Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari’s party may be wracked by defections
and his battles against corruption and an Islamist rebellion under
fire, but he has one crucial advantage in securing re-election:
incumbency.
The 75-year-old leader is going to need all the
tools available to repeat his 2015 victory — the first time an
opposition party won power at the ballot box in Africa’s biggest oil
producer. At his disposal, analysts say, is a record with some policy
successes, as well as the state power to reward or punish.Buhari
“seems prepared to deploy the institutions of state to his advantage,”
said Clement Nwankwo, executive director of the Policy and Legal
Advocacy Centre in the capital, Abuja. “It’s kind of a plan to beat
people into line.”
Buhari — who was briefly Nigeria’s military
ruler in the 1980s — will be fighting against perceptions the country
hasn’t gotten any safer nor less corrupt during his tenure. A promise to
shatter Boko Haram’s northern Islamist insurgency may have been partly
fulfilled, but inter-communal violence has replaced it as Nigeria’s
deadliest threat. Nigeria’s corruption perception ranking soared this
year despite a much-touted war on graft.
Buhari is benefiting
from a recovering economy with rising crude prices after a 2016
recession triggered by the sharp fall in the price of the commodity that
is the country’s main export. Foreign-exchange reforms by the
government have helped to stabilize the naira. Inflation decelerated for
the 18th straight month in July as food prices climbed at the slowest
rate since March 2016.
Improved Economy“Oil output
has been fairly steady and prices are better than anticipated,” said
Antony Goldman, West Africa analyst at London-based PM Consulting.
“Economic fundamentals are better than when Buhari was elected.”
When
the head of the Senate, Bukola Saraki — Nigeria’s third-most powerful
politician — joined more than 50 APC members in leaving for the
opposition People’s Democratic Party over the past month, the reaction
was swift. First his home was blockaded; days later security officers
barred entry to the legislature itself. It’s an exodus that Buhari needs
stemmed if he’s to keep afloat a party with a campaign machine spanning
Africa’s most populous nation of almost 200 million people.
The
PDP said the move was an attempt to smuggle in Buhari loyalists and
remove Saraki, who’d adjourned sittings until late September. Amid
public outrage, the government and APC condemned the deployment as
unconstitutional and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, who’s acting head of
state while Buhari’s overseas, dismissed the state security chief.
‘Damage Control’“It was a crucial act of damage control by the acting president,” said Nwankwo.
Saraki
said he’s considering challenging for Buhari’s job in the coming vote
on the platform of the PDP, as the country needs a business-friendly
leadership that is currently lacking.
Buhari’s war on corruption
gives him a way to coerce his opponents, according to Cheta Nwanze, an
analyst at Lagos-based business advisory, SBM Intelligence.
Buhari
signed an executive order in July empowering him to freeze the bank
accounts of those implicated in graft investigations. The opposition
says that it will be used to punish defectors, undermines Nigeria’s
courts and violates the principle of presumption of innocence.
Critics
point to the case of Benue state Governor Samuel Ortom. Shortly after
he left the ruling party for the PDP, the Buhari-controlled financial
crimes agency moved in to freeze Benue state’s bank accounts, citing a
corruption investigation. Ortom’s office has asked why the probe only
happened once the governor had left the APC.
‘Concrete Achievements’Buhari
has other elements in his favor. Amaka Anku, an Africa analyst at
Washington D.C.-based risk advisers Eurasia Group, pointed to national
railway lines and a metro system in the capital completed during his
first term.
“Buhari will have concrete achievements to point to on the campaign trail,” she said.
The
president may also get a boost from the opposition’s disunity. Still to
name a presidential candidate, the PDP has at least a dozen would-be
contenders.
While former President Olusegun Obasanjo — a powerful
voice — is campaigning against Buhari’s re-election, he’s also, due to
long-standing differences, opposed to the candidacy of his former
deputy, Atiku Abubakar. A northerner, like Buhari, who may be able to
win support on the incumbent’s home turf, Abubakar is widely seen as the
only challenger proposing coherent policies.
“Compared to 2015,
the president has lost some support, but the challenge for the
opposition will be to win that support,” Goldman said. “The PDP is still
in search of a personality to unite the party.”
Source: Bloomberg
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