By Paul Onomuakpokpo
It was only those who
lacked prescience in the heady days of the campaigns for the 2015 elections
that failed to realise that the All Progressives Congress (APC) was a
contraption waiting to unravel. All that was needed was the appropriate time
for the party to suffer an implosion and disrupt its self-valourisation for
being different from the much-pilloried People’s Democratic Party (PDP). And
now in less than two years after assuming power, the party is in the grip of
crises from which recovery may not be possible.
This should have been
expected in so far as the APC grew out of a myriad of crises of other parties.
These crises have continued to haunt the APC in a way that has rendered its
performance since its emergence less than stellar. Of course, no one makes the
case that the existence of conflicting interests is aberrant in a democracy
with its attendant plurality of perspectives. One moment of such a contest of
interests that culminated in discontent was the quest for the chairmanship of
the party that led to the exit of Tom Ikimi and his supporters.
But the troubling
reality is that these crises have worsened since the APC assumed the reins of
power. They have negated all expectations that after the electoral victory,
previous differences would be relegated for a common front to tackle national
problems. Thus, the only area where the APC could be said to have done well
aside from winning the 2015 elections remains in its playing the role of an
opposition party. It succeeded in demonising the then government of the PDP and
eventually made it unacceptable at the polls.
What has
dogged the APC and prevented it from building on its electoral success is a
lack of a clear ideological vision that is underpinned by a holistic pursuit of
service to the citizens. It is in this ideological vacuum that has festered all
shenanigans for the appropriation of the party by its members as a vehicle for
realising their selfish goals. In other words, what has marked out the party is
its members’ Darwinian struggle for supremacy. In this quest, the disparate
members owe no fidelity to the common ethos that binds them together in the
party; thus it can be used and dumped as they have done to other political
parties. It was this that led to the emergence of Bukola Saraki as Senate
President and Yakubu Dogara as House of Representatives Speaker in utter
disregard for the desire of some of the party’s leaders.
It is not only the
party that its members brutally disregard to pursue their selfish interests.
They have also disavowed their own promises to the citizens. But the citizens
are not beyond blame; they have had too high expectations from politicians of
the Nigerian hue. For despite all the pretensions, these politicians who decamped
from the PDP could not be expected to do anything good to improve the lot of
the people.
At his
inauguration, President Muhammadu Buhari in a moment that was seemingly
preceded by a great introspection declared that he belonged to everybody and belonged to nobody. If this were a clear
repudiation of all obligations that might have negated national interest, the
citizens would have appreciated it. But from the performance of Buhari in the
past 16 months, he has been far from proving that he understood the heavy
weight of the thoughts he expressed. For it is clear now that far from what he
would like the citizens to believe, he is beholden to some interests that
conflict with the collective good of the citizens.