The postponement of the presidential election
until 9 April 2011 means another four months of intensive party politicking
and the shelving of plans to reform the
oil, gas and electricity sectors. Strategists around President
Goodluck Jonathan want time for him to win over his divided party
and the country at large. Delays also give northern Nigeria's political
clans time to sharpen strategies and renegotiate their alliances with the
south. Policy failures are undermining President Jonathan, who presented
himself as the leader who would clean up the oil business and fix the power
industry. The amnesty that he and his late predecessor, Umaru Musa
Yar'Adua, secured in the Niger Delta is coming apart; oil
production and state revenues are falling (AC Vol 51 No 21 & AC Vol 52 No
23).
In national politics for less than five years, Jonathan is a candidate of
the south, from Bayelsa State in the Delta. He faces problems on many
fronts, starting with a bruising battle to win the presidential nomination
of the governing People's Democratic Party (PDP) against his rival, former
Vice-President Atiku Abubakar. On 22 November, Abubakar
emerged as the north's PDP candidate, shifting the balance of power in the
party. If he gets it, Jonathan will have to reverse the mounting PDP losses
in the south and cope with the north's less than enthusiastic support for
him.
Jonathan will also come up against a resurgent opposition in the form of
former military leader, General Muhammadu Buhari and his
Congress for Progressive Change. The CPC has built up a substantial
following in the northern states of Kebbi, Katsina, Kano, Kaduna and Bauchi.
A northerner with more national appeal, the former Chairman of the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission, Nuhu Ribadu, may run as
candidate for the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN). Many calculate that in a
free election, the combined support for Buhari and Ribadu could at least
force the PDP's candidate into a run off.
All parties are preparing for the most open election since Independence.
There will be lively primary elections in all the political parties but the
big contest for the PDP's nomination is likely to be held in mid-January,
giving both candidates time to muster support across Nigeria's 36 states.
The party organisation in each of the states, in coordination with the
National Executive Council, selects delegates who vote for candidates at the
national convention.
Advantage Atiku
Atiku has the advantage in the north. Initially the four northern contenders
for the PDP nomination - Atiku, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida,
Gen. Aliyu Mohammed Gusau and Kwara State Governor
Abubakar Bukola Saraki - were going to slug it out at the national
convention. Instead, a former Finance Minister and a founder of the PDP,
Adamu Ciroma, organised the Northern Political Leaders'
Forum to choose a consensus candidate for the north. The forum took
soundings across the north and then appointed a nine-member consensus
committee, chaired by Ciroma.
We hear that Atiku won four votes and Babangida won three, with one each for
Saraki and Gusau, although some suggest that Gusau's man voted for
Babangida. As part of the deal, all the defeated candidates had to
congratulate Atiku (albeit through clenched teeth) and pledge to support him
against Jonathan. In London this week, addressing business people and
students at University College, Atiku exuded confidence that he will get the
PDP's presidential ticket. Exuberant and a consummate dealmaker, he is the
professional politician who established a formidable national political
network with the Yar'Adua family two decades ago.
Jonathan has been called the 'accidental president' even by his own allies.
More than personal merit, the PDP's primary contest is about the contenders'
ability to mobilise support among the state governors and the party
officials. Yet the PDP is losing its political dominance, especially in the
south: Kayode Fayemi of the ACN overturned the 2007
election of the PDP's Segun Oni as Governor of Ekiti State
in an epic legal battle and was sworn in on 16 October; on 26 November, the
ACN's Rauf Aregbesola was declared Governor of Osun State
after the courts overturned the election of the PDP's Olagunsoye
Oyinlola; and Great Ovedje Ogboru of the
Democratic People's Party has persuaded the courts to annul the governorship
election of the PDP's Emmanuel Uduaghan in Delta State.
With the backing of Babangida and others, Atiku is well placed to garner
votes among the 19 states in the north and with the backing of veterans such
as former Vice-President Alex Ekwueme, he should make some
headway in the south-east.
In his home base in the Niger Delta, Jonathan expects to sweep the board
despite the latest wave of militant attacks and he is confident of strong
support in the south-west, too. Help from former President Olusegun
Obasanjo, a determined foe of Atiku's, will give Team Jonathan more
muscle, as will the emergence of the PDP Governor of Ogun State, a
Jonathan-ally, Gbenga Daniel, as Chairman of the Nigerian
Governors' Forum. In 2007, President Obasanjo's control of the Forum was
critical in winning support for Umaru Yar'Adua's nomination. Obasanjo
remains at best a controversial figure, though, and is reviled in many parts
of the north.
Incumbency will doubtless help Jonathan if his organisation can distribute
the patronage fast enough and reinforce his grip on the party organisation
and state officials: most of the delegates voting in the presidential
primaries will be elected officeholders and party functionaries. Competition
for the spoils is intensifying: Jonathan's close ally, Oil Minister
Diezani Allison-Madueke, will struggle to organise a fresh bidding
round for oil production and exploration licences before the primaries.
On 1 December, Finance Minister Olusegun Oyotoyin Aganga
and Central Bank Governor Lamido Aminu Sanusi were summoned
to the National Assembly to explain their concern that representatives and
senators were overpaid: the Assembly consumes about 25% of the federal
government's overheads and its elected officials are among the best paid
(and least productive) in the world. Beyond that, the well regarded Segun
Aganga and Lamido Sanusi are struggling to bring public finances under
control: in its last year, the Yar'Adua government spent about US$15 billion
from a special off-budget account for oil revenue and ran down foreign
reserves by more than 10%. Aganga and Sanusi have slowed the outflow but
will face their toughest test in the months prior to the April election.
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