Bola
Tinubu is not a democrat, has never been a democrat and will never be a
democrat. There is a popular Yoruba song that says: “Eko o gba gbere rara o.”
It means: “Lagos does not take any nonsense whatsoever.” It is high time for
Lagos to fulfil the intent of this song by putting a stop to commandeering of
the political processes in the state by Bola Tinubu and his cronies. Divided
house

Enough is enough. The domination of Lagos politics by one man has gone on
for too long. Lagos must be wrested from the control of Bola Tinubu who has
enslaved the politicians in the state and privatised its resources for the last
16 years. Senator Femi Okurounmu, a Yoruba Afenifere leader and co-coordinator
of the recently concluded National Conference, said early this year: “Now that
the Yoruba people have known that the APC is worse than PDP- in corruption,
impunity and lack of internal democracy- we have to vote against APC.” The
shenanigans of Tinubu at the just concluded APC gubernatorial primaries in
Lagos provide strong confirmation of the veracity of the Senator’s position.
Nobody should be fooled; the primaries were nothing but one big charade. Those
of us who have insisted that there is nothing progressive or democratic about
the APC were sadly proved right once again. Tinubu frustrated every pretension
to democracy in the elections and manipulated his cronies into office; all in
the interest of sustaining his domination of Lagos politics. In the process, he
has sown the seed of his own downfall. A house divided against itself cannot
stand. Tinubu has effectively divided the APC in Lagos. It is now up to the PDP
to capitalise on his high-handedness by coming up with a candidate that can be
sold to Lagosians. If it does, the days of slavery to Tinubu in Lagos will
certainly come to an end on 29th May, 2015. We have seen this before. In 1991,
the Social Democratic Party (SDP) seemed to have Lagos under lock and key. In
the House of Assembly election, the SDP won an overwhelming 26 of the 30 seats.
However, it lost the election of governor to the National Republican Convention
(NRC). Sir Michael Otedola became governor of Lagos as a result of conflict and
split within the SDP and he was the beneficiary of the resultant protest vote.
The evidence suggests that, thanks to Tinubu’s high jinks, history might repeat
itself in 2015 with the probable loss of Lagos by the ruling APC to the
opposition PDP. Mafia godfather Bola Tinubu is a political leopard that cannot
change its skin. The man is not a democrat, has never been a democrat and will
never be a democrat. The truth of the matter is that democracy does not suit
Tinubu’s the political agenda. In a moment of Nebuchadnezzar exuberance before
the Ekiti poll, Tinubu declared: “Nobody, no one under the sun, under the United
Nations Human Rights Charter, can stop Bola Tinubu’s ambition.” After what we
witnessed on Thursday at the APC primaries for the prospective governor of
Lagos, it is clear that the onus is now on the Lagos electorate to put a stop
to Tinubu pomposity in Lagos. Tinubu never even found it necessary to pretend
in the past to be a democrat. According to his own choice of expression, he
fashioned his political style in Lagos State and, indeed, the entire
South-West, grandiloquently as “godfatherism,” claiming: “godfatherism is
biblical, which is why Christians refer to God as their father.” However,
Tinubu’s “godfatherism” is more akin to that of unscrupulous mafia dons in
Sicily. It is certainly anathema to democratic norms and principles. Tinubu’s
“godfatherism” means candidates for public office of his political party are
not elected by popular vote but selected from Tinubu’s bedroom in Bourdillon
Road and then imposed on the party. They are then held under a tight leash by
the Jagaban and are required to do his bidding on pain of being summarily
replaced or impeached. Bisi Akande, former chairman of Tinubu’s legacy ACN
party, declared unapologetically that democracy had no place in the internal
arrangements of the ACN. “Anyone that is not comfortable with that should go
and contest in another political party,” he said. Anti-democratic APC Nothing
has really changed in this stance beyond the fact that ACN has since
metamorphosed into the APC. The first test was the so-called election of the
chairman of the party. Recognising that his choice candidate might not be
elected in a free and fair democratic poll, Tinubu engaged in backroom deals
whereby, instead of electing a new APC chairman, Odigie-Oyegun was rigged into
the office. APC governors went along with this charade out of fear Tinubu might
otherwise lose interest in the new party and deny it valuable South-West
support. The lie was sold to the convention that all other candidates had
agreed to step down for Odigie-Oyegun. As a result, he was declared the new consensus
chairman of the party. Unfortunately for Tinubu, he had to contend in the APC
with new people who were not beholden to him and refused to be subservient to
him. Thus, Tom Ikimi blew the whistle on him, insisting he never dropped out of
the race for Oyegun but was forced out because, at that time, Tinubu had
designs for a Muslim/Muslim APC presidential ticket, with him as the
vice-presidential candidate. Ali Modu Sheriff was even reported to have been so
incensed by Tinubu at an APC NEC meeting that he threatened to beat him up.
Both of these men have since left the APC. Sharp practices With these
antecedents, it is not surprising therefore that the APC primary for the
party’s gubernatorial candidate for Lagos State was yet another sham orchestrated
by Tinubu. Long before the election, Tinubu had unveiled Akinwumi Ambode as his
preferred candidate. Oba Rilwan Akiolu, who Tinubu arrogantly announced is one
of the very few Obas worth his salt in the entire South-West, had already
publicly endorsed Tinubu’s irrefutable choice. But there were already rumblings
that some were not going to take this lying down this time. Muiz Banire, one of
Tinubu’s former acolytes, declared publicly that the imposition of a candidate
on the APC should be resisted. He said: “I want to encourage our people,
particularly APC people, to shine their eyes. They must shine their eyes this
time around and not allow anybody to pull the wool over them. They have their
votes, their rights, and they must go all out to ensure that we have and enjoy
free, transparent, and just primaries.” But this was not to be. Tinubu
manipulated the process from beginning to end. Delegates were not chosen from
the 20 local governments recognised by the APC constitution. Instead of direct
primaries in the different local government wards, indirect primaries were
held, enabling the powers-that-be to select their preferred disciples and give
them voting instructions. To that end, the delegate list was not made known to
any of the candidates, except favourite-son Ambode. Once the results started to
be declared, the other contestants realised they had been conned. They all
stormed out of the venue in protest; leaving only Ambode and Ganiyu Solomon.
Tokunbo Wahab, one of the aggrieved candidates, declared: “I can say
categorically, that what happened today was not a primary but a
pre-orchestrated drama. We shall be making our positions known to the party and
INEC within the next few hours and we shall pursue this to a logical, legal
conclusion.” It should be clear to any but the most politically naive that in a
truly free and fair election, Ambode is no competition for many of the other
contestants. Ambode is not a politician, and he is an unknown political
quantity in Lagos. How then can he prevail over far more popular and
better–known politicians in APC, including Ganiyu Solomon, a serving Senator;
Adeyemi Ikuforiji, a long-standing Speaker of the House of Assembly; and other
household names like Femi Hamzat, the State Commissioner for Works. The results
themselves gave the lie to the entire process. Political lightweight Ambode
received a whopping 3,735 votes; while Hamzat could only manage 1201 votes;
Ganiyu Solomon 272 votes and Adeyemi Ikuforiji 182 votes. Tinubu pleaded with
aspirants to accept the contrived outcome, saying: “You are 12 aspirants and
like the 12 tribes of Israel you have some differences but you must remain one
and united.” Someone needs to inform the Jagaban that the 12 tribes of Israel
were not united. As a matter of fact, they split, with two tribes becoming the
kingdom of Judah and the remaining ten the kingdom of Israel. Emasculated
governor Tinubu’s machinations are all about power and control. By choosing a
candidate without grassroots support, Tinubu is ensuring that he would not be a
threat to him if he becomes governor. Moreover, he would not be able to rely on
his own independent sources of power outside of Tinubu. That way, the man would
be at Tinubu’s beck and call. This ensures that Tinubu would emasculate the
governor; making him entirely dependent on him without having a significant
political structure of his own. If the governor grows wings after a few years
in office, the threat of impeachment by Tinubu’s henchmen in the House of
Assembly would be held as a sword of Damocles around his neck to keep him back
in line. Through the same flawed process, Tinubu loyalists also swept the APC
House of Assembly primaries, even as his supporters swept the election in the
20 LGAs and 30 LCDAs. With this clean sweep, Tinubu’s continued control of the
state legislature is assured should the APC candidates prevail at the polls in
February. It is therefore imperative for the Lagos electorate to throw out
Tinibu and his gang lock, stock and barrel in the coming elections. For too
long, Lagos has been run as the personal estate of one over-bearing man. This
must come to an end. Come February 2015, Lagos voters must send Tinubu into
early retirement, recognising that a vote for APC again is a vote for political
slavery to the whims and caprices of one insatiable godfather.
Opinion NG
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