Unending ‘war’ between Nigerian politicians and judges
There
are three arms of government, no doubt. They are the Executive, the legislature
and the judiciary. They are very pivotal to sustainability of any democracy.
Other institutions of democracy include the Election Management Body such as
the Independent National Electoral Commission and State Independent Electoral
Commission, Civil Society Organisations, the media and the political parties.
Members of political parties are called politicians. They elect among themselves
leaders to run their party offices. Some of the organs of political parties to
which people are appointed or elected to occupy include the Board of Trustees,
National and State Executive Committees, National and State Working Committees
among others. Part of the functions of political parties includes leadership
recruitment and political socialisation.
Leadership
recruitment function of political parties includes sponsorship of candidates
for elections into both the executive and legislative positions. Cortical to
party nomination process is what is generally known as party primaries which is
an intra-party election. When a party
wins election, it gets to form government. Out of the three arms of government,
politicians populate two of them, that is the Executive and the Legislative
arms. But for the doctrine of Separation of Powers and Checks and Balances, the
politicians would have taken over the control of the judiciary as well.
However, judges in Nigeria do not stand elections as members of the other two
arms do.
Politicians
across party lines are inclined to act with impunity. Many of them prefer to jettison conventional rules for
rules of the thumbs. Whether in power or in opposition, they prefer short cuts
to due process. Rule of law count for little in their dictionary. A Friday, May
24, 2019 Supreme Court judgment had stripped the All Progressives Congress of
its electoral victories in Zamfara State due to the fact that the party
conducted invalid primaries. This means the primaries are not in tandem with
provisions of Section 87 of the Electoral Act 2010, as amended.
Ahead
of the 2019 General Elections, the same apex Court had barred the ruling party from
contesting over 50 elective positions – Governorship, Senate, House of
Representatives and State House of Assembly positions in Rivers State. These
unprecedented act by the Nigerian judiciary has drawn the ire of politicians in
the ruling APC who condemned the judgment of the Supreme Court.
It
was like the judges are on war path with the ruling APC as over 20 out of about
27 Certificates of Return earlier issued by INEC to candidates elect under the
platform of the party were withdrawn on the orders of the courts. I bear witness to the fact that the judges of
different courts who have ruled against APC may not have anything personal
against those candidates. I said this because several other political parties
including the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party have also suffered
similar fate as did some of the APC members. Recall that Nigerian judges have
ruled against PDP in Rivers State when the party withdrew the nomination of
Chibuike Ameachi in 2006 then as governorship aspirant without
cogent and verifiable reason as stipulated in the Electoral Act 2006.
Nigerian
judges in rare demonstration of courage have also similarly upturned the electoral
victories of PDP in a number of governorship cases. Examples that readily come to mind are those
of former Governors Peter Obi of Anambra, Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo, Kayode
Fayemi of Ekiti, Adams Oshiomhole of Edo and Rauf Aregbesola of Osun. These
gentlemen may never have been governors if not for judiciary who assisted to
retrieve their stolen mandates from the PDP. But for the judiciary which came
to the rescue of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, he would not have served
out his tenure as Vice President neither would he have contested the 2007
presidential election under the Action Congress party. It was another ‘locus classicus’ when the Supreme Court
ruled that joint candidacy of contestants
and their running mates end at
the polls and does not extend to government. Hence, in 2007, we witnessed a
divided presidency with the president being in PDP and his vice being in Action
Congress.
When
some governors were trying to elongate their tenure through the backdoor by
misinterpreting Section 180 (2) of 1999 Nigerian Constitution as amended in
2010 to say that their tenure start to count from the day they were sworn in
after winning a re-run elections, it was the Honorable Justices of the Supreme Court who in a
landmark judgment on January 27, 2012 that correctly interpreted that section
of the law that any governor whose election was annulled and asked to be
re-conducted, should he win the re-run, his tenure will start to count from
when he was initially sworn in and not the time he wins re-run. This position
was later reflected in 2010 Constitutional amendment. It was through judicial activism that Nigeria
now has staggered election in which case gubernatorial elections in Anambra,
Kogi, Bayelsa, Ekiti, Edo, Ondo, and Osun now hold on different dates.
Beyond
elections, Nigerian Judiciary has been redressing executive recklessness and
legislative rascality. It was members of
Nigerian bench, judges, who has been nullifying many of the rash and unconstitutional
impeachments of many deputy governors and indeed governors by the State Houses
of Assembly. Among them was the nullification of the impeachments of former
Governor Murtala Nyako of Adamawa State as well as those of the ex-Deputy
Governors Sunday Onyebuchi of Enugu State, Mohammed Garba Gadi of Bauchi State,
and Ali Olanusi of Ondo State.
I
dare say that if not for the steadfastness and activism of some of the judges
and justices of our courts, politicians will have rail-road Nigeria’s democracy
into autocracy with likelihood of military intervention. Rather than tongue-lashing
judges who demonstrated courage by righting the wrongs committed by
politicians, we should rather laud their yeo-man’s effort and encourage them to
do more. Even though in electoral matters it is the politicians that win and
lose, however, they should learn the right lessons from their electoral
misfortunes.
Judges
are not after the job of politicians but give these landmark judgments in order
to promote democratic ethos in our political parties. I know for a fact that
every judgment a judge gives wins him or her friends and enemies alike, be they
in civil or criminal cases including election petitions. It is most unfortunate that politicians from
the other two arms of government have allegedly been relentless in compromising
the integrity of many judges by offering some of them hefty bribes that’s
irresistible. Our political elites should desist from this ignoble practice and
allow members of the bench to carry out their functions without let or
hindrance; fear or favour..
Party
administrators, seeing what the judiciary has done in the aforementioned election
petitions cases should have introspection and be committed to due process in
the management of their party affairs. It should be clear from the electoral
misfortunes of APC in Rivers and Zamfara during the just concluded 2019
elections that party constitution is subordinate to the country’s constitution,
Electoral Act and INEC Regulations and Guidelines for the conduct of the
elections. Will they heed this noble advice? Time will tell.
I am definitely in love with this article. Very insightful.
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