Lessons From The Anambra Gov Election | Punch

It’s true the 2017 Anambra State governorship election has come and gone, but it could not have done so without some inherent lessons to be learnt by all concerned. Indeed, before the election, many had doubted that it would hold, let alone peacefully like it turned out. As the self-anointed ‘Light of the nation’, many non-indigenes of the state had even seen the election as a litmus test for its supposed brightness. Many of them even feared that it would end a stillbirth, necessitating the declaration of a state of emergency in the state. There is only God to thank that it never came to pass.

As it stands, following that landslide re-election of Governor Willie Obiano to serve out another four-year tenure in office, the state now has a unique opportunity to reassert itself even more brightly than ever before. Given the nature of the victory, Obiano should see the result as a beginning rather than an end. It has indeed given him a golden opportunity to write his name in gold in the template of all those privileged like him to have governed the state. True, the names of Chris Ngige and his predecessor Peter Obi have often resonated when the office is recalled, Obiano has a truly unique opportunity to surpass the duo if he plays his card well enough. A supposition ought to be doubled given the enormous resources he is rumoured to have spent to make the dream a reality.

Easily, the incumbent reason to be derived from the foregoing is that elections do not often go according to the plans of all. The other parties involved would have by now realised what they did or did not do right as the race wore on. For instance, while all the while Obiano and his All Progressive Grand Alliance were busy winning converts, the rest of them watched their members being converted. This could not be for nothing.

The greatest loser in this case was the Peoples Democratic Party. After their fractional primaries, virtually all their intended forerunners but the adjudged winner refused to throw their weights behind the party in the election. This saw them going to war divided against themselves. And sadly enough, there appeared to be no effort by the PDP candidate, Oseloka Obaze, to try a mending of fences as the battle drew closer. A failing they will no doubt be ruing by now that they have lost an election they would ordinarily have counted themselves as one of the possible winners.

Somehow, this also affected the All Progressives Congress. As always, many pundits had adjudged them the party to beat on account of their being in power at the centre. After all, it was widely argued, the results of prior elections in Edo and Ogun states were there to be cited. The prognostication had appeared to fly following their final rally for the election, with no less a person than Vice President Yemi Osibanjo putting up a personal appearance. All that however paled somewhat when weighed against the reality that their own primary also ended up throwing up a kind of an underdog. Like many have stressed ever since, perhaps the result of the election would not have been such a landslide like it turned out had the APC presented its best choice for the race.

The only other lesson there is to point out remains the fact that by now the lone wolves who had thought they could have made headway in the polls as virtually independent candidates would have counted their teeth with their tongues. Though Anambra is not that big a state compared to some others, it holds that it is still far from one its governorship can be won without a solid party structure nurtured over time. The idea of winning the governorship of any state for that matter because of a splendid performance in a debate of your townsmen and women casting block votes for you is yet to dawn. Arguably, for one to nurse such a hope aptly amounts to such a candidate taking people for granted; a decision they may carry over any other time such a candidate decides to hoist his flag again.

All said and done, the Anambra election coming peaceful and unbiased like it did is really worth toasting to. Like the winner has asked, all the contestants should rally round him to see that the state makes the most of it. And hopefully in four years time, we can do it again to the glory of our state so that we shall remain a light unto the entire nation as always.

Mascot Tecu Ezeukoma, Awada, Obosi, Anambra State

END

CLICK HERE TO SIGNUP FOR NEWS & ANALYSIS EMAIL NOTIFICATION

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*


This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.