Connect with us

Trending

Coming Soon: Compulsory Voting For APC, By SOS/Sonala Olumhense

Published

on

Mandatory voting, the idea that a citizen must cast a ballot in an election, is not new.  Of the Inter-Parliamentary Union’s 181 members, about 20currently practice some form of it.

Compulsory voting ensures a higher voter turnout. Where they feel that they have something to lose, voters obey the law to avoid the consequences.

A law such as the one sought by Abbas Tajudeen and Daniel Asama Ago in “A Bill for an Act to Amend the Electoral Act, 2022 to make it Mandatory for Nigerians of Maturity Age to Vote in All National and State Elections and for Related Matters” (HB.1930), will, in principle, empty more Nigerians into the streets on election day.

What this law aims at is that Nigerians would no longer vote as a matter of choice, which is the essence of democracy, but because of the consequences of not voting.  It will basically criminalize even the act of staying in your own home in disgust for disgusting politicians.  Little wonder it has been received with general revulsion.

HB. 1930, which passed the second reading last week in the House of Representatives, appears to beimportant to the Nigerian political establishment.  I conclude that from seeing that it is led by the Speaker, Abbas Tajudeen, a man with no legislative honour: even his own page on the House website shows noLegislative Interests, no Target Achievements, no Awards & Honors, and no other bills sponsored.

There is no record of the Zaria Federal Constituency representative being outraged about the age-long killings in his Southern Kaduna neighborhood or the insecurity that has now grounded Nigeria, threatening to make hunger our story.

Abbas does not have a National Assembly phone number by which Nigerians, particularly his constituents, can reach him.  His email, embarrassinglyenough, is a Yahoo address.  While he is in office through the 1999 constitution; twenty years earlier in Lagos, even as a reporter taking his first steps, I walked into the office of Speaker David Ume-Ezeoke and interviewed him.  Today, no reporter can simply walk through the gates of the National Assembly.

Abbas’s personal immortality comes from his swearing-in as Speaker when he brought the tumult of his own life to the stage with his two wives jostling for a place with him in the limelight.  This is the man who wants every adult Nigerian to vote in elections.

I have reported the national legislature for 46 years.  That includes: “How to Buy A Senator” (2002), “Is the House of Reps for Sale, or Rent?” (2021), and The National Assembly is in Decay (2022).  Only recently, I argued that the legislature was no longer an arm of governance in Nigeria, having morphed into the executive.  That is what the current focus of the Abbas’ House on compulsory voting vindicates.  And this misguided focus reminds Nigerians why they are reluctant to vote in the first place: that when they send people to Abuja, they are mis-representatives.

Think about it: Among the most populous democracies, Indonesia in February 2024 held the world’s largest single-day election to produce a president. Indonesia is an archipelago: the world’s largest: over 18,000 islands and islets, of which 6,000 are inhabited, straddlingthree time zones of often treacherous terrain.

For the election, in that one day, the General Elections Commission had to manage over 204 million registered people, including Diaspora voters, who speak about 150 languages.  Voter turnout was still a remarkable81.78%.

Later in November, the Simultaneous Regional Elections were held in one day to elect 37 governors and vice-governors, 415 regents and vice-regents, and 93 mayors and vice-mayors across the country’s 545 regions.

Similarly, in the 2024 India elections, the world’s most populous country featured over 960 million eligible voters and over 2,700 political parties, including six national and more than 70 state parties.  Because of distances and terrains and cultures and religions and climates, the electoral commission faced tricky scheduling that it overcame in six weeks of implementation.

India’s voting is also electronic.  Unlike ours, however, theirs involved over one million polling stations and 15 million election workers who traveled by air, rail, road, boats and camels to make sure that every eligible voter could vote. With the voting calendar concluded on June 1, the votes were tallied on June 4 and the results announced the following day.  Voter turnout: 65.7%.

Compare that, then, to Nigeria’s 2023 election whichsaw Bola Ahmed Tinubu taking the presidency in a mismanaged election in which voter turnout was an abysmal 25.7 per cent.  According to Chatham House, “President-elect Bola Tinubu received the least number of votes, and lowest winning percentage, of any victor in the Fourth Republic (1999 to date), taking just 36.6 per cent of the total votes cast.”

In other words, Tinubu sits in the presidency on the weakness of a rather humiliating 8.8 million votes, about one-half of what his predecessor, Muhammadu Buhari, received in 2015.

If their APC truly cared, this is the question to which the federal legislature would be responding: that government and key institutions such as the electoral commission, have no credibility.

The challenge is: how do we establish public trust and make voting attractive?  Sadly, APC thinks that, instead, it can beat voting into the electorate.

In 2015, the poor, the hungry, the sick, and the dispossessed dragged themselves to the polls nationwide for the APC seeking to defeat the ruling PDP.  Over the decade which followed, APC has responded by being the filthiest a party can be.  Citizens who could leave, did.

In the next two weeks, the party will step up preparations for the 2027 elections when it celebratesTinubu’s two years in control.

In these 10 years, Nigeria has become increasingly insecure, and is listed among the Most Dangerous Countries in 2025.  Throughout the land, people are afraid to go to their markets or the next village. Children are afraid to go to school.  Farmers cannot farm, let alone harvest.

But for the deluded APC, it is the harvest season on the journey to a one-party state where every Nigerian will mandatorily vote for its candidates.  That is the objective, and they are preparing for that by encouraging every defective politician elsewhere to defect to it.

The Patron-Saint of political defection, Senator Adams Oshiomhole, who announced this Sinner-to-Saint philosophy in 2019—here is the proof—was last week blaming Buhari for Tinubu’s troubles, a blame Tinubu has never found the courage to admit, having been theNational Leader.

APC seems to believe that if they inflict this dagger blow, voters who cannot feed their families will drag themselves through blood and hunger and forests and poverty and kidnappers and militia to vote for it.

The bill proposes a six-month imprisonment or a fine of up to N100,000 for defaulters.  But they forget two things: to recruit millions of new soldiers and build thousands of prisons. The first will be to ransack all of Nigeria, including Sambisa Forest, on election day, and the other to house those arrested.

In 2023, there were 67.4 million voters in 2023, with 29.4 million votes cast.  At the same rate of attrition, there will be over 60 million refusing to vote in 2027.

Come arrest us!

Entertainment

2Baba Cries Out For Help in Now Deleted Instagram Post

Published

on

 

This morning, 2Baba posted “Help Me” on his Instagram stories, but less than 20 minutes later, the message vanished.

For the past few days, his relationship with his current wife, Senator Natasha Osawaru, has been under serious scrutiny, as a series of public incidents have surfaced and fuelled widespread speculation about the state of their marriage.

His cry for help should not be taken lightly. But who will answer him?

Will it be his family, his close friends, or the entertainment industry that has benefited from his legendary career?

At this point, one thing is clear. The music icon seems to be calling for real support and those around him cannot afford to look away.

 

Continue Reading

Trending

BREAKING: Unknown Gunmen Attack Gov. Otti’s Advance Team In Imo, As Scores Were Kidnapped From A Bus Along Owerri-Road Road

Published

on

An advance team of Abia State Governor, Dr. Alex Otti, escaped unhurt after unidentified gunmen opened fire on their vehicle in the early hours of Tuesday, December 2, 2025, along the Umuowa–Ihite axis in Imo State.

The three-member team was en route to Sam Mbakwe Cargo Airport, Owerri, when the attack occurred shortly before the airport junction.

In a statement electronically signed by the Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, Mr. Ukoha Njoku Ukoha, the Abia Government clarified that Governor Otti’s main convoy was not involved in the incident and was nowhere near the location at the time.

“The convoy of His Excellency, Dr. Alex Chioma Otti, was not attacked. No member of the advance team or any other person sustained injury, and no life was lost,” the statement stressed, urging the public to disregard rumours suggesting otherwise.

It was learned that Security agencies have been notified, and investigations are underway to identify and apprehend the assailants.

Meanwhile, a commercial bus plying along Owerri -Aba road towards the Ngor Okpala axis was attacked Monday and scores of passengers were feared kidnapped by yet-to-identify gunmen.

Continue Reading

Trending

Gunmen attack Ngige’s convoy in Anambra

Published

on

 

The convoy of former Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige, was attacked by gunmen in Umuoji, Idemili North Local Government Area of Anambra State.

Ngige who confirmed the incident to newsmen, stated that he was not in the convoy when the attack occurred. He mentioned that several people were shot and injured.

“I was not in the convoy. I’m still alive and well. Those hoodlums have started again. I came to my state to relax, but what happened is unfortunate. I will go back to Abuja. But I assure those who did this, they will not go unpunished.” he said

The vehicles were reportedly returning from a mechanic workshop in Nkpor when the gunmen struck along the busy Umuoji–Nkpor Road leading to Alor, Ngige’s hometown.

According to Mr. Fred Chukwulobelu, Ngige’s former Special Adviser on Media, a policeman in the pilot car was shot, and the attackers, dressed in police and army uniforms, took away his gun and uniform.

He also confirmed that a woman filming the incident was fatally shot. He added that a shop owner who rushed out to see what was happening was also shot; he lost significant blood and is scheduled for surgery, but is expected to recover fully.

The pilot car was riddled with bullets, while the wounded escort leader has undergone surgery and is also expected to recover.

Meanwhile, the Anambra State Police Command said it has launched a state-wide manhunt for the perpetrators.

Continue Reading

Trending