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Sabo Mohammed-Nakudu Withdraws Vote Of Confidence On Saraki / List Of 84 Senators That Passed Vote Of Confidence On Saraki / Senate In Rowdy Session Over Vote Of Confidence On Saraki (2) (3) (4)
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Leadership By Vote Of Confidence by kennybabs1980: 6:36am On Oct 04, 2015 |
By a larger plurality, and for the
second time in months, the Senate
has passed a vote of confidence in
Senate President Bukola Saraki over
his apparent face-off with his party,
the All Progressives Congress (APC),
and perhaps the president himself,
Muhammadu Buhari. After a six-week
recess, the Senate resumed plenary
last week, and immediately, some 83
senators rose in unison to endorse
the leadership of Dr Saraki. The first
vote of confidence by 81 senators in
late July boasted two fewer senators
in Dr Saraki’s wagon. Who knows, by
the time a third vote of confidence is
held, for it will certainly be held as
long as the ruling party is in
suspended animation, perhaps nearly
all of the country’s 109 taunting
senators would endorse their
embattled leader. Last week’s larger
plurality, according to reports, was
predicated on the senators’
continuing dismay at what they
describe as meddlesomeness of
external forces in Senate affairs. The
insinuation is not lost on anyone, for
even Dr Saraki himself pointedly
disclosed where his troubles were
coming from.
The vote of confidence was prompted
by Dr Saraki’s arraignment for
offences connected with false
declaration of assets, which the
animated prosecuting counsel said
he needed just two days to establish
beyond doubt. Neither the mere fact
of charging Dr Saraki in court, nor
the fear of proving the Senate
President as untrustworthy, nor yet
the possibility of presenting him with
the moral conundrum of leading
Nigeria’s highest lawmaking body on
shaky ethical ground, was enough to
temper the enthusiasm of the 83
senators from biting the bullet. For
both the consenting senators and the
Senate President himself, what
assumed paramountcy were the
motives behind arraigning Dr Saraki
before Justice Danladi Umar of the
Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) and
the independence of the legislature,
not the substance and merit of the
court case.
In the view of Dr Saraki, the court
case indicated nothing but
persecution. He argues that by
breaking ranks with his party over
the zoning of legislative leadership
positions, he was consequently being
unfairly and needlessly harassed. But
the legislature, he sermonised, must
be independent of the executive arm
if democracy was to flourish. It is not
clear whether he believes himself.
But from all indications, senators, at
least the 83 who endorsed him,
identify with Dr Saraki’s point of view,
and regard the ethical dilemma
facing the lofty and incomparable
position of the Senate President as
secondary to the battle for legislative
independence with which they have
canonised his defiance. Both in the
tribunal and the resumed Senate
plenary, Dr Saraki managed by sheer
sophistry to frame the argument
according to his liking and in his
own ethically distorted worldview.
Said he: “I wish to reiterate my
remarks before the Tribunal, that I
have no iota of doubt that I am on
trial today because I am President of
the Nigerian Senate, against the
wishes of some powerful individuals
outside this chambers. And to yield
ground on this note, is to be
complicit in the subversion of
democracy and its core principles of
separation of powers as enshrined in
our constitution. This, in your
wisdom, is what you have done by
electing me to be the first among all
of you who are my equals.”
The monstrosity of Dr Saraki’s
arguments find parallel only in the
perverted logic of a man who
excuses his life of crime on the
grounds of parental neglect or
societal and economic inequality. It
is indeed possible that Dr Saraki has
found himself before a tribunal today
because he disagreed with his party
and possibly even the president,
though he has tried strenuously to
dissociate the president from the
court case. But for a senior lawmaker
of Dr Saraki’s calibre to conflate
party politics with the juridic
circumstances of his alleged offence
is to stretch logic and morality to
their elastic limit. Unfortunately for
everyone, particularly the senators,
the two cases are not only distinct,
the court case even takes
precedence over the merit of his
Senate leadership election and the
so-called independence of the
legislature. The court case, when it is
over, will establish whether he is
morally qualified to occupy the lofty
position he claimed grandly and
extravagantly that his colleagues
bestowed upon him in June as
primus inter pares.
If senators refuse to be persuaded by
the argument of those who insist on
the court case proving or disproving
Dr Saraki’s bona fides, it is either
they lack the quality their election
supposedly conferred on them, or
that at bottom they are themselves
facing gargantuan ethical conflicts, or
even worse, that they lack the depth,
strength of character and wisdom
required to discriminate between
complex and interwoven phenomena.
Left to the chafing senators who
undiscriminatingly endorsed Dr
Saraki last week, had they been
asked to examine the quandary
former US president Richard Nixon
found himself over Watergate in
1972-74, they would have blamed
partisan politics for his woes rather
than judge the matter on merit, and
dismiss the erring president as
ethically misled and unfit to hold the
high office he was voted into. On
Thursday, observers saw a thaw in
the relationship between President
Buhari and Dr Saraki during the
celebration of the Independence Day
anniversary at Aso Villa. Even if the
smiles between the two indicated a
thaw, it is unlikely to affect Dr
Saraki’s court case, let alone lead the
federal government to a withdrawal or
amelioration of the case.
Not only will the trial go on,
irrespective of anyone’s sympathies
for Dr Saraki regarding his dispute
with party leaders, the case will be
diligently prosecuted and justice,
sans politics, served. It is incredible
that Dr Saraki wishes the case
against him to be settled politically,
as many intermediaries suggest.
Should it be settled politically, it will
not only destroy the ethical
foundation of President Buhari’s anti-
graft war, it will pervert the cause of
justice in Nigeria and establish an
impregnable dichotomy between the
haves and the have nots, and
between the influential and the
ordinary citizen. Worse, it will
presuppose two forms of justice in
the land. The cocooned Dr Saraki
does not give the impression of a
wise lawmaker or leader; this may be
why he continues to conflate the
issues before him. But it is even
more shocking that none of the 83
senators who passed a vote of
confidence in him was able to
deconstruct Dr Saraki’s troubles and
judge appropriately.
Members of the House of
Representatives are also reported to
have unanimously mandated a willing
Yakubu Dogara, the Speaker, to wade
into the Dr Saraki/presidency/APC
matter in order to find a political
solution. They obviously see the trial
as political. Perhaps too, some APC
leaders believe the Saraki case
should and could be settled amicably
and politically. For Dr Saraki,
however, the only way to settle the
matter is to leave him to do what he
pleases at the Senate, to enter into
alliances that suit his purpose but
hurt his party, and to frame the
argument and its resolution along his
peculiar politics and schizoid
worldview. Speaker Dogara faced a
similar problem in the House of
Representatives, but he managed to
settle the misunderstanding with
extensive concessions. However,
neither the president nor APC can
assume the liberty to settle the case
politically before the CCT adjudicates
the matter. The short-term and long-
term consequences will be too grave.
Indeed, irrespective of the outcome
of the CCT case, and given the way
Dr Saraki has framed the stalemate in
the party as a dispute between him
and one or two powerful APC leaders,
neither the Senate for which he
craves independence, nor the ruling
party that sometimes seems to
vacillate so mysteriously, will know
peace with a political settlement.
If the APC wishes to retain influence
over its elected officials, if the values
the president wishes to project are to
endure and prosper, and if the
legislature wishes to sustain a more
realistic and lasting independence,
they must not embrace the atrocious
solution being foisted on them by Dr
Saraki, his unreflective Senate
supporters, and goody two-shoes
House of Representatives
sympathisers. Dr Saraki can continue
to fight or arm-twist his party and
party leaders, a right his position and
privilege confer on him, and even
plot to master the ruling party or
outwit its leaders, as much as his
ambition gives him wing, but the
state, which transcends both him and
his party, must resist being
blackmailed into abandoning the CCT
case. The public must also sensibly
refuse to confuse the two issues.
They are different, and no amount of
intra-party squabble and interminable
votes of confidence can expiate the
infraction of the law federal
prosecutors allege against the Senate
President. Dr Saraki’s case is a bad
one, notwithstanding the political
intrigues he tries to insinuate into it,
and it will in fact remain very bad
irrespective of the sentimental blather
lawmakers deploy to undermine
public understanding of the issues.
The 7th Senate was nothing to write
home about in terms of the integrity,
sanctity and dignity of lawmaking.
The 8th Senate seems adamantly
focused on going down that same or
more monstrously vicious chute. The
country should not indulge them
even if the president were to relent.
www.thenationonlineng.net/leadership-by-vote-of-confidence/ |
Re: Leadership By Vote Of Confidence by SeverusSnape(m): 6:39am On Oct 04, 2015 |
Saraki we know. |
(1) (Reply)
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