By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D. Twitter: @farooqkperogi In politics, pandering refers to the insincere, opportunistic appeasement of a gr...
By Farooq A. Kperogi,
Ph.D.
Twitter: @farooqkperogi
In politics, pandering refers to the insincere,
opportunistic appeasement of a group of people, usually a large electoral bloc,
for the sole purpose of winning their votes. President Muhammadu Buhari’s
declaration of June 12 as Nigeria’s new “Democracy Day” and the conferral of posthumous
awards to the late MKO Abiola and the late Gani Fawehinmi, commendable as they
are, are classic cases of pandering. The pandering is carefully calculated to
reverse the noticeable diminution of Buhari’s political capital among Yoruba
voters ahead of the 2019 presidential election.
From 2003, when Buhari
started running for president, to 2011, he had never won Yoruba, Igbo, Northern
Christian, and Southern ethnic minority votes; Northern Muslim votes, which he
has always won, were never enough to make him president. In 2015, he
re-invented himself as a cosmopolitan nationalist and won Yoruba and Northern
Christian, or Middle Belt, votes in addition to the votes from his traditional
base.
Apart from his lusterless and mediocre performance as
president, one of the immediate triggers for the dramatic waning of Buhari’s
appeal among Yoruba voters was his politically inexpedient extolment of the
late General Sani Abacha, the persecutor of the cultural and political icons of
the Yoruba people—MKO Abiola, Gani Fawehinmi, Wole Soyinka, and so on. On May
22, 2018, Buhari told supporters who visited him at the Presidential Villa that
whatever people might think of Abacha, they had to concede that he would go
down in the records as someone who built roads, hospitals, and schools.
This high praise of Abacha provoked mass outrage in Yoruba
land, even among Buhari supporters, and threatened to erode the last vestige of
goodwill he had in the region. That was particularly politically precarious,
and here is why. Buhari has now irretrievably lost the Northern Christian vote.
If he loses the Yoruba vote, he would be down to his pre-2015 Northern Muslim
constituency. So he needed to do something radical to appease Yoruba voters.
His strategists advised him to go for the ultimate emotional
appeasement: Declare June 12 “Democracy Day,” which it already is in the
Southwest; honor MKO Abiola, Gani Fawehinmi, and other Yoruba icons; apologize
for the voiding of the June 12 election; and even go so far as to make the
outrageously inaccurate claim that “June 12, 1993 was far more symbolic of
democracy in the Nigerian context than… October 1,” the day of Nigeria’s
independence from British colonialism.
Buhari did this at no
personal political cost. His political base will always stand by him,
irrespective of what he does. Any other northern Muslim politician who does
what Buhari did would have alienated and lost his base. But Buhari’s supporters
interpret this move as a “necessary evil” to get the Southwest to reelect him.
The president’s tactical emotional and political tokenism
seems to have worked—at least so far. I have nothing against the Yoruba
elite—and the voters they influence—for being suckers for Buhari’s appeasement.
We are all suckers for something. And our emotions are a valid component of our
being. June 12 and MKO Abiola are obviously tender spots for many Yoruba
people—and that’s entirely reasonable.
However, while it’s legitimate to be a sucker for emotional
appeasement, it helps to be self-aware of the potential for costly naivety. I’m
glad that Professor Soyinka’s public pronouncements show evidence of this
self-awareness. On June 12, for instance, he told President Buhari to his face,
“You cannot honour Abiola in one breath and admire his tormentor in another
breath.”
Other Southwest political elites aren’t this clearheaded,
unfortunately. Femi Falana, for instance, in his giddy excitement over Buhari’s
pandering to the Yoruba, chose the path of self-centered intellectual
dishonesty to defend Buhari’s clearly unconstitutional declaration of June 12
as Democracy Day. “It is crystal clear that the president is not required by
law to seek and obtain the approval of the National Assembly before declaring a
public holiday in the country," Falana said on June 7.
A week later, Buhari’s Attorney General and Minister of
Justice, Abubakar Malami, undercut Falana’s duplicity and helped to underscore
the insincerity in the declaration of June 12 as Nigeria’s new Democracy Day. “As
it relates to public holidays, there is truly a Public Holiday Act,” Malami said. “The Act can be amended and the process of amendment has been put in
place. When the Act has been fully amended, the declaration of the President
will come into effect. It is a declaration of intention, a declaration of
desire and that will eventually be given effect with the amendment of the
existing law.”
In other words, contrary to what Falana said, President
Buhari has no constitutional powers to unilaterally declare June 12 as
Democracy Day; he needs to amend the Public Holiday Act before his declaration
can become legal. As always, for political reasons, the president shot before
he targeted. If this wasn’t pandering, the president should have first set the
process for the amendment of the Holiday Act in motion before announcing his
“declaration of intention” to make June 12 the new “Democracy Day.”
As it is now, it is entirely within the realm of possibility
that the legal and legislative processes required to amend the Holiday Act to
make June 12 Nigeria’s Democracy Day won’t be completed before the 2019
presidential election. It is also conceivable that if Buhari wins a second term
with votes from the Southwest, there would no longer be any talk of June 12 as
Democracy Day. The president would shift the burden to the National Assembly,
which won’t care for it. Only Yoruba states that already celebrate June 12 as a
democracy day would continue to do so.
Buhari’s June 12 pandering is eerily similar to his faux
sartorial and religious inclusivity in the run-up to the 2015 election. He donned
the symbolic garbs of various ethnic groups and even attended church services.
This was complemented with the deliberately false Internet story that he
countenanced the marriage of one of his daughters to an Igbo Christian— and suchlike
fabrications. Pastor Tunde Bakare even recalled, falsely it turned out, that
Buhari once exclaimed “Jesus!” during a moment of intense emotion.
So the pretense to cultural and religious broadmindedness coalesced
with intentionally false internet narratives to construct an image of a
radically transformed Buhari who was no longer beholden to narrow ethnic,
regional, and religious allegiances. It didn’t take long for this elaborate
fraud to unravel.
During his first visit to the US shortly after his election,
Buhari said he won’t dispense equal favors to people who gave him only 5
percent of their votes and those who gave him 97 percent of their votes.
Although, he immediately walked back on the statement, his administration has
shown no genuine commitment to uniting the country outside mouthing pious,
disingenuous bromides about the indivisibility of the country.
Buhari may well get a second term with the help of votes
from the Southwest. But one thing is as certain as tomorrow’s date: he will
spectacularly fall out with the Yoruba elite whose support he’s bending over
backwards to court now. He’d no longer have a need for them after 2019 and
might even remember that they betrayed him in 2011. These same people would then
turn against not just Buhari but the entire North. If we’re alive till then,
we’d remind them that they are complicit in their own fate. An Italian proverb
says, “When a man deceives me once, it is his fault; when twice, it is mine.”
I wonder if these politician ever bother to read your articles? You are like an oracle they can consult for free to help them better strategies in the political moves.
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