Goodluck Jonathan, Nigeria's 'Worst' President Turned Best Ex-President
The immediae past President of Nigeria, Goodluck Jonathan is being hailed as one of Nigeria's best ex presidents.
Ex President Goodluck Jonathan
Few men in the history of any nation are as privileged and
fortunate, as former president Goodluck Jonathan, to have held every
important position of authority and power, consecutively for sixteen
unbroken years. First elected in 1999 as deputy governor, then governor
in 2005, later as vice president in 2007 and finally in 2010 as
president and commander in chief of the armed forces, of the Nigerian
federation. Reputed to be amiable, simple and meek; his steady rise to
power has been attributed more to divine providence and sheer luck, as
his first name implies, than any track record of proven competence and
capacity at statecraft.
Born on Nov 20, 1957 in the riverine community of Otuoke in Bayelsa
State, to Ijaw parents, Goodluck Jonathan is no doubt Nigeria’s
greatest personal beneficiary of the Fourth Republic. Expectedly, no
literature is exhaustive and there is no consensus of opinion yet about
his stewardship as president between May 6th, 2010 and May 29th 2015,
because it maybe is too early to fully appraise his tenure barely 14
months after he left office. But one thing is certain, Nigerians
rejected him at the 2015 general elections and elected the candidate of
the then opposition APC, Muhammadu Buhari as president. The 2015 general
election was historic because in a rare precedence in Africa, unheard
off in Nigeria, an incumbent president lost an election.
However, Jonathan’s loss of election and PDP’S fall from power
after sixteen years was long time coming. The beginning of the end for
the PDP started with the predicted and eventual death of former
President Umar Musa Yar’Adua on May 5th 2010 after a battle with
terminal illness. Events emanating from the long medical vacation of
Yar’Adua and his inability or unwillingness to hand over the mantle of
powers to Goodluck, his vice, even in acting capacity, created quite
some political tension in the country. Members of the Yar’Adua
administration’s kitchen cabinet, the “cabal”, in which Jonathan was an
outsider, were running the country by proxy, because Chief Kaase
Aondoaka, the attorney general proclaimed that the president could rule
from anywhere, including his sick bed.
But in a rare show of unity, the country rose to the occasion and
with one voice urged the then President Yar’Adua to toe the path of
honour (Olusegun Obasanjo) and constitutionality (Muhammadu Buhari), by
handing over to his vice (the Save Nigeria Group) while unable to
discharge his functions as head of state. Through the ingenious
“doctrine of necessity”, the National Assembly of the federation
mandated Goodluck Jonathan to act as president in the absence of the
substantive president and commander in chief. The nation heaved a sigh
of relief and normalcy was restored. This event further endeared
Goodluck Jonathan to Nigerians, with an attendant goodwill because he
was perceived as maligned and marginalised in the scheme of things in
the Yar’Adua presidency.
Once he assumed full powers as president, it wasn’t long before
another Goodluck Jonathan was unveiled. Nigerians mistook his timidity
and naiveté for simplicity; for he barely understood Nigeria and
Nigerians and remained an outsider in the power equation throughout his
tenure. Beneath the calm and innocent look of his was a man driven by
high ambitions and the quest for power; he moved swiftly to consolidate
his hold on power and prepared for his eventual election as president.
His gentle manners and politeness effectively concealed a very
vindictive fellow who rarely forgives political adversaries; he quickly
moved against all his opponents and stumbling block to power, beginning
with AGF Aondaoaka, whom he redeployed from the justice ministry to
special duties and the sacking of the then PDP chairman Vincent
Ogbulafor, whose sin was in prematurely declaring an embargo on a
Southern candidacy for the presidency, because the North had not run its
course. This was without first seeking the opinion of the president, a
Southerner, who was set to run for the presidency in clear violation of
the zoning arrangement.
All these attributes and more were to shape the form and structure
of his presidency. His nomination of Mohammed Namadi Sambo, the then
governor of Kaduna as his vice president was his first political
misstep. This action was interpreted as deliberate under the influence
of a strong Christian lobby, whose lifelong interest was in having a
Christian governor in Kaduna. This perception was further entrenched by
Jonathan’s inability to act decisively during the Jos mayhem, which many
blamed on the discriminatory policies against Hausa-Fulani Muslims by
the then governor Jonah Jang, a Christian and close ally of the
president. Pastor Ayo Oristejiafor, the very radical CAN president
actually assumed the role of Jonathan’s spokesman and defender with such
zeal and combativeness that irritated many rational minds. Jonathan
elevated religiosity to a state affair. He routinely toured churches and
often delivered political sermons from the pulpit, which was
interpreted as trying to get the support of the Christian community by
appealing to their religious sentiments. Members of Jonathan’s native
ethnic Ijaw in a clear misjudgment of events leading to the emergence of
their son assumed the ownership of the president of the whole
federation, forgetting that his rise to power was made possible by all
Nigerians, from North and South; Muslim and Christian. They verbally
assaulted anybody they perceived as opposed to their son. Genuine and
constructive criticisms were met with hostility and outright abuse and
invectives. Nobody was spared in this inquisition as it was their turn
to “chop”, since others have had their turns. With this mindset,
corruption blossomed and Jonathan’s disposition appeared favourable to
this ugly trend. Therefore, the Jonathan presidency was narrowed along
religious and ethnic lines and was perceived to be sectional, leading to
the build up of widespread resentment against him. Jonathan’s
sectionalism unfortunately casted a shadow of doubt on the sincerity of
the motives behind his numerous policies. Even his remarkably modest
economic achievements were under-appreciated because of his political
incorrectness.
Matters were further compounded when, against wise counsel,
Goodluck Jonathan expressed interest to run for a fresh term of office
in 2011 against the established zoning agreement within the ruling PDP.
The zoning and rotation of offices and positions of state arrangement in
the PDP was put in place to ensure equitable distribution of resources
to all parts of the Nigerian federation. It however quickly degenerated
into the equitable sharing of loot by thieving political elites from
every part of Nigeria. Jonathan did not properly and skillfully
negotiate his way to power. He got the PDP nomination through blackmail,
threats and brazen dishonesty, which left a bitter taste in the mouth
of most Northerners. Jonathan and his supporters, drawn from mainly his
ethnic group, region and religious group, made nonsense of the concept
of zoning and declared it undemocratic and unconstitutional. This brazen
violation further altered the sharing of resources or loot by skewing
it in favour of Jonathan’s section of the country. With a compromised
opposition (ACN/ANPP) and a weak and sectional opposition (CPC),
Goodluck Jonathan got easily elected. His election polarised the country
along the North/South divide. Known or unknown to Jonathan, the
political class across the North was only going to support him for one
term of four years only. Therefore, when he made attempts to get
re-elected in 2015, he was roundly defeated by a coalition of power
brokers from across the country who formed the APC. By the end of his
tenure, a majority of Nigerians held the belief that Goodluck Jonathan
was the worst president in the history of Nigeria.
Once he lost his re-election bid, we again saw a different
Jonathan. We saw a man who rose from the ashes of defeat, dusted up
himself, accepted his fate by promptly conceding defeat and putting
across that historic phone call to his opponent, Muhammadu Buhari,
congratulating him, to the relief of his countrymen and the delight of
the international community, who had been experiencing concerns over an
oncoming implosion. With this first step, Jonathan began a giant leap
from his perception as Nigeria’s worst president ever to Nigeria’s best
ex-president. He quickly followed up this gesture by organising the most
comprehensive and seamless transition process ever seen in our country.
Jonathan’s greatest achievement was in losing an election which he
supervised as an incumbent, because that historic event has certified
our democracy as fully grown and mature. A loss for Jonathan has become a
massive gain for Nigeria. Nigerians are now confident in the electoral
system having been emboldened by their ousting of an incumbent through
the ballot. To Jonathan’s credit, he appointed a man of proven integrity
and capacity, Attahiru Jega; a scholar of international repute as the
chairman of INEC. An appointment that was based on merit and not on
sectionalism, Jega’s performance was unparalleled in our electoral
history. All the innovations and reforms carried out by Jega were made
possible by the financial and moral support of Jonathan, thereby
transforming Nigeria’s democratic experiment to a proven theory – one in
which power truly belongs to the people.
Goodluck Jonathan had a choice in the 2015 election; the Mugabe or
Nkurinziza option was open to him, but he chose the path of civility and
statesmanship by bowing to the will of his countrymen. He famously
declared that “my ambition is not worth the blood of any Nigerian”. He
kept to his word and Nigeria was pulled from the precipice of imminent
implosion. His role as ex-president is very inspiring and exemplary,
which has greatly stabilised the polity amidst various agitations,
particularly in the Niger Delta. He politely turned down the role of
opposition leader by declining the chairmanship of the PDP BoT. Instead
he is giving full support to his successor to succeed. Even in the face
of provocation and harassment, Jonathan as a statesman has maintained a
cordial relationship with Buhari and channels his views directly to him
without going public like a politician.
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- Majeed Dahiru, a public affairs analyst, writes from Abuja and can be reached through dahirumajeed@gmail.com.
Culled from from Premium Times Opinion
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