“In all science,
error precedes the truth, and it is better it should go first than last” —Horace Walpole (1717-1797) English writer and politician.
If we go by what our politicians (the major presidential candidates
notably) are saying about each other this campaign season, we can’t but
conclude that they are all ‘misfits’ for office in 2019. They have smeared
themselves. They have used invectives dug from the gutter to paint themselves.
They have cancelled one another from the log of men and women of integrity.
*President Buhari |
They have thrown away their gloves and bruised their faces with bare
fists. They have either asked the umpire to stay off or have left the ring
altogether to slug it out in the mud. Now it’s a bloody street fight all the
way. When the vote is cast and the result declared, both the winner and
defeated and spectator would be losers, none a victor, even if there is a
coronation. Why? It would be a pyrrhic triumph, where you’d ask yourself if you
haven’t run all this marathon race only to end up with a mistake as your
leader.
But that is our cyclical experience. We hail our leaders when they
come in. Soon, the scales fall off our eyes. We then begin to see them again in
the soiled garment the opposing side put on them before the poll. Mistake or
not, we are stuck with them for four years. Unless he resigns. Which is rare in
our clime. Or unless he’s impeached. Which is uncommon.
Some worried compatriots have said that we don’t have to be glued to
an underperforming leader for four years, if they wouldn’t leave on their own
or allow themselves to be removed legitimately. They are suggesting a new
constitutional provision to make way for midterm polls to serve as a referendum
on a ruling party, as it is done in the United States near the midpoint of a
president’s four-year term of office. Dissenting critics however argue that
because it generates a lower voter turnout, a halfway ballot cannot be a valid
or democratic gauge of the mood of the electorate.
They refer to the history of these ‘subelections’ in the US . Less than
36% of the poll-eligible community voted in 2014, said to be the lowest in 76
years. In 1966, only 48% were available to vote. The 70s were worse, recording
severe drops, reportedly because of the Watergate scandal of President Richard
Nixon.
I think no matter what these statistics point to, they send powerful
signals to a leader, a faltering one especially, that his days are numbered if
he doesn’t sit up. That’s the instruction from the recent midterm poll in the US . Rulers must
be put on their toes. They don’t daily realize they are in power only because
the people want them there. But the people’s vote can’t be taken for granted.
It is capricious; it can swing the opposite way to correct an electoral error.
And in Nigeria ,
we have inflicted serial ballot blisters upon ourselves that we futilely
attempt to cure in quadrennial elections. Nigerians say each new government
they usher in is worse than the previous one voted out. They loathe the fresh
administration and begin to grumble it is not catering for their
interests. Then in a year or two, the
traditional parting of ways occurs. As the government prepares for its fourth
anniversary, expecting a second term, there is open rebellion that sounds its
death knell.
It is a pattern that we have lived with in our recent history. It is
astonishing that members of the pools community in Nigeria have not discovered an
inherent business of subjecting this predictable succession trajectory of our
politics to a betting game. They could have made a merchandise of this, seeing
we’re a country of commercial risk takers with excessive faith in luck or fate.
After all, other less fickle human activities such as the top football leagues
of Europe have not only emptied the pockets
and bank accounts of Nigerian fortune seekers, but also they have occupied
their days and nights.
Some of our compatriots fear this seasonal search for the ‘right’ man
at the helm would be an endless journey, that generations to come would be
trapped in a similar will-o’ the wisp, that we are tethered to a jinx to last
forever.
False prognosis, according to science! There is hope one day we shall
get the right man. The great scientific and technological discoveries of our
age never came as finished products. They went back and forth as one failure to
another failure, receiving knocks and rejections that finally brought them into
some level of acceptance, which, as time has proved, would itself be displaced
for a more suitable acceptance.
So let’s draw immeasurable solace from what we gather in these castles
of science and technology. That is what moves us to continue to go to the poll,
despite the challenges thrown at us before, during and after elections, knowing
most on offer are ‘errors’ preparing us for the ‘truth’ hidden in the close
future.
So, as the politicians go on the hustings, spewing scurrilously
searing side issues, ahead of the 2019 ballot, we ask: who will be our next
mistake?
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