In a previous column, I argued that President Muhammadu
Buhari has so lowered the bar of governance that it won’t take a lot for any
person who succeeds him to impress Nigerians. So the best campaign against
Buhari is to promise not to be like him, which is really sad because there is
much more at stake in the task of governing Nigeria than just transcending
Buhari’s incompetence and mediocrity.
President Buhari (shown above)
Atiku Abubakar has started to excite voters by promising
to not be like Buhari. On October 12, for instance, Atiku’s statement on
Twitter that he won’t take six months to name his ministersresonated wildly
with a lot of Nigerians. It reminded people that Buhari took six months to
assemble the least impressive cabinet in Nigeria’s recent history, which is peopled
by NYSC dodgers, certificate forgers, malefactors, liars, etc.
I extensively researched to see which other country in
the world in recent memory elected a president who took six months to name his
or her cabinet. There was none. So promising to name a cabinet shortly after
inauguration ordinarily shouldn’t be a campaign promise because that’s what
every elected president is expected to do. But you can’t fault Atiku because
Buhari has lowered the bar to an unprecedented degree.
Atiku also promised that 40 percent of his cabinet would
be composed of women and young people. Again, ordinarily, that would have been
uninspiring, even condemnable, because the promise implies that 60 percent of
his cabinet would be composed of old men, which is unfair, unbalanced, and
regressive. However, look at Buhari’s cabinet, which he has failed to rejig in
more than three years, and you will see why such an unimpressive pledge would
strike a chord with Nigerian voters.
Mr. Atiku Abubaka (Top contender in the 2019 presidential election)
See below an excerpt from my February 3, 2018 column
titled “How Buhari Has Lowered the Bar of Governance” to gain an insight into
why Atiku’s popularity has been soaring in the last few days. Buhari’s
unexampled incompetence is propelling Atiku to heights he is unworthy of:
“I had hoped that even if Buhari wasn’t a stellar
president, he would at least not lower the bar. But that is precisely what he
has done. He has set the bar of governance so low that all it would take for
any president who comes after him to impress us is to:
1. Constitute his cabinet within a few days of being
sworn in. It took Buhari nearly six months to appoint his cabinet, which is the
worst record in Nigeria’s entire history. It slowed the country and hurt the
economy. On September 17, 2015 when France 24’s François Picard asked him why
he hadn’t named his ministers months after being sworn in, he said ministers
were worthless and just “make a lot of noise.” That was a low point. And the
cabinet he took months to put together turned out to be one of the most
colorless and lackluster in Nigeria’s history.
Lagos City (Nigeria)
2. Appoint members of governing boards of government
agencies in the first few months of being in power. It took Buhari nearly three
years to do this. Since government agencies can’t legally function without
governing boards, governance basically halted for more than half of Buhari’s
first term. That’s why I once observed that while previous administrations were
guilty of misgovernance, Buhari is, for the most part, guilty of
“ungovernance,” which is worse.
3. Not be so incompetent as to appoint dead people into
government—and living people without first consulting them.
4. Periodically speak to Nigerians through the domestic
media, not when he is abroad.
5. Personally visit sites of national tragedy, show
emotion, and make national broadcasts to reassure a grieving nation. In my
March 18, 2017 column titled, “Why Buhari Should Learn from Osinbajo,” I wrote:
“In a tragic irony, it took Buhari’s sickness for Nigeria
to get a chance at some health. It also took his absence for the country to
feel some presence of leadership. Why did it take the ascendancy of Osinbajo to
the acting presidency for this to happen? The answer is simple: symbolic
presence. Buhari lacked symbolic presence in the 20 months he was in charge.”
6. Have an economic team made up of economists and not,
as Buhari has done, appoint a diplomat as an economic adviser and then push him
to the gaunt fringes of the Vice President’s office.
7. Reflect token religious, regional, and national
diversity in appointments. Buhari won a national mandate, but his appointments
are, as I’ve pointed out in previous columns, undisguisedly Arewacentric. His
personal example shows that he doesn’t believe in one Nigeria, yet he often
insists that Nigeria’s unity is “non-negotiable.” That’s unreasonable.
8. Not lie shamelessly about self-evident facts.
9. Not budget billions for Aso Rock Clinic and yet
starve it of basic medicines (so much so that his own wife and daughter would
complain openly) and then fly to London for medical treatment at the drop of a
hat even for “ear infections” and “breathing difficulties.”
10. Not have a compulsive runawayist impulsethat
ensures that he travels out of the country at the slightest opportunity and for
the silliest reasons.
11. Even pretend that the whole of Nigeria is his
constituency—including those who gave him “97%” of their votes and those who
gave him only “5%” of their votes.
12. Add to the list
Sadly, these are really basic things that shouldn’t
attract any praise. There is no greater evidence that Nigeria has regressed
really badly in almost every index in Buhari’s less than 3 years of being in
power than the reality of these grim facts.
And he wants you to extend this national tragedy for
another 4 years in 2019? Well, it’s up to you. If that's what Nigerians want,
who am I to deny them the "luxury" to inflict self-violence on
themselves?
But what I won’t take is the narrative being promoted by
apologists and beneficiaries of the government that there is no one better than
Buhari at this time. On the contrary, it’s actually practically impossible to
be worse than Buhari because he has brought Nigeria to the ground zero of
incompetence, so almost anybody would be better than him. He descended from the
zenith of “Sai Baba” to the slope of “Baba Go-slow” and finally to the nadir of
“Baba Standstill.” It can’t get worse than that.”
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