Nigerians condemn high cost of nomination forms
Nigherianshave condemned the high cost of expression of interest and
nomination forms imposed by political parties on members to contest the
various political offices in the country.
They however blame it on
the inability of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to
control and regulate funding of the election by registered political parties in the country.
The Deputy Speaker, Osun State House of Assembly, Hon. Adegboye
Akintunde (APC), noted that the intent form fee for Presidential
aspirants on the platform of APC which is put at N27.5 million was not
exorbitant but a reflection of the type of the government that we are
running in the country.
Akintunde representing Osogbo State
Constituency explained that the nation’s electoral body had been unable
to control and regulate the running of affairs of parties regarding the
aspirations to political offices and the funding of the election.
“There is no commission regulating the affairs of parties in the
country; elsewhere, for general elections, there is a commission
regulating the elections which would include how the parties are running
their affairs stating the aspirations to the candidacy and the funding
of the election.
“This proper regulation of parties in Nigeria is
missing and that is why corruption in election and in government is the
order of the day.
“In real sense of it, the amount is not too much
for anybody aspiring for the presidency of a country like Nigeria, not
forgetting that the party itself would promote the candidate in the
general election with the campaign in all the 36 states of the country.
“Whoever emerges as the candidate does not alone bankroll the
electioneering campaigns but his/her goodwill must be able to carry him
to a length and that is the reason why APC national chairman proffered
that the amount is to differentiate between the ‘boy and the man’.
“The fee is not in any way too much. What is necessary is to have
Electoral Commission that would regulate spending on election by
individual parties,” he stated.
He said the law as amended by the
National Assembly to allow independent candidates will in no way affect
the modus operandi of the party politics we are used to.
“If it is
not practically working in the advanced countries, I cannot see how it
would affect the right candidates to have a space in our polity.
However, a chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Lekan
Balogun, described it as monetisation of democracy. He said: “It is
wrong, it is undemocratic, it is not likely to throw up the best
candidate.
“The best candidate may not necessarily be the richest
candidate. In the civilised democracies, the wealthy/rich people often
place their wealth at the service of the real intelligent political
activists and usually, the amount required is minimal that most people
can afford it.
“My mind boggles at the millions of Naira being
demanded by political parties from aspirants; it’s very sad. It is
probably pardonable for some political parties, whose members don’t
claim to be progressives, but, it is certainly much worse for the party
that tags itself progressive.
“The idea of independent candidacy may
not necessarily be the solution; such people may be very rich and can
buy their way through at the expense of those who are committed to
democracy. The answer is to demonetise the democratic process,” the
former lawmaker said.
Speaking in the same vein, a lawyer and an
activist, Femi Aborisade, described it as monetisation of politics in
Nigeria and posited that “it is essentially aimed at excluding the poor
from having access to political power and/or to subject them to being
robotically subservient to their political godfathers.
“However, if
the constitutional amendment which allows independent candidature is
successfully passed, it may reduce the tendency of monetisation of the
process, but may not completely eliminate it.
“This is because, not
many candidates for election may have the social stature and/ or
resources to independently build the political structure to conduct and
finance elections,” he stated.
Jonathan Enegide, a Benin based
lawyer, in his own reaction said: “First of all, there is freedom of
association, any political party has its prerogative to regulate its
operation, membership and indeed finance.
“All these are governed by
inbuilt rules and regulations. The right to aspire to any position is
voluntary. Where political parties decide to fix various amounts for the
purchase of expression of interest and nomination forms, they are
acting within their rights legally.
“The issue as to whether the
amount is adequate or outrageous is within the realm of moral discourse.
This is because the political parties have the right to adopt measures
aimed at raising funds to run the parties such as selling forms and
raising revenue.
“Moreover, elections all over the world are not
cost effective and this is also another means of accessing financial
strength and stamina of the aspirant otherwise it becomes an all comer’s
affair,” he stated.
Also speaking on the issue, the Head of
Department of Urban and Regional Planning, Osun State University,
Professor Samson Akinola, said the amount is not too much since those
aspiring are corrupt people and not trustworthy and who have stolen
money at one level or the other.
“Those that belong to political
parties can be asked to pay any amount since they are there to loot and
share among themselves. But independent candidates should be allowed to
pay about N10,000 and be screened on credibility, manifesto, vision and
strategies of actualising the vision,” he stated.
He therefore
called on the media and Nigerians to create platforms for the emergence
of independent candidates, adding that it is a more viable method to
allow those with good track record, pragmatic methods and strategies of
redeeming our ailing democratic system to contest.
An aspirant of
the Abak Federal Constituency under the platform of PDP and former
Deputy Speaker, Akwa Ibom State House of Assembly, Hon. Uwem Udoma, has
described the exorbitant nature of nomination forms for the forth-coming
elections as a two-edged sword.
He said such charges might on the
one hand, shut out qualified poor Nigerians from seeking elective
offices and on the other hand, become necessary to keep the parties
equal to their responsibilities.
The former lawmaker who considers
this development an unhealthy threat to the nation’s democracy opined
that the parties should explored other avenues to generate funds to run
the parties and elections other than making it an exclusive preserve of
the moneybags.
“I agree that the nomination forms are expensive and
very exorbitant and if we continue in that form, it would mean that we
are bringing money politics and it’s not going to augur well for people
because if you are not able to afford that kind of money, no matter how
qualified you may be, you cannot make it. So, it’s only the rich that
can make it, and most of the rich people may not have the requirement to
be elected.
“And it’s not all of them that can be accepted by the
electorate. So when you have to be defeated because of that financial
demarcation, it means the poor people would not have a chance.
“I
may want the party to do something, maybe try to generate funds from
elected office holders, grants from Federal Government and other means
and then drop this nomination form thing so that everybody would have an
opportunity.
“Then when such people are elected into offices, they
can pay some percentages of their annual salaries to the party. The
party should bring mechanism to raise funds and bring down the
nominations forms,” he suggested.
Meanwhile, a Senior Advocate of
Nigeria (SAN), Femi Falana, has criticised the All Progressives Congress
presidential aspirant, Maj. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, for obtaining a loan
of N27.5 million to procure his party’s expression of interest and
nomination forms for the 2015 presidential election.
Falana made the
remark on Thursday in Abeokuta, Ogun State, while speaking at the
Nigeria Union of Journalists, Paramount FM Chapel Press Week.
Falana, who was the guest lecturer at the event, spoke on the topic,
‘Current Security Challenges: Implication for 2015 Elections’.
He noted that the action of the former head of state was indefensible, stressing that it amounted to monetisation of politics.
A chieftain of the APC in Ekiti State, Barrister Funminiyi Afuye, has
urged the leadership of various political parties in Nigeria to review
their policies on party primaries in order to strengthen the nation’s
democracy.
Speaking with the our souce in Ado-Ekiti on the high bill
placed on parties’ Nomination Forms, Afuye noted that a situation where
aspirants had to go a-borrowing before obtaining the form would not be
in the overall interest of democracy and Rule of Law.
Rather than
the public condemning aspirants who borrowed to contest, the former
member of Ekiti State House of Assembly declared that whoever borrowed
has demonstrated genuine intention to serve the people.
10/27/2014
Nigerians condemn high cost of nomination forms
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