Where are the candidates?
One week after the
official kick-off of campaigning for the 2019 presidential election, there is
little action yet by most contenders known to have signified interest in the
race. For an activity that the law provides a 90-day window, could it be they
are yet warming up to hit the tracks?
The impending poll is
potentiated with a multiplicity of options, and of all presidential contests in
Nigeria’s political history, there’s been none with a field so crowded. But
whether the huge number holds out genuine and actionable alternatives for
voters remains to be seen.
Pending the publication
of a definitive list of candidates, the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC) has made known that a throng of political parties filed the
particulars of flagbearers running on their respective platform. Besides
President Muhammadu Buhari of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and
former Vice President Atiku Abubakar of major opposition Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP), there are contenders like Donald Duke of the Social Democratic
Party (SDP); Kingsley Moghalu, Young Progressive Party (YPP); Obiageli
Ezekwesili, Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN); Fela Durotoye, Alliance
for New Nigeria (ANN); Omoyele Sowore, African Action Congress (AAC); Tope
Fasua, Abundance Nigeria Renewal Party (ANRP); Eunice Atuejide, National
Interest Party (NIP); Adesina Fagbenro-Byron, Kowa Party (KP); Gbenga
Olawepo-Hashim, Alliance for People’s Trust (APT) and Chris Okotie, Fresh Democratic
Party (FDP).
Others include Chike
Ukaegbu, Advanced Allied Party (AAP); Hamza Al-Mustapha, People’s Party of
Nigeria (PPN); Alistair Soyode, Yes Electorates Solidarity (YES); Obadiah
Mailafia, African Democratic Congress (ADC); Ahmed Buhari, Sustainable National
Party (SNP); Usman Ibrahim Alhaji, National Rescue Movement (NRM); Eniola
Ojajuni, Alliance for Democracy (AD); Sunday Chukwu-Eguzolugo, Justice Must
Prevail Party (JMPP); Funmilayo Adesanya-Davies, Mass Action Joint Alliance
(MAJA) and Nicolas Felix, Peoples Coalition Party (PCP). Also listed are Habu
Aminchi, Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM); Yabagi Sani, Action Democratic
Party (ADP); Moses Shipi, All Blending Party (ABP); Peter Nwangwu, We the
People of Nigeria (WTPN); John Ogbor, All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA);
Edozie Madu, Independent Democrats (ID); Yahaya Ndu, African Renaissance Party
(ARP); Davidson Akhimien, Grassroots Development Party of Nigeria (GDPN); Ike
Keke, New Nigerian Peoples Party (NNPP); Hamisu Santuraki, Mega Party of
Nigeria (MPN); Habib Gajo, Young Democratic Party (YDP) and Williams Awosola,
Democratic People’s Congress (DPC).
Former Ondo State Governor
Olusegun Mimiko was thrown up as presidential candidate by Zenith Labour Party
(ZLP), but he has since set aside that mandate and scaled down his ambition to
seeking a senatorial seat. Unless there are other withdrawals before the
statutory deadline, all parties fielding candidates will have to be listed on
the ballot for the February 16th poll – with attendant implications
like cumbersome logistics for INEC, as in the bogus size of ballot paper that
will be necessitated, and a confusing cluster of party options voters will
confront even though there may be few genuine alternatives available.
So far, only a handful
among the candidates has come up with an agenda for power if entrusted with it.
Buhari of the APC and Atiku of the PDP swiftly hit out with blueprints of their
respective manifesto, and it is widely assumed that the contest is a two-way
race. But ACPN’s Ezekwesili and YPP’s Moghalu are mounting a stiff challenge
against the duopoly and have been detailing alternative policy propositions.
Other than these, little else has been heard in terms of clear-cut policy
proposals from the army of candidates.
‘Economy is at the heart of the current power narrative in this country,
and we must interrogate the financials underlying to-do lists of candidates’
Economy is at the heart
of the current power narrative in this country, and so we must interrogate the
financials underlying to-do lists of the candidates. ADP’s Yabagi Sani was last
week reported promising a minimum wage of N100,000 to workers if elected
president; but without a plausible financial framework, such promise simply
insults the intelligence of the electorate. Proposals by more prominent candidates
for the poll are evidently better reasoned; they, however, as well need
subjection to scrutiny if only to help with thinking through.
President Buhari, who is
seeking re-election on a ticket with Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, outlined
plans to upscale the administration’s employment generation drive, upgrade
infrastructure and power supply, deepen social welfare with institutional
structures like People’s Moni Bank and the Entrepreneur Bank, redouble its
security and anti-corruption efforts, and boost the education as well as health
sectors among other things. With the benefit of the last three and a half years,
the administration perhaps has some integrity advantage.
But with these policy
aspirations added to the pending carrot of an increase of the minimum wage to
N30,000, one thing the policy highlights did not seem to address is how the
financials add up. The Nigerian economy presently haemorrhages heavily from ‘under-recovery
cost’ on local fuel consumption, which many would rather call subsidy on
refined imports. This runs into tens of billions of naira yearly. Recent data
from the Pipelines and Product Marketing Company (PPMC) showed that the volume
of import indeed rose by 34 percent over the last year, implying higher
obligations in subsidy cost. With the notoriously bad politics of raising the
pumphead price of petrol, the administration is obviously cold on that option –
especially after its 49 percent hike in 2015 that has turned out not
eliminating the subsidy element in pricing template. But what then will it do
to plug the huge drainpipe and save up for its proposed programmes?
Proposals by PDP’s Atiku
Abubakar are more ambitious, and by that token raise a greater credibility
challenge. The candidate promises, for instance, to ramp up economic growth,
targeting a gross domestic product of $900billion by 2025 – which is about
double the current level – and to lift “at least 50 million people out of
extreme poverty” and as well create 3million jobs yearly. Among others, he also
proposes partial privatisation of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation
(NNPC) and selling off all four national refineries. Before the official
start-off of the campaign, he had promised to revert the pumphead price of
petrol to below N100. Atiku has not disclosed whom he will sell the refineries
to, and with alleged records of the privatisation programme of the former
Olusegun Obasanjo administration that he anchored as Vice President, he will
need to do much assuring of the public the proposed sell-off won’t indeed be
personal acquisition of public assets by indirection. Besides, he has not shown
how refinery sell-off and part-privatisation of NNPC will translate to lower
fuel price. Public experience with past deregulation of diesel and kerosene
prices, and the more recent privatisation of the country’s electricity assets
does not guarantee such outcome.
Both Ezekwesili and
Moghalu were bold in declaring they would throw out oil subsidy and submit the
sector to the free market, so to redirect funds involved to more socially
impactful programmes. ACPN’s Ezekwesili, at one of her press conferences,
reveried on what N1.3trillion allegedly being spent on subsidy yearly now could
do in helping her lift 80million Nigerians out of poverty. And for his part,
YPP’s Moghalu has tagged the N18,000 currently obtained as minimum wage “poverty
wage.” He proposes to fund a higher and sustainable wage level by eliminating
oil subsidy and boosting tax revenue, among other measures.
One thing both
candidates have not seemed to address is the inflationary ripples of high fuel
prices that would follow the elimination of subsidy, and how they would handle
the social upheaval that almost invariably attends such economic trend as was
witnessed in France only last week.
Of course, it is morning
yet on campaign day (apology to the late Chinua Achebe) and we may perhaps get
clarifications on some of these posers in due course.
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