of existing political parties. Nigeria
presently has a motley crowd of 91 parties – with 23 new parties registered
only last week by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to top
up the 68 parties that previously existed on the commission’s roll. Only that
most of those parties are no more than what they evidently are: nominal
existences on INEC’s burgeoning records.
Worse is that with no
restrictive criteria in our electoral laws for parties to be placed on the
ballot, the huge number of registered parties can’t but compound INEC’s
logistics for conducting elections. Consider, for instance, the bogus size of
ballot paper that would be required to reflect every political party fielding
candidates in an election. Besides,
nominal parties could well play the spoiler in electoral outcomes by nitpicking
on guidelines for the conduct of elections and laying ambush against
inadvertent omissions – either by INEC or by serious contender-parties in a
particular poll. Meanwhile, INEC must keep registering new parties as our
electoral law provides once minimum conditions are met.
Not that the huge number
of parties is in itself the challenge. India perhaps has the largest number of
political parties – totalling 2,075 as at April 2018, and with more yet getting
registered. But the Indian system clearly defines territorial relevance for its
parties, and so the country has two parties namely Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
and the Indian National Congress (INC), simply called Congress, dominating its
national politics.
Israel, with a voter
population of just about 6million persons, as well has numerous political
parties. The country, however, operates the proportional representation system
that accommodates many of those parties in its 120-seat Knesset (parliament)
and compels every emerging prime minister and his/her party to negotiate
coalitions with other parties.
Nigeria, on the other
hand, operates the first-pass-the-post, winner-takes-all model that gives the
dominant political parties a permanent edge over all others; hence the
unyielding two-force structure. The United States from which we adopted the
model also has dozens of political parties, but few get to qualify for ballot
placement, for which there are stipulated preconditions that vary from state to
state. Besides, many of those parties have sundry objectives that are not
limited to seeking electoral offices – like climate change, environmental
issues, and as well controversial rules of social conduct like same sex rights
and marijuana use. Only the Republican and Democratic parties cross-cut all 50
states and Washington DC in seeking offices, hence the bi-party nature of that
country’s electoral system. The catch is, Nigeria has no restrictions for
ballot access, and so weak parties wheel and deal in and out of electoral
contestations without offering the electorate any real alternative.
But we do need a third
force – to be sure, not according to Obasanjo’s image of it – to moderate the
mutually aggressive contestation for power by the existing two-force blocs and
ensure necessary safeguards for ordinary citizens. In our circumstance, a vocal
civil society and enlightened voter population seem best placed to constitute
that force.
Among other things, we
need that third force to instill the code that politicians can’t prostitute
with membership of political parties out of sheer self-interest, without
bearing the costs in the form of rejection at future elections. We need the
force to let it be known that the Police can’t lock up harmless journalists for
no other reason than ethically practising their trade, like they did with Premium Times’ Samuel Ogundipe last week,
and as well Jones Abiri who was just released after two years of detention
without arraignment. And the government in power just remains indifferent or
outrightly insular about it all. We need
the third force to make the point that political power ideally reposes in the
people, it is only delegated and could well be withdrawn from partisans during
elections.
To be a part of that
force, all you need is get your voter card ready for the impending 2019
elections.
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