SO FAR, SO GOOD

SO FAR, SO GOOD

The not- too- young- to-run act is bearing fruits, writes

Tony Ademiluyi

In 2018 the National Assembly passed the Not- too- young to- run bill which President Muhammadu Buhari assented to. The general public praised both parties for the realization of this bill as the polity is extremely hostile to youths playing key roles in it. Many youths are marginalized to the point of being mere bag carriers and in some tragic cases, thugs for the ruling elite who don’t want to let go of the sweet elixir of power. The then ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had its youth leader who was well over 50 years of age.

Things were not always like this. How did we get to this sorry state? Once upon a time, youths were entrusted with gargantuan responsibilities that made them stand tall amongst their peers and elders alike. Matthew Mbu was the Minister for Labour and Productivity at the age of 23 in 1954 long before he went to the United Kingdom to study law and end up as a world renowned diplomat.

Anthony Eromosele Enahoro became the nation’s youngest editor at the age of 21 when he edited the Daily Comet, one of the newspapers in the stables of the Zik Group of Newspapers in 1944. He did this without a university degree. He moved the motion for our independence from Great Britain at the age of 30 in 1953. His younger brother, Peter Enahoro a.k.a Peter Pan edited the Sunday Times under the Daily Times stable at the age of 23 in 1958 and became the Editor of the Daily Times at 29 in 1964. Like his elder brother, he possessed no university degree.

The late Bola Ige became the organizing secretary of the Action Group at the age of 23 in 1953. Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe started the struggle for our independence at the age of 33 in 1937 when he founded the irascible West African Pilot. Chief Obafemi Awolowo influenced the election of Ernest Ikoli who won the Presidency of the Nigerian Youth Movement at the age of 32 in 1941. Ernest Ikoli himself edited the Daily Times at the age of 33 in 1926 when the paper was founded.

Prof. Pat Utomi became the political adviser to the then President Shehu Shagari at the age of 27 in 1983 and acting Managing Director of the now moribund Volkswagen of Nigeria at the age of 35 in 1991. Atedo Peterside started the Investment Bank and Trust Company (IBTC) at age 33 in 1989. I can go on and on of the monumental achievements of these illustrious Nigerians in their youth.

The military intervention which destroyed the fabric of the nation and the attendant brain drain and exile of the brightest and the best to foreign lands especially the west left the youths without adequate mentors and led to this current trend of the breeding of overgrown babies who are literarily still in the diapers well into their 50’s in some sad instances.

It was with joy that the bill that was barely signed a year ago has started yielding fruits as the likes of Adebo Ogundoyin got elected as the Speaker of the Oyo State House of Assembly at the age of 32; Abok Ayuba emerged as the Speaker of the Plateau State House of Assembly at 33, Yakubu Danladi became the Speaker of the Kwara State House of Assembly at the age of 34.

Indeed this new trend at the States Houses of Assemblies is cheering news as the youths will be in charge of their elders in the various assemblies. These youths are officially the number three men in their states and can even initiate impeachment proceedings against their governors. The bill was a good omen to the beleaguered polity which was earnestly yearning for progressive reforms.

This change has to find its way to the federal level where the oldies still holds firmly sway. The various political parties should de-monetize the process that leads to the emergence of their leaders so that the youths who are economically disenfranchised will be able to muzzle their way through. We need to encourage politics of ideas and vision rather than the stomach infrastructure politics made popular by the likes of former Ekiti State Governor, Ayo Fayose and the late Alhaji Lamidi Adedibu amongst many others who valued the belly more than the medulla oblongata.

For starters, the amount spent to purchase the nomination forms should be reduced so as not to discourage brilliant but indigent young aspirants. The practice of consensus candidacy should also be abrogated as it makes a mockery of the wonderful idea of the party primaries which is meant to bring out the best in the candidates for the larger benefit of the electorate who have been receiving the short end of the stick since the return to democracy two decades ago. The electorate clearly deserves better and the soothing balm they need is for more younger and cerebral people to be attracted to politics.

The polity should be made less attractive. It’s an avenue for selfless service and should be run on a part-time basis especially the legislature. The do- or- die nature should give way for passion if the large perks are done away with. The assassinations, electoral manipulations, financial impropriety will not abate if the stakes are too high. Politics should stop being the last resort to wealth making when all options fail. In the west, politicians are among the poorest professionals. Bill Clinton left office in 2001 after over two decades in politics in debt. His millions came from his speaking engagements and his book writing.

Tony Blair became a Member of Parliament at 30 in 1983 and was in partisan politics for 24 years which didn’t make him a millionaire. His millions came after he stepped down from Number 10 Downing Street in 2007 from speaking deals and consultancy assignments. The practice of our legislators being the highest paid in the world for doing next to nothing especially those who are either absentees or perpetual bench warmers should cease forthwith.

The ascension of Ogundoyin and co is a sign of greater things to come. We hope this can be speedily replicated at the federal level so that the dividends of democracy can be better felt by the hapless hoi polloi who have been emotionally and physically battered since 1999.

Ademiluyi wrote from Lagos

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