|
NIGERIA’S POLITICAL PARTIES:
THE NEED FOR IDEOLOGY
Senator (Comrade) Uche Chukwumerije
A
Lecture Presented at the 26th
Memorial Anniversary of
Malam
Aminu Kano held at Sa’adu Zungur
Auditorium, Mambayya House on April 17,
2009
NIGERIA’S POLITICAL PARTIES:
THE NEED
FOR IDEOLOGY
Nigerian political class has a lot to
learn from the ideological profile of
NEPU, its legacy of commitment to
principles, and the personification of
the legacy by the lifestyle of its
leader, Mallam Aminu Kano, if our
political parties are to be the
conveyors and articulators of positive
political values. Without such values
and such vehicles to carry them forward,
our nation and her democracy will remain
at best mired in a circularity of
ceaseless motions without forward
movement.
The short piece is on the
crying need for distinct ideologies in
our political parties. It treats the
subject in three parts.
1.
A definition of ideology. The
NEPU / PRP example.
2.
Survey of the ideological
profiles of Nigeria’s political parties.
3.
The need for an ideology in our
political parties.
1. Ideology: The NEPU/PRP Example
What do we mean by
ideology?
I want to reverse the normal process of
answering a question. It is helpful to
preface the answer with a description of
NEPU/PRP legacy, situated in the
historical context in which Mallam Aminu
Kano and NEPU and its successor, PRP,
operated.
1.i
Birth of Political Parties
The decade from 1940’s to
early 1950’s marked the outbreak of a
serious threat to British rule in
Nigeria.
A century-old strategy of colonial rule,
based on a most economic and inexpensive
plan of divide and rule – indirect rule
in the North and direct rule in the
south - had seemed to be succeeding. The
aim of creating and fostering a secure
market for Britain economy and planting
a British political value system as the
overarching political norm over the
two-tiered colony was working. In the
north, the collusion of the interests of
London and the Emirate system had
reinforced an existing feudal system
that flourished on the denial of nearly
all rights to the masses. In the South,
the training and apprenticeship of
thoroughly anglicized natives, expected
to play the role of surrogates to
British system, had continued apace. But
by 1940, the house had begun to tumble.
The heightened political consciousness
of the new BBU (I mean British Brought
Up, not Bala Brought Up!) educated
Nigerians had begun to foster simmering
revolt over foreign occupation. The
main vehicles of the discontent were
National Council of Nigeria and
Cameroons (NCNC), Northern Peoples
Congress (NPC), Action Group (AG),
Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU)
and United Middle Belt Congress (UMBC).
From the womb of British system were
emerging the seeds of its own
destruction. In self-defence, the
colonial system responded to the
situation with a combination of all the
guiles and cruelty that it could master.
It was in this political and
social context that NEPU arrived at the
scene. The setting of the political
terrain and field of social struggle was
marked by one feature – the determined
effort of the British to control these
emerging vehicles of decolonization, the
political parties – to modulate their
agitation and moderate the objectives of
the political parties. Evidence abound
that the birth of two of the political
parties, NPC and AG, were either mid-wifed
or inspired by the British, as a counter
to the first –national/nationalist
party, NCNC. On political behaviour,
existing literature reveals that in
either their lifestyles or affinity of
class interests or pull of business
aspirations, the leaders of the three
major political parties – Dr. Nnamdi
Azikiwe of NCNC, Sir Ahmadu Bello of NPC
and Chief Obafemi Awolowo of AG were led
to moderate their political temperament
and confine their objectives to colonial
definition and terms of independence.
Lastly, it is public knowledge that,
inspite of the permanent malignant
salience of its presence in Nigeria
plural setting, promotion of ethnic and
regional sectionalism into an explosive
public issue in the critical incubation
period of the early twentieth century
was a deliberate strategy of the
colonial master to smother the fire
fanned by the new wave of national
consciousness and nationalist agitation.
In summary, the British system sought to
wean the political parties into a path
of genteel, peaceful, orderly transition
to ‘independence.’
1.ii.
A distinct ideology
All the parties developed this
neo-colonial character except NEPU.
(Among the major parties, the nearest
effort at ideology came from Action
Group but its latter-day slant of
Democratic Socialism, which was really a
tactical response to the reactionary
image of NPC/NCNC coalition, lacked the
coherence of a systematic espousal and
the sincerity of NEPU adherents because
AG’s leadership remained as comfortably
capitalist and bourgeois as its
counterparts in NPC and NCNC). All the
parties fought for the goal of
‘independence’ from colonial rule but
NEPU and Mallam Aminu Kano were further
preoccupied with the quality of rule as
measured by the equality of all citizens
and upliftment of the down-trodden, both
in the existing colonial system and
beyond. In pursuit of its initial battle
cry in Sawaba Declaration, that
“the emancipation must be the work of
the Talakawa themselves,” the
supporters of NEPU loudly questioned the
basis of the existing social arrangement
with its inequalities and fearlessly
mobilized the peasantry to reject every
form of oppression. Other parties reined
in or disowned any of their members and
affiliates that temperamentally sought
more radical approaches to
decolonization outside the genteel
pacifist format of colonial tutelage.
One party, NCNC, virtually disowned its
radical members, Zikist Movement,
for departure from this Establishment
approach. On the other hand, the whole
of NEPU, both leadership and
followership, spearheaded this
confrontational approach. Infact all the
three major parties and their leaders
considered NEPU and its leader at one
stage or the other as too radical for
their decolonization programmes.
It is therefore obvious that
their different responses to colonial
expectations of ‘responsible’
decolonization process marked out NEPU
as different from the other parties; the
differences were most marked in
ideological commitment. The ideological
profile of NEPU had three features which
others largely lacked – (i) clarity of
thought on preferred state of the
political system , (ii) programme of
action and (iii) integrity of
leadership.
1.ii. a.
A clarity of doctrine
On ideological clarity,
definitive doctrines ran through all
political statements of NEPU – equality
of all human beings and equitable
distribution of products of the social
system. Its maiden policy statement, the
Sawaba Declaration of 1950, was
the most comprehensive. It declared in
part:-
“1.
That the shocking state of social
order as at present existing in Northern
Nigeria is due to nothing but the family
compact rule of the so-called Native
Administration in their present
autocratic form.
“2. That owing to this unscrupulous
and vicious system of administration by
the family compact rules and which has
been established and fully supported by
the British imperialist government,
there is today in our society an
antagonism of interest, manifesting
itself as a class struggle…
3. That this antagonism can be
abolished only by the emancipation of
the Talakawa from the domination of
these privileged few and by the reform
of the present autocratic political
institutions into Democratic
institutions and placing their
democratic control in the hands of the
Talakawa for whom alone they exist
…
6. That all political parties are
but the expression of class interest,
and as the interest of the Talakawa
diametrically opposed to the interest of
all sections of the master class, both
white and black, the party seeking the
emancipation of the Talakawa must
naturally be hostile to the party of
oppressors.
7. The Northern Elements
Progressive Union of Northern Nigeria
therefore being the only political party
of the Talakawa, enters the field of
political action determined to reduce to
nonentity any party of hypocrites and
traitors to our mother country, and
calls upon all sons and daughters of
Northern Nigeria to muster under its
banner to the end, that a speedy
termination may be wrought to this
vicious system of administration which
deprives them of the fruits of their
labour, and that POVERTY may give place
to COMFORT, PRIVILEGE to EQUALITY, and
political, economic and social SLAVERY
to FREEDOM”
It is true that this
declaration was a specific response to a
local social situation, the feudal
system of
Northern Nigeria,
and that it lacked the systematic
presentation and universal sweep of a
theory. The leader, Mallam Aminu Kano,
defended this approach as a deliberate
strategy of working outwards from the
particular to a universal truth.
Mallam summed it thus:
“ To
approach the people one most use
identifiable means, coded in words and
images that they understand
–
analysis, simplicity, approachability,
that which appeals to them directly. If
then local needs can be related to the
regional and national needs, ideology
will result”.
However, what NEPU lacked in
formal conceptualization of its
doctrines was amply provided by its
ideologically conscious successor, PRP.
Re-instating the political philosophy of
NEPU, PRP declared:
“The heart of the current trend in our
economic and political development is
the mutual reinforcement of four
distinct forces, namely, the ‘new rich’,
a rapacious but client professional
class, resurrected traditional
aristocracy, and external imperialist
circles. These constitute the so-called
social motor of ‘national progress’. The
two pairs of giant wheels bearing this
social motor are NPN/NPP conglomerate
and UPN/GNPP squad. There can be no
national progress along this route.”
Describing the character of the society,
PRP continued: the root causes of the
social evils of our society are the
abuse of money and power; exploitation
of the ignorance and poverty of the
masses. Money, instead of being put to
its proper use as a means of exchange,
is used to buy power, to pervert
justice, to procure positions of
prominence and to influence government.
Having used money to buy power or having
come to power through money for those in
power and those in the corridors of
power. Ambitious men, men hungry for
power and money, use religious and
tribal sentiments to divide the ignorant
and simple people of this country. Money
mongers exploit poor people. They
organize workers and pay them a pittance
while the exploiters amass huge profits.
They buy cheap from the peasant farmers
while selling dear to the needy. Even
elections are made the bye-product of
money. This is the appalling system
under which we live and operate. The
nation thus becomes gripped in the
vicious stronghold of greed and power.
All pious denunciation of bribery,
corruption, tribalism, nepotism,
indiscipline and the high increase in
crime rate is sweet nonsense. Until we
tackle boldly and openly the root causes
of our social evils, and do this now,
there will be no hope of a bright future
for the coming generations.
As a remedy to the unacceptable state of
social arrangement, PRP offered a
solution in the creation of a new
social order. It declared:
The new social order (which)
the PRP seeks to create is one of social
and economic justice… The new social
order concerns man and his environment
and must manifest itself in liberating
the ordinary citizens of this country –
the worker, the peasant, the farmer, the
petty trader, the messenger, the clerk –
from poverty, ignorance, disease and
exploitation. The new social order must
mean a just wage for work done, a fair
reward for successful effort. A just
wage must be relative to the cost of
living, and a fair reward must be
measured in terms of increases to
production and promotion of the common
good. The new social order must make the
ordinary citizen aware of his duties and
responsibilities to the nation; and
equally the citizen must know his right
and have the courage and confidence to
demand these rights from the nation”
As indicated earlier, NEPU’s ideology
did begin with the particular –
the oppression of the peasantry and the
poor in Northern Nigeria by the feudal
system in partnership with the crude
elemental capitalism of colonialism, but
through words and action it developed
into a universal (national) statement.
Subsequent events lent credence to Aminu
Kano’s claims of deliberate choice of
the language and perspective of a
particular concrete situation as a
strategic option. The subsequent events
include NEPU’s alliance with an
explicitly national party, NCNC, its
affiliations with other like-minded
national movements and associations that
articulated radical rejection of
existing social and political system,
consistent opposition to delineation of
Nigeria into ethnocentric units, support
of geopolitical constituencies that cut
across ethnic boundaries, the responses
of the leader, Mallam Aminu Kano, to
national events, the massive attraction
of progressives from all over Nigeria to
NEPU’s successor, PRP, the nationally
celebrated exemplary lifestyle of Mallam
and his emergence as a national
reference point in simplicity, selfless
service and honesty, and the faithful
elaboration of Sawaba Declaration
into a pointedly more ideological
language by PRP. These activities
evidenced the broadening of the sectoral
(Northern) front into a national
all-Nigeria battle field, in consistent
pursuit of NEPU’s original basic
principles of – equality, social justice
and equitable distribution of wealth.
The pitch of NEPU/ PRP
ideological concerns was different from
that of other parties. It was a legacy
consistently unblinking in its focus on
the need for a new social arrangement in
which the poor and the down-trodden
would have a dominant presence in the
economic system. Its pitch of analysis,
centered on the processes of this
exploitation, was different from the
external focus of all the other parties
on foreign colonialism. Indeed, what
could be passed as the ideologies of the
three major parties were rival gallant
efforts to think within the colonial
box. Theirs were decolonization
programmes, not ideologies, and these
programmes were up-dates of colonial
governance manuals edited to accommodate
the roll-call of the new prospective
Nigerian successors about to benefit
from the forthcoming change of guards.
The major parties were poised to
inherit, not transform, the colonial
state.
1.ii.b
Programme of action
The second important aspect of distinct
ideological personality is programme of
action. The mobilization strategies of
the political parties spoke eloquently
of the quality of their ideologies. The
three major parties – founded by
aristocratic/feudal interests or
aspiring bourgeois elitist groups who
were increasingly engrossed in their
plans to succeed the colonial masters –
rested their mobilization efforts on
recruitment of existing centers of
influence (traditional rulers,
professional groups, bourgeoning
administrative middle class, and,
emerging business class), although one
of them, NCNC scored a remarkable
departure, with its alliance with the
radical nationalist trade union movement
led by Michael Imoudu and the accidental
discharge of a premature child,
Zikist Movement, which it quickly
disowned. However, beyond the common
struggle for independence from colonial
rule, this broad social formation of
elitist interests, represented by the
leadership of the three major parties
was not structured to challenge the
fundamental basis of the existing
system. Their decolonization style was a
jamboree of rallies fed on promise of
life more abundant with arrival of
independence: the driving motive of this
struggle was transfer of the national
cake to the custody of new conclaves of
Nigerian leaders. Theirs was a top to
bottom mobilization scheme.
But the target audience of NEPU
mobilization was different. Mobilized on
a do-it-yourself philosophy, the
down-trodden masses embraced NEPU as
their own weapon of salvation. Its
highly decentralized structure operated
on a platform of equality and total
involvement of all members, and on
alliance of think-alike groups and
associations throughout the ethnic and
sub-ethnic groups of the country. Its
uncompromising stance of No to
injustice and inequality meant torture,
imprisonment and the worst forms of
intimidation and denial. But the
leadership cadre and the supporters were
prepared to bear the consequences of
their political conviction. It was a
bottom-to-top mobilization of the
masses. It was not an accident nor an
exceptional case of excesses of Northern
feudal system that NEPU’s president was
the only national political party
president who suffered imprisonment
while the British system turned the
other way as its agent, the Emirate
system, executed the jail sentence.
Beside the leadership of Zikist
Movement, no top leaders of NCNC, NPC or
A.G. suffered imprisonment for their
political activities.
The result of this ability to suffer the
consequences of its ideological
preferences further reinforced NEPU’s
ideological commitment. What followed
was a deep entrenchment of a value
system which remained largely resistant
to the disorientation of material
inducements, the familiar weapon of the
elite political class. It was the strong
internalization of this value system
that gave depth and resilience to NEPU,
turning it from a political party into a
grass-roots movement. The gallant
performance of the adherents of NEPU-PRP
legacy in all the elections from 1959 to
1983 in spite of the rigging, bribery
and intimidation of the elite parties,
testifies to the ideologically moulded
character of its mass structure.
1.ii.c
Leadership
A third point of ideology
departure from the other parities is
NEPU’s leadership. It must be conceeded
that leaders of the first generation of
political parties were generally modest
in their lifestyles and largely
uncorrupt in their demands on public
resources. But even in that era of
relative innocence, the lifestyle of the
leader of NEPU was outstanding. He lived
a spartan life, comparable only to
Ghandi’s. The core of NEPU’s
leadership cadre also lived in the
austere manner of single-minded foot
soldiers. For Mallam, I recall vividly
the hot sultry afternoon on April 17
1983 when I had to summon all my
will-power to resist fainting spells
from the unbearable heat in the course
of a 2-hour brief from Mallam in his
sitting room – probably his last brief
to a senior party officer – before I
hurriedly raced to the airport to catch
a Kabo flight back to Lagos. His house
proudly shunned every comfort, including
a generator and any effective cooling
fan. His lifestyle was such a
prominently illustrative high point of
NEPU-PRP ideology of egalitarianism that
it virtually became synonymous, in
public view, with the ideology. Such a
profile differed radically from the
image of the leadership of the other
parties. Most in the leadership of
other parties including even UMBC were
either aspiring capitalists or left no
observer in doubt that they were
determined to escape via politics from
the misery of want and poverty to a
higher level of life more abundant. The
mind-cast of the pioneer major parties
foreshadowed the mercantilist attitude
that progressively dominated the
behaviour of political actors in post
independence Nigeria.
1.ii.d.
Test of power.
The review of NEPU as an
example will not be complete without a
brief statement on the final point of
test of a party’s will to implement an
ideological programme when such a party
secures executive political power.
Unlike NEPU, the three major political
parties assumed political power in the
first Republic. In various ways, they
implemented their manifestoes, but their
efforts were logically in a neocolonial
direction. There was little change to
inherited colonial framework of action
beyond series of incremental innovations
which, under the stimulus of regional
rivalries, had to give priority
attention to issues that assured
regional pre-eminence. The same pattern
continued in the second Republic.
NEPU’s opportunities for such
a test of will through performance in
government produced mixed results. In
the first Republic it controlled no
Government but its alliance with NCNC, a
partner with NPC in the Federal
Government, fetched an allocation of the
post of Chief Whip in Federal House of
Representatives which its leader, Mallam
Aminu Kano occupied. This was a
situation of responsibility without
power which created for NEPU serious
contradictions, especially agonizing
doubts among some members about the
strategic value of what they saw as a
compromise decision. The purely
legislative post of Chief whip had no
executive powers to check the brutal
reprisals of NPC-controlled Northern
Nigeria government against the
activities of NEPU supporters in the
region. In the Second Republic, NEPU’s
successor, PRP, came to power for the
first time in NEPU’s long struggle. But
its two state governments soon broke
away from the party on the grounds of
what they saw as the leader’s infidelity
to ideological principles. The
ideological aspect will be briefly
discussed later, but on the issue of
performance in government, one point
should be noted here. In programme of
action complementing ideological
postulation, PRP did show that NEPU in
government was determined to implement
what it preached. Whatever the
difficulties that arose later, it was
generally agreed, even by opponents,
that the PRP regimes confronted more
purposefully than any regime before or
after them the problem of adult
education, women illiteracy, poverty
alleviation and socialization of wealth
in their states. In lifestyle, one of
the governors, Balarabe Musa of Kaduna,
maintained the virtues of the spartan
lifestyle of Mallam Aminu Kano. However,
none of the governments radically
changed the inherited underlying
economic system.
We have sketched this
ideological profile of NEPU/PRP legacy
as an illustration from which we intend
to proceed to offer a brief definition
of ideology, its importance in national
development, and the features that could
make or mar the effective growth of an
ideologically-committed political party.
The tenacity of NEPU–PRP ideological
struggle has high-lighted three features
as the hallmark of its operation. One
is the unequivocal projection of
equality and social justice as its
preferred basis of the society. The
second is its fighting stamina which
withstood all social pressures for over
30 decades. The third is the progressive
changes in the political and social
system of the federation, especially
Northern Nigeria, which came partly, and
in some cases, mainly as the harvest of
NEPU’s years of unrelenting firmness.
1.ii.e.
Definition of Ideology
What, then, is Ideology?
Ideology
is a system of doctrines that seeks to
explain and change the world, (or a
given society or state). It seeks to
interpret the working and structure of
society and posit the need for a change
in the existing situation through a
programme of practical politics
predicated on a comprehensive theory of
human nature and requiring long social
struggle for attainment of its goals.
Ideology, characterized thus, has four
dimensions – (i) contents (ii) programme
of action (iii) functions and (iv)
effective leadership. Contents
refers to the systematic body of basic
philosophical principles espousing the
character of an existing social system,
its flaws, and the merits of a new
social order. Political programme of
action refers to a set of proposals
designed to effect the postulated
changes in the existing system.
Function refers to the value of the
ideology as a perceptional screen which
sifts the proposed remedial options. To
an ideologically-committed party,
ideology is what a needle is to the
compass of a ship. Leadership
refers to quality of leaders and
managers whose vision of a radical
improvement of an existing system is
crystal-clear, leaders who possess
integrity to live what they preach and
leaders who command enough mobilisation
skills to lead the organisation through
a protracted struggle to ideologically
designated goals.
Locally re-interpreted,
political ideology means concise and
clear body of beliefs that explains the
nature of the Nigerian state, projects
what it should be, and sign-posts a
programme of action to achieve its
prescribed remedy. Defined in this
homely light, the challenge of ideology
to our political parties is extricated
from the pejorative connotations of the
didactic universal nostrums and
evangelical panaceas that marked the
cold war era.
Applied to our situation, the
call of ideology (as principles,
clear policy preferences and a programme
of action) is directed to three key
problems confronting the Nigerian
society:-
i.
Economic development: Economic
arrangement of a society is the mother
of all its sub-systems. It determines
the complexion of social and political
subsystems. How do we want to produce
and share wealth in Nigeria? On the
principle of the greatest good to the
greatest number, or on the principle of
IMF/World Bank’s dictates of pure market
economy and survival of the fittest? On
the principle of sustainable development
and self-reliance or on the principle of
profligate consumption and share of the
national cake?
ii.
Political development: Political
development must answer the fundamental
question of depth and scope of citizens’
participation in governance –
distribution of power and authority
among social groups/classes, state of
the civil society and reality of
individual freedoms and rights.
iii.
National stability: Level of
national cohesion and stability is a
function of the performance of the first
two variables. What system will nurse
and sustain the loyalty and love of the
citizenry for the Nigerian state and
foster the growth of nationhood?
These issues are fundamental issues
which should give food for thought to a
political party determined to transform
Nigeria
and make a difference in governance.
Although the military usurped almost
two-thirds of the 50 years independent
existence of
Nigeria, the last one decade has
witnessed the continuous civilian reign
of multi-party democracy. If we assume
that the long period from 1960 through
the military regimes to 1999 is a
sobering lesson to the political class,
the question is: have the political
parties learnt the importance of
applying themselves seriously and
selflessly to the task of governance and
how creatively have they thought about
solutions to the problems of the
country, as may be seen from their
ideological positions? We intend now to
take a look at the manifestoes of the
current political parties and appraise
their ideological profiles.
2.i CURRENT POLITICAL PARTIES
|
S/N |
POLITICAL PARTY |
POLITICAL STATEMENT |
WEALTH GENERATION |
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: IMPLEMENTATION |
|
|
|
|
|
Sector Reforms |
Aggregate |
|
|
|
On a
preferred state of Nigerian state
and society? same, nil or new? |
Any
clear alternative to oil or a
continuation of existing pattern,
yes or same? |
If PDP manifesto is used as a base
(which means free-market economic
system) what does the manifesto of
any other party offer, on the
aggregate, in sectoral reforms:
Nil? Vague/same? Incremental?
innovation (fully or partially)? |
Overall picture |
|
1. |
ACCORD PARTY |
Same |
Yes |
Power –Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Nil
Roads - Incremental |
Agriculture –Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil |
Incremental |
|
2. |
ACTION ALLIANCE |
Nationalism |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Incremental
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture-Incremental
Health – No
Education - Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Barely
Innovative |
|
3. |
ACTION CONGRESS |
Welfarism |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental Health –
Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Incremental |
|
4. |
ACTION PARTY OF NIGERIA |
Nil |
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water –Vague
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture – No
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Incremental |
|
5. |
ADVANCED CONGRESS OF DEMOCRATS |
Driven |
Same
|
Power –Incremental
Steel – Vague
Water – Vague
Roads –Vague |
Agriculture-Incremental
Education – Incremental
Health – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Incremental |
|
6. |
AFRICAN DEMOCRATIC CONGRESS |
Same |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Vague
Roads – Vague |
Nil
|
Nil |
|
7. |
AFRICAN POLITICAL SYSTEM |
Welfarism |
Yes,
through agriculture. |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Same
|
|
8. |
AFRICAN RENAISSANCE PARTY |
Restructure of society |
Silent |
Power – Nil
Steel – Same
Water – Vague
Roads – Nil |
Nil |
Same |
|
9. |
ALLIANCE FOR DEMOCRACY |
Welfarism |
Yes
through non-petroleum sectors. |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Same |
|
10. |
ALL
NIGERIA PEOPLES PARTY |
Nationalism |
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Incremental |
Agriculture – Same
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Incremental |
|
11. |
ALLIED CONGRESS PARTY |
Same
|
Same
|
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture-Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Incremental |
|
12. |
ALL
PEOPLES LIBERATION PARTY |
Same |
Same |
Power –Improved
Steel – Nil
Water – Vague
Roads – Incremental |
Agriculture -Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Incremental |
|
13. |
ALL
PROGRESSIVE GRAND ALLIANCE |
Welfarism |
Alternative to oil through solid
minerals development and agriculture |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Nil
Water – Incremental
Roads – Incremental |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Incremental |
|
14. |
BETTER NIGERIA PROGRESSIVE PARTY |
Same
|
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Incremental |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Incremental |
|
15. |
CITIZENS POPULAR PARTY |
Same |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Fair |
Agriculture-Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil
|
Same |
|
16. |
COMMUNITY PARTY OF NIGERIA |
Not
stated |
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Same |
|
17. |
CONGRESS FOR DEMOCRATIC CHANGE |
Same |
Alternative to oil through
agriculture and strategic mineral
resources |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Other sectors – Same |
Same |
|
18. |
DEMOCRATIC ALTERNATIVE |
State driven capitalism |
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Yes
Power/steel – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Incremental |
|
19. |
DEMOCRATIC PEOPLES ALLIANCE |
Welfarism |
Same
|
Power – Same
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Power/Steel-Nil
Roads Nil – Nil |
Incremental |
|
20. |
DEMOCRATIC PEOPLES PARTY |
Not
stated |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Same
Water – Incremental
Road
– Incremental |
Agriculture-same
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – Same |
Fairly
Innovative |
|
21. |
FRESH DEMOCRATIC PARTY |
Restructure of society |
Yes
Alternative to oil through coal |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Incremental |
Agriculture-Incremental
Education – Incremental
Health – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
22. |
HOPE
DEMOCRATIC PARTY |
State driven capitalism |
Silent |
Power – Same
Steel –
Water –
Road
– Same |
Same |
Same |
|
23. |
JUSTICE PARTY |
Yes
Restructure of society |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Nil
Road
– Incremental |
Agriculture-same
Education – Incremental
Health – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
24. |
LABOUR PARTY |
State driven capitalism |
Yes,
alternative to oil through revival
of manufacture and agriculture |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Nil
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
25. |
LIBERAL DEMOCRATIC PARTY OF NIGERIA |
Same
|
Same
|
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Nil |
Agriculture – Nil
Health – Nil
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
26. |
MASS
GOVERNMENT OF NIGERIA |
Yes,
restructure of society |
Alternative to oil though
agricultural products |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Nil |
Same |
Same |
|
27. |
MOVEMENT FOR DEMOCRACY & JUSTICE |
Same |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Incremental
Road
– Nil |
Agriculture – Nil
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
28. |
MOVEMENT FOR THE RESTORATION AND
DEFENCE OF DEMOCRACY |
Welfarism |
Alternative to oil through
improvement in agric sector |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Incremental
Road
– Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Fairly
Innovative |
|
29. |
NIGERIAN ADVANCE PARTY |
Yes,
restructure of society |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Fairly
Incremental |
|
30. |
NATIONAL ACTION COUNCIL |
Silent |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Same |
Agriculture – Nil
Health – Nil
Education – Nil
Infrastructure – Same |
Same |
|
31. |
NATIONAL CONSCIENCE PARTY |
Not
received |
Not
received |
Power –
Steel –
Water – Nil
Road
– |
Not
recorded |
- |
|
32. |
NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC PARTY |
Nationalism |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Nil
Road
– Incremental |
Agriculture-same
Education – Incremental
Health – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
33. |
NATIONAL MAJORITY DEMOCRACY PARTY |
State driven capitalism |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Incremental
Road
– Incremental |
Agriculture-same
Education – Incremental
Health – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Fairly
Innovative |
|
34. |
NATIONAL
REFORMATION
PARTY |
Same |
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Nil |
Agriculture-same
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
35. |
NATIONAL SOLIDARITY DEMOCRATIC PARTY |
Same |
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Same |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
36. |
NATIONAL UNITY PARTY |
Same |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Same
Water – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
37. |
NEW
DEMOCRATS |
Yes
Restructure of society |
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Same |
|
38. |
NEW
NIGERIA PEOPLES PARTY |
Welfarism |
Same |
Power – Same
Steel – Incremental
Water – Same
Roads – Incremental |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Barely
Innovative
|
|
39. |
NIGERIA
ELEMENTS PROGRESSIVE PARTY |
Silent |
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Same |
Same |
|
40. |
NIGERIAN PEOPLES CONGRESS |
Welfarism |
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Roads – Nil |
Agriculture-same
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Same |
|
41. |
PEOPLES DEMOCRATIC PARTY |
Capitalism |
Alternative to oil through
agriculture |
Power – Same
Steel – Same
Water – Same
Roads – Same |
Agriculture-same
Health – same
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Same
|
|
42. |
PEOPLES MANDATE PARTY |
Same |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Improved |
Agriculture-Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Fairly
Innovative |
|
43. |
PEOPLES PROGRESSIVE PARTY |
Same |
Same
|
Power – Incremental
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Incremental |
Agriculture -Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
44. |
PEOPLES REDEMPTION PARTY |
Socialism |
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Nil |
Agriculture-same
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
45. |
PEOPLES SALVATION PARTY |
Not
stated |
Same |
Power – Nil
Steel – Nil
Water – Nil
Road
– Nil |
Same |
Same |
|
46. |
PROGRESSIVE ACTION CONGRESS |
Same |
Alternative to oil through
agricultural produce |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Incremental
Road
– Same |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
47. |
PROGRESSIVE ACTION CONGRESS |
State driven capitalism |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Incremental
Road
– Incremental |
Agriculture –same
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Incremental |
|
48. |
REPUBLICAN PARTY OF NIGERIA |
Same |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Nil
Road
– Incremental
Water – Incremental |
Agriculture –Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Fairly
Innovative |
|
49. |
UNITED ACTION PARTY |
Same |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Nil
Road
– Incremental
Water – Nil |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Fairly
Innovative |
|
50. |
UNITED NIGERIA PEOPLES PARTY |
Same |
Same |
Power – Incremental
Steel – Incremental
Water – Incremental
Road
– Incremental |
Agriculture- Incremental
Health – Incremental
Education – Incremental
Infrastructure – same |
Fairly
Innovative |
This table above is
at-a-glance mirror of the manifestoes of
the fifty registered political parties.
It uses three measures
–
political statement, economic programme
(wealth generation), and economic
development: implementation. The three,
taken together, give a useful insight
into a political party’s ideological
profile. Political statement
refers to a party’s ideas on the
character of the Nigerian state and
political community – what it is and
what it should be. Economic
development is divided into two
components
–
‘wealth generation’
which sheds light on a political party’s
response to the basic problem of
underdevelopment and ‘economic
development: implementation’ which
measures its approach to the challenges
in the various sectors.
2.i.
The following facts emerge from this
survey:-
i.
Only three out of the 50
registered parties offer clear statement
on the character of existing political
and social system and ideas on its
improvement.
ii.
All except four are content with
existing mode of economic development
and have offered, at best, vague
platitudes about improvement.
iii.
On income re-distribution, eleven
offered minimal welfare schemes in forms
of limited free facilities in education
and health, or modification of tax
regimes or vague promises of improvement
of labour condition.
iv.
All, except five, are blank on
initiatives in sectoral reforms.
2.ii. Objectives
From these facts, some observations are
in order.
The first is the general lack
of explicit political ideology as a
general statement outlining the
principles that inform a party’s view of
Nigeria and its remedial political
programme. We say lack of explicit
ideology because implicit in the
pragmatic programme of each party is a
silent agreement with the existing
mainstream political value. The value
is a product of over a century of
practice, bequated by colonial rule,
nurtured by post-independence politics,
and sanctified by international norms
–
norms such as
free market economy and the palliative
of welfarism along with its political
correlates of ‘freedom’ and ‘equality’.
However reality suggests that
in Nigeria norms are obeyed more in
breach than in usage. The wide gap
between prescription and practice
therefore offers a rich virgin field and
ample space to a political party for
innovative ideas on social/political
reforms. This has not happened. What the
political parties have generally
postulated as political ideologies are
sets of placebos and mantras of a chorus
of crowd sing-along’s.
Since their thoughts barely
were engaged with what Nigeria is and
what is right or wrong with her existing
system, most of the political parties
are not prompted to offer any
ground-breaking views about an
alternative way of reorganizing the
society.
But it is the issues of
poverty alleviation and sustainable
economic development or self-reliance
that underline the poverty of the
ideological content of our political
parties. On welfare, taxation and other
forms of re-distribution of wealth, none
offers an outstanding departure from
solution to the worsening problem of
dichotomization of the society between
the extremely rich few and the extremely
poor majority. The contingent danger of
mass unemployment and its link with
spiraling social insecurity receive no
systematic treatment.
The apparently uniform
approach of the political parities to
the nation’s problems share a heritage
of ideological barrenness of
post-independence Nigeria. A few
remarkable examples will illustrate this
point. In 1998, three persons
master-minded the authorship of PDP’s
constitution. When a party
misunderstanding took the three persons
to APP, there they replicated the same
constitution for the new party. Again,
another crisis occurred and took them to
a new party, AD, there again they were
entrusted with the responsibility of
producing the constitution of the new
party. This meant that within a short
period of six weeks, three different
versions of virtually the same
constitution had been produced for three
parties. And the source material for
the three was probably the template of
Action Group Constitution of the
First
Republic!!
Babangida’s Parastatals model was
another instance. The Babangida regime
mocked the relevance of ideology to
political parties and national political
development when it tired to decree two
national political parties and two
ideologies. The two parastatals
distinguished themselves, according to a
BBC reporter, by one doctrinal
difference: namely, one spoke about fish
farming and the other was silent on it!
An extreme case of uniformity of outlook
to a national problem manifested itself
in the searches of the five political
parties of Abacha regime for their
presidential candidates. Each nominated
General Abacha, the incumbent head of
the Federal Military Government – a
situation that provoked Bola Ige to
dismiss the political parties as five
leprous fingers of the same hand.
If Nigerian political actors used the
state as instruments of their will, as
Prof. Claude Ake observed, it is not
uncharitable to describe our current 50
registered parties as alliances and
cliques of convenience set up by clubs
to facilitate group access to the
national till.
3. The Imperative of Ideology
The absence of clearly distinct and
different ideologies in our political
parties is the bane of Nigeria’s
political development. Political parties
constitute the arteries and veins that
feed the blood of political values into
Nigeria’s
body politic. Without such nutrition,
the body will at best remain weak and
atrophy.
There are three grounds which
should compel a serious attention to the
necessity of distinct ideologies. By
ideology, I mean no more than a full
statement on a political party’s
appraisal of the Nigerian society, its
vision of an improved country, and its
plans to realize this vision, if voted
into power. Surely, this is not an
inconsiderate demand from an electorate
to whom a party is applying for mandate
to govern.
3.i.
The first ground is that political
parties are both the producers and
conveyor belts of political values. It
requires the persistence of
ideologically committed political
parties to articulate these values and
through their consistency transform them
into integral components of our
democratic culture. Key values like
equality and freedom acquired the
central salience which they have
occupied in popular mind partly because
they were the focal points of the
decolonization struggle but mainly,
especially in the political system of
the North, owing to the energetic and
consistent articulation of their
necessity by NEPU. NEPU’s strength of
conviction and relentless pursuit of its
objective yielded in time several
benefits to the political system and the
society. The gains from such a
consistent struggle expanded the
democratic space. The point must be
emphasized that the gestation period of
new ideas burrowing its roots through
the rocky grounds of vested interests
into effective accommodation in an
existing social/political system
requires an intense and sustained
struggle – definitely a time span longer
than the profit calculations of business
contractor/political actors of current
political parties. Just as in the case
of NEPU in Nigeria, it took Britain’s
Labour Party decades of unwavering
commitment to transmute Fabian socialism
into noteworthy features of British
political landscape.
The present generation of
political parties puts little premium on
this kind of orientation. Very few, if
any, concern themselves with ideals and
values. The general concern is narrow
personal interests. Politics is seen as
the surest and quickest route to
personal wealth. Pragmatism is treasured
over idealism, and shrewd calculations
of personal material profit and loss
over the stimulation of ideology and
rewards to the society. Few political
actors are prepared to risk isolation
and exclusion from the patronage of a
winning party.
The subordination of
ideological principles to individual
material goals has leeched negative
values into the body politic. A highly
amoral and opportunist social order in
which end is glorified above means, and
unearned wealth above labour now reigns.
The nation has degenerated to a society
of mercenaries and diamond-diggers. The
negative values of the wider civil
society mirror the astronomical rise of
electoral irregularities, switches of
party allegiances, corruption and
cynical disregard for rule of law in the
polity. Democracy has degenerated into
plutocracy and kleptocracy.
This decay can be checked by
the strong presence of popular
mass-based ideological parties. As in
the case in all democracies, the
positive values of well-grounded
political parties such as freedom,
equality, justice, accountability and
tolerance should coalesce and feed into
the mainstream of our democratic
culture.
3.ii.
The second point is the necessity of
clearly different options of economic
development with their different
political and social consequences for
the whole society and its different
classes. All the economic problems that
mocked the virility of our independence
have gathered more strength and
developed wider tentacles with every
succeeding regime, civilian or military,
in spite of three decades of
unprecedented oil-fuelled prosperity.
Four Republics and sixty four political
parties have tinkered with them. Minus
one or two that offered a rehash of
undomesticated certitudes from the
universal ism’s of the cold war era,
none volunteered an analysis or
programme different from conventional
practice. What has continually expanded
and now occupies the policy centre is a
bureaucracy-driven incrementalist
approach in which more of the same is
added to the same sameness by each
succeeding regime. It is hardly
surprising that no political party has
ever made the issue of the ideal path to
Nigeria’s economic development and
self-reliance its major electoral issue
or challenged its opponents to debate
over the right answer to the recurrent
decimals of our economic problems and
circular motion of underdevelopment.
Allied to this is the issue of
decay of our institutions, the support
base of a democratic structure. The
long military interregnum has undermined
these institutions. Take, for instance
the political parties, which constitute
the flagship of structures of popular
democracy. The military’s familiar
diktat of ordering formulation of
political parties and conducting
elections, all within a few months,
means that political parties are hastily
formed and their common positions
hurriedly negotiated. Bureaucracy has
suffered a more serious harm than
political party system. The long
history of military rule has destroyed
it. It has taken up Bureaucracy to the
phenomenal empowerment of
“super-permanent secretaries” of Gowon
era and later brought it down to a steep
devaluation with the wave of arbitrary
retirements of Murtala era. The change
of fortune destroyed confidence in civil
service and what has followed is a quiet
readjustment to individual self-pursuit
in preparation for the rainy day.
Cynics say that a civil service officer
shares his or her daily working time as
follows – 40% to self-aggradisement, 20%
to intrigues against rivals, 20% to
counter-manouvres against rivals
intrigues, 10% to routine matters, and
5% to activities that actually add value
to the system. It is a picture of
malaise. Also, the military did not
help matters in the installation of
well-considered constitutions. To
hastily prepare and churn out a
Constitution, the grundnorm of the
Federation, in six weeks, as 1999
Constitution was done by Gen.
Abdulsallam, seemed to underline the
military’s calculation of handing out a
transition platform that was designed to
fail. All other institutions in Nigeria
have registered similar decline and
decay since 1960.
An ideologically oriented
party ought to appreciate the importance
of institutions in nation-building and
seek to re-position them in their
ideological paradigms for a better
society.
The pattern highlighted by the
table of ideological profiles promises
no early end to this malaise.
3.iii.
The third area of necessity is
definition or re-definition of
Nigeria
especially in the face of the slagging
pace of process of national unity. The
issue of national unity is central to
the future of
Nigeria.
All other issues are premised on it. It
is a united stable country that provides
a secure warehouse to her economic and
social activities.
The wobbling pace and unclear
direction of Nigeria’s national
integration after almost fifty years of
independence should give enough room for
creative thought to ideologically driven
political parties. Challenges to thought
and action beacon from all tiers and
corners of the polity. The spirit of
national unity, measured by the
affective disposition of the citizens
towards the Nigeria State, has been on
consistently downward trend since 1960.
A rule-of-thumb graph reveals an
orientational decline like this: in the
sixties, no body bothered about one’s
tribe because the normal point of focus
and interaction was one’s Nigerianness;
in the seventies and eighties, the
general expectation shifted to one’s
state of origin. By nineties, the point
of identification became tribe, inspite
of the release of new generation of
social forces into the political centre
by IBB regime’s bold social political
programmes. By the first decade of the
twenty first century, the general
expectation is that mention of one’s
name should be immediately suffixed with
tribal and state origin for prima facie
identification and citizen profile. All
this means that progressively the place
of
Nigeria
State is being relegated to a low index
of our citizen profile. The contour of
our federalism has taken similar plunge.
By the sixties, it was a balanced
partnership between the centre and
viable federating units. By the turn of
the century – after forty years of
military interregnum – it has become a
cross breed between proto-federal and
unitary systems, offering neither the
firm pull of centralized direction nor
the team pull of multiple efforts. In
place of rich plural unity from
corperative federalism, a conglomeration
of disparate seemingly ‘federating’
units held together by common dependence
on the centre’s largesse and states’
fear of the centre’s coercion powers.
Statism, designed to provide healthy
decentralization, has degenerated to
balkanization of the body politic
accompanied by balkanization of thought
and national loyalty. The institution of
election, supposed to convey popular
will and enrich a melting unifying point
of various interests, has degenerated
into cockpits of domino manouvres among
godfathers of political parties and
self-perpetuating regimes. Communication
gaps between groups and classes have
continued to wide. After 50 years of
self-rule, topics like revenue
allocation and derivation principles
remain vexatious issues, and the basis
of the federation is still open to
debate though calls for a conference of
ethnic groups.
Clear answers to these
challenges from distinctly different
ideological perspectives are over-due.
What is the most appropriate Federal
device to manage the primordial divides
of our plural society in the direction
of national integration? Any positive
lesson from similar phases of political
development (USA in 1900 to 2090, USSR
in 1921-1985, Ataturk’s Turkey in 1924
to 1938, the nationalist ideology of
Baath Party in the Middle East or even
the populist politics of Philippines and
Thailand). In quality of governance,
Chapter 2 of the 1999 constitution
offers a rich mine of ideas to an
ideologically oriented party. On the
sense of corporate self-worth of
Nigerian
State,
the fact of our existence as the largest
black country in
Africa
and the world offers to an
ideologically-driven political party
materials for reconstruction of our
manifest destiny in both the continent
and in the world.
If the opportunities offered
by the various problems of national
integration are taken seriously by any
ideologically conscious political party
which is determined to make a change and
which has staying stamina for a
prolonged campaign, the question of
Nigeria’s national unity will begin to
yield to positive and enduring answers.
Admittedly, much has been done through
the pragmatism of non-doctrinaire
political parties, compelled by military
fiats, mandatory regulations and
exigencies of electoral competition. But
much more can be done because, more than
all institutions of mass politics,
political parties are the main
governance vehicle which constitutes the
junction, the meeting point, between
theory and practice. If ideologically
directed, they should be more effective
catalysts of social change.
3.iv.
Handicaps
We most however admit that there are
difficulties on the way of political
parties determined to tackle these
challenges.
3.iv.a.
The first problem is the
tradition of Federal government
sponsorship of a political party which
quickly attracts to its side a massive
alignment of most political actors
pursuing their self-interests. The
centre-favoured political party soon
balloons into the majority mainstream
party peopled by the broad elite
spectrum of ideological strange
bed-fellows. This is the lineage of
political establishment that has since
independence provided a formidable and
seemingly impregnable phalanx, and
appropriating all state power to
perpetuate its dominance. The formation
has remained more or less unbroken
through all permutations, military or
civilian. The boundary between the
establishment political party as a
technically independent institution and
the State is now blurrred. In civilian
rule, it has transmuted from NPC,
through NPN, SDP, and NRC to PDP. All
efforts to network an effective
opposition to this phalanx has failed,
partly through the ideological
incoherence of the opposing political
actors and partly through the
intolerance and self-perpetuation drive
of the incumbent government-sponsored
parties. The current somersaults over
electoral reforms and the incumbent
regime’s defence of its executive powers
to appoint Chairman of Independent
National Electoral Commission (INEC)
assures the continuity of
centre-sponsored national party,
positioned beyond the uncertainties of
free election and the hazards of
political party competition. The new
trend of carpet-crossing of elected
state chief executives from the parties
with mandated them to rule with specific
manifestoes to the ruling federal
behemoth foreshadows the arrival of a
dusk of right-wing one-party state in
Nigeria.
History of governance in Nigeria is an
unrelieved tale of little respect for
democratic culture. It is a totalitarian
convention in which governments obey the
letters, not the spirit of the laws.
Governments try in various ways to
control all instruments of rule from
monopoly of the resources of state,
through partisan use of coercive forces,
to attempts to compromise the judiciary
and any other centres of independent
initiative. The political field does
mount formidable obstacles to opposition
parties, especially those which are
genuine instruments of change. Many of
the parties have their backs pushed to
the wall for survival. (Survival
necessity explains in part the
participation of NEPU in the Federal
government coalition of the First
Republic in which its ally, NCNC, joined
the NPC-controlled centre).
Because of the weakness and
delinquency of the State as a neutral
umpire, all political parties outside
the sponsored choice are orphaned
parties. They are denied freedom of
expression and activities normally
available to all political actors in a
democracy. But to overcome such
government-created obstacles ought be
seen by ideologically committed parties
as a part of the challenge to the
realization of the set goal of changing
an existing system.
3.iv.b.
The second problem is lack of funds.
This arises partly from the class
character of membership of such parties
(if they are leftist) and mainly from
the ruling party’s policy of financial
starvation of its opponents. Even if
the Constitution stipulates financial
grants to political parties as 1999
Constitution does, a ruling party can
frustrate the realization of the law’s
intendment.
3.iv.c.
More harmful to the virility of the
political parties is their lack of
internal democracy. The parties cannot
convey to democracy the value which they
have not got. In varying degrees, all
the parties ignore the tenets of
democracy. Besides the internal struggle
for supremacy among leading members, the
problem is the prevalence of members’
habit of reflexive submission to the
whims of acknowledged leader of a party.
Whatever rights the party constitution
has given to its members, and whatever
functions and powers it has stipulated
for its organs, members tend to regard
the leader of the party as the
embodiment of its rules. This attitude
exists in all the parties, including
NEPU and PRP. The impression in some
quarters that Mallam was a dictator is
not entirely true. Mallam was a democrat
per excellence. But the fact is
that the followers and the cadres
insisted on using him, not the rules, as
the final endorsement of their actions,
inspite of his continual attempts to
reject this role.
3.iv.d
The fourth problem is the blight of
personality cult, probably the most
deadly enemy of ideological parties.
Personality cult takes the place of
ideology in the hearts of generality of
members, thereby hindering and
undermining adequate internalization of
its values by members. The structure of
the party and state of discipline are
among the early casualties. As
President Obasanjo promoted himself to a
demi-god in PDP, though not an
ideologically-driven party, it was an
open secret that favoured sycophants
were allotted states to select and
deliver their choices as elected
candidates. The bye-products of
personality cults are godfathers and
patron saints. In place of healthy
doctrinal discourses, differences of
opinion result in personality clashes
among turf leaders. Internal
differences in Action Group when it
veered towards an ideology degenerated
to violent warfare between Chief Awolowo
and Akintola groups. In USSR, Stanlism
initiated a terrible purge and execution
of ideological opponents. Also, by the
collapse of USSR, it was an amazing
discovery that the internalization of
socialist values among members of the
Communist Party was really low. For PRP,
it is not a flight of far-fetched
imagination to project from certain
indications (e.g the lifestyle of many
of its members who found themselves in
government for the first time) that a
decline of NEPU-PRP legacy was about to
set in real earnest from 1980.
3.iv.e.
The second difficulty arises
directly from the conservative and
pragmatic temperament of market
economy-based environment. The
unconducive features of the society
include the prevalence of mercenary
ethos, the practical anti-doctrinaire
outlook partly inherited from British
tradition of pragmatism and the current
spirit of modernisation indices of
market economy and public-private
initiatives. The psychological
set-back inflicted by the collapse of
the
Soviet Union
and dawn of Gorbachev’s Perestroika
set a false signal of end of
ideology and made the international
environment even more unreceptive to
radical thoughts and movements.
Apart from NEPU, no radical party –
Social Workers and Farmers Party (SWAFP),
Zikist Movement, etc – survived beyond
adolescence partly because of the
inadequate response of an unappreciative
environment. NEPU survived so long
partly because of the depth of its
ideological commitment and partly
because it rooted its proselytizing
language in the local idiom of a
religiously fervent peasantry.
3.v. PRP crisis
If its successor PRP was not as lucky,
it was because of a combination of the
factors outlined here. The PRP crisis
remains a metaphor on the fate of an
ideologically-driven party in Nigeria.
The objective reality, defined by the
boundaries of a fast growing capitalist
social arrangement, confronted adherents
with the strategic challenge of
correctly interpreting the unfolding
political situation. What followed were
divergent interpretations of
opportunities for strategic maneuvers.
PRP, loyal to Mallam, saw a chance in
exploiting the opportunity offered
through constructive engagement with an
NPN-controlled federal government in a
national coalition at a period in which
the fragile civilian regime seemed to
risk premature collapse, with dire
consequences to democracy. On the other
hand, adherents who were opposed to this
position insisted that alliance with
political parties in opposition to the
NPN-controlled centre would give more
teeth to PRP’s radical barks against
existing order, enrich its ideological
profile, and most importantly, advance
the nation’s political struggle. But,
like in all fratricidal warfare, the
bitter polemics of self-righteousness
soon took over. The pro-Mallam group
underrated the essence of doctrinal
purity and the importance of adherence
to it, while the anti-Mallam group
betrayed inadequate appreciation of
objective reality, as subsequent events
soon proved, and, against the facts of
history they even tried to devalue the
pioneering role of Mallam Aminu Kano in
formation of NEPU!
The problem of correct reading of the
dynamics of political change,
dispassionate use of the rudder of
ideological perspective and ability to
discern the relevance of short term or
long term goals in a struggle remains a
thorny task to the tactical ingenuity of
the strategists of ideologically
committed parties in Nigeria.
Conclusion
The dire consequences of absence of
parties with clear, strong ideological
orientation continue to haunt the peace
and future of
Nigeria
daily. In material prosperity, the
standard of living of her people is
lower than it was fifty years ago.
Kleptocracy has conspired with
incompetence to ensure that the decline
proceeds unabated. While other nations
climb upwards to enter the ozone layer
of the most economically advanced
nations, Nigeria appears content to hold
a world record in corruption and
population explosion (By size of
population, she is among the first 10,
but by human development indices she is
among the last poorest in the world).
No political party has noticed that
at birth Nigeria shared the same level
of underdevelopment with
Korea,
Singapore and Indonesia but today the
economic development of her Asian
contemporaries is a century ahead of
us. No party has noticed the steep
gradient of this decline because our
political actors see their calling as
grabbing their share of prepared pottage
from the national pot. As a political
party is seen as nothing more than a
meal ticket to the national vault by
political party members, switches of
party allegiance are as frequent as
investors’ readings of the stock
exchange market. Even state governors
are not exempted from the mealy-mouthed
forays for greener pastures in the
extensive diamonds field of ruling
federal-government-sponsored party. In
the absence of democratic culture and
its principled drivers, the political
parties, a dispensation of high premium
on money reigns. The result is
plutocracy – rule of the rich by the
rich, for the rich and opposed by the
rich excluded from the national loot.
To what extent the masses who cannot
project their interests through these
political parties can endure their
inevitable alienation is beyond the
scope of this brief lecture.
I want to conclude this anniversary
lecture with two questions.
What are the lessons from the history of
NEPU-PRP to Nigerian political parties?
What are the lessons of this
legacy to Nigeria’s political future?
The lessons from NEPU/PRP legacy may be
summarized in one phase – clarity of
ideological focus and staying stamina of
a fighting spirit.
And the lessons of this legacy
to our political parties? If a party
seriously wants to change and improve
the existing system, it must develop a
clear ideological position. If the
position is dispassionately developed,
and passionately embraced, the party
will ipso fact, muster the requisite
strength that supplies it the staying
power. It is the staying power that wins
its battles– in one fell swoop or
incrementally – in a long prolonged
social war, even in the dark nights of
apparent defeats. It is the ideological
strength that will provide the party the
shield and armour against the seductions
of an increasingly philistine society
and the wiles of an IMF-programmed
capitalist dispensation. It is this
depth of passionate commitment that will
constantly remind such a party that the
secret of an effective leadership of a
leftist radical movement is integrity
and extraordinary depth of the
ideological commitment. Such a party
must learn from the successes and
failures of Mallam Aminu Kano, and the
strategic gains and errors of NEPU and
PRP.
To continue to deny this country the
stimulation of ideologically driven
political parties is like denying the
body of oxygen or a vehicle of a
steering wheel. The people of Nigeria
cannot settle for the inertia and
deadness of a mortuary. Our youths must
produce their Bikko’s and our leaders
their Lee Kuan Yew’s.
Bibliography
1.
Building Party-Based Democracy In
Nigeria:
Dr. Tunji Olagunju, Paper presented at
the National Seminar organized by PDP,
Abuja
May, 1990
2.
The Politics of Mallam Aminu
Kano:
Alkasum Abba, Vanguard Printers and
Publishers Ltd, 1993 Kaduna
3.
African Revolutionary: The Life and
Times of Nigeria’s Aminu Kano,
Feistein Alan. Triatlantic Books, New
York 1998.
4.
The Ideology of Power and the Power
of Ideology: Goran Therborn, 1981.
5.
Ideology and Political Life,
Hoover K. R. 1986.
6.
The Third Wave: Democratization In
the Late Twentieth Century, Samuel
Huntington: University of
Oklahoma
Press, Norma 1993.
7.
Instability and Political Order:
Politics and Crisis in
Nigeria.
Patrick Wilmot, Ibadan University Press
1973.
8.
The Politics of Federalism In
Nigeria, J Isawa Elaigwu Aba
Publishing House Ltd. 2005
9.
Democratization of Disempowerment in
Africa:
Claude Ake Malthouse Press Ltd 1994.
10.
Governance And Politics In
Nigeria:
The IBB And OBJ Years: Ed. Sam
Oyovbaire.
11.
The Tale of June 12: The
Betrayal of The Democratic Rights of
Nigerians (1993), Omo Omoruyi,
Press Alliance Network Ltd London
1999.
12.
Seeing Double: Patrick Wilmot,
St. Martin’s
Press New York 2006.
|