Two for the price of one
Obviously you read
about the president’s (unelected) wife and Nigeria’s first lady
publicly berating a constitutionally elected, federalism-protected and
a-NOT-even-answerable-to-the-president-himself governor on an executive
decision he had taken, which (mind you!) he is lawfully empowered to
do. Totally unscripted, it was just the type of news that makes for
compulsive viewing/reading!
So, is our brand of
democracy different from that practiced all over the world? We seem to
have re-written the rules to suit our whims. Are the spouses of our
political officers for example, also elected by proxy in our brand of
democracy? Is it like a bargain purchase: buy-one-get-one-free?
We do not seem to
be able to separate our elected persons from their spouses; and it may
be deliberate. Methinks nobody wants to criticise the overt, visible,
in-your-face spouse because nobody knows when it will be their turn to
enjoy such privileges. You know, they could also benefit from the same
office; who no wan shine?
Let’s imagine if
Chief A had bad-mouthed the office of first lady of his predecessor in
his domain, would Madam Chief A still be able to ‘reign’ as first lady
subsequently? We saw some political office-holders promise not to
unleash their wives on us to ‘reign’ as first ladies, but what did we
see? Presidents, bullied, out schemed and coerced by feminine wile,
turn the proverbial blind eye because ‘after all, madam is not the one
who bastardised the system’. Why will it be when it is now ‘madam’s
turn’ that the office will end? Abeggi!
For crying out
loud, are we not all guilty of sycophancy when in breach of established
international protocol for instance, we address unelected spouses as
‘your Excellency’? Who dey ‘dash’ the title ‘Excellency’?
With the jury still
out on whether or not we truly ‘elected’ them, we are further forced to
contend with a warped Bill/Hillary-Clinton-2-for-1 bargain? Must
spouses be in our faces, all the time? Is it cultural, because they
apparently intercede on behalf of all? When we encourage and/or imply
parallel powers, paraphernalia of office and so much visibility to any
spouse, then we must expect limits to be blurred.
When spouses of
elected persons are given offices, staff and full-fledged budgets, who
monitors things? Who would have the audacity to perform the oversight
function over such spending?
Aberrations are
what one gets when one ignores the law per se. Starting with simple
breaches, they are entrenched when we observe laws only in the breach.
The aberration here began with the decision of a state governor to
jettison essential state work to entertain the president’s wife, a
chore that should have been naturally and more appropriately left to
the governor’s wife.
If the governor
really appreciated the concept of true federalism as espoused in our
Constitution, he would have cherished, respected and protected his
space.
The rule of thumb
universally, is that he who comes to engage one in one’s territory,
shall play the game by one’s rules only. You come to me on my own
terms, period!
Of course, our
first lady has stepped up her brief since the ‘presidential campaign’
started. The danger therein is the perception that whatever she says,
positively or negatively, reflects the president’s thoughts and
feelings. So, when she endorses governors for a second term during her
visits, she enters the political arena.
One is left with
the impression that the possibility of someone else emerging in that
state as governor after election is foreclosed. So, could the governor
have been hoping perhaps to be endorsed as his counterpart in Delta was?
That incident has
reiterated the need for more training on matters of real protocol for
political office holders and those around them. As the president
prepares to finally formally (expressly) declare his interest in the
race, we must not allow mere norms of culture and tradition to color
the law, otherwise there will be a Gordon-Brown moment happening here.
The professional protocol coach must honestly tell people their
limitations, and there are many!
A country
bastardized by military rule has left elected officials thinking they
need to be dictatorial and unbending to show authority like the
military did.
They resent being questioned or queried by those who supposedly elected them.
Should a democratically elected person think in terms of being in power or in office?
Does their being in office mean they have all the answers? Therefore, must we accept their opinion just because?
That thought was what the first lady was trying to convey: that the
governor should not think that he has such a monopoly of knowledge, he
is not even willing to consider another opinion. The message was apt,
undoubtedly. Only thing is: these positive thoughts should have been
expressed privately!
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