I am an adopted ‘Lagos boy’, a
self-styled ‘Buharist’, a fan of the National Leader of the All Progressives
Congress (APC), Bola Tinubu, and a believer in the notion that the APC is the
best thing to happen to Nigeria since the discovery of the revered Agege Bread.
I am also a shrewd student of international politics. This is why I believe
that it is necessary to comment on a picture that is making the rounds in the
national dailies and on online platforms that shows President Muhammadu Buhari,
flanked by Tinubu, and Chief Bisi Akande, a former interim-Chairman of the APC.
Anybody
that truly understands democratic politics would agree with me on these next
points. In more-developed democratic nations, as soon as a government is
formed, regardless of the constitution of the individuals that make up that
government, it is expected that the leaders of that government have to work
together. A careful case in point is President Barack Obama having to work with
the Republican Speaker of the United States (US) House of Representative, John
Boehner, and the Majority Leader of the US Senate, Mitch McConnell, who is also
a Republican.
However
one chooses to look at it, it is unacceptable that nearly 100 days since the
inauguration of the 8th National Assembly, President Buhari has chosen not to
engage in a formal capacity with the President of the Senate, Bukola Saraki,
who is a member of his own party. This development is equally problematic when
you look at the President’s statement immediately after the June 9th election
of presiding officers of the National Assembly in which he stated that Saraki’s
election was in fact constitutional – as he was chosen by a majority of his
colleagues.
I
do not believe in politics of personalities. I believe in politics for the
greater good. That is why I cannot stop being baffled that the President would
choose to meet with two of the men that were instrumental in calling a phantom
meeting in his name, and without his permission with the Senators at the
International Conference Center in Abuja on the 9th of June – thus, depriving a
vital chunk of APC Senators their right to vote. These same people allegedly
illegally ordered the Inspector General to shut the gates of the National
Assembly against even members-elect and their families.
What’s
more difficult to understand, is that the meeting with Buhari, Tinubu, and
Akande was allegedly to discuss the upcoming ministerial list. This is because
with the Senate being the constitutionally mandated legislative body to approve
the nominees of the executive branch, I wonder why the President chooses to
meet instead with private citizens like Tinubu and Akande, instead of
consulting with the ‘constitutionally elected’ Senate President on the next
steps that his nominees will eventually have to face – legislative vetting and
confirmation.
I
believe that in the interest of Nigeria which we all clamour should move
forward, this perceived ‘Cold War’ needs to end right now. Buhari and Saraki
need to mend any broken fences to get the lasting nation-building underway. As
things are, executive powers can only go so far. In a similar vein, the powers
of the legislature stop at oversight without the signature of the President.
For his legacy, Buhari needs Saraki’s Senate to be effective, as much as
Saraki’s Senate needs Buhari’s presidential pen to pass any bills into law.
This
man-made checkmate cannot be allowed to continue. It sets a dangerous tone for
the future of Nigeria under this administration, and a more dangerous precedent
for the future of our country’s democracy.
Op-ed pieces, views and
opinions expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflects
the official policy or position of konfirminfo.blogspot.com.

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