• About
  • Advertise
  • Our Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Thursday, January 15, 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
MetrowatchXtra
  • WORLD
  • BUSINESS
  • POLITICS
  • HEALTH
  • SPORTS
  • OP-ED
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • WORLD
  • BUSINESS
  • POLITICS
  • HEALTH
  • SPORTS
  • OP-ED
  • ENTERTAINMENT
No Result
View All Result
MetrowatchXtra
No Result
View All Result
Home OP-ED

OPINION | What Role for the Opposition?, By Hon. Josef Omorotionmwan | METROWATCH

MetrowatchXtra by MetrowatchXtra
December 25, 2023
0 0
0
•Hon. Josef Omorotionmwan

•Hon. Josef Omorotionmwan

 

Everyone has a way of descending a slippery slope. Peter Gregory Obi, the presidential candidate of the Labour Party at the 2023 election, has long accepted Nigeria as a unit of development.

In coming to grips with the bitter decision of the Supreme Court over the outcome of the election, Obi quickly assigned to himself and his party the enviable role of the Official Opposition to Government.

Obi does not intend to stand against the government on every issue. But in government, there must arise, those critical moments when government, by its acts of commission or omission, is going adrift. Then, the opposition must step in to offer its viewpoints and proffer bold alternatives.

Experience remains the best teacher. At a point, we were afraid that Peter Obi was going to win the election and run into the turbulent waters of facing a National Assembly predominated by an opposition party.

Obi maintained that that was not going to constitute any problem. He had been there before. He became the Governor of Anambra State under the APGA platform, and the state House of Assembly members were 100% PDP.

Of course, they threw him out through an ill-conceived impeachment process. But he was reinstated by the courts; and he ruled successfully with the PDP-dominated assembly.

Obi was right that the legislators are Nigerians first and partymen after that, and that if you were embarking on good policies and programmes, they would go with you, the party differences notwithstanding. He was right.

However, today, we see leaders of the opposition parties, particularly those of the Labour Party persuasion, feeling thoroughly disappointed at the mild gesture of their representatives at the National Assembly.

The feeling here is that these representatives should have carried the fierce fight people saw in them during the campaigns to the chambers of the National Assembly – tie up the Assembly; oppose everything that came from the government; and make the government impossible!

They wonder how these people would be sitting there, while billions and trillions of Naira are being frittered away on luxuries for the revamping of the presidential fleet; the fleet of cars for the First Lady; the presidential yacht; and other frivolities; and this is a nation where every Nigerian is suffering and the leaders, so-called, keep asking people to tighten their belts! What type of opposition do we now have, if they couldn’t bring down the roof: and let the spoilt world spoil? The opposition leaders that ask these questions simply miss the point.

READ ALSO  OPINION | How Not to Benefit from Your Crime, By Hon Josef Omorotionmwan | METROWATCH

The dynamics have changed, somewhat. During the campaigns and the legal battles that followed at the courtrooms nationwide, the Labour Party candidate at Isiala Ngwa, Abia State, could throw banters at his Birnin Kudu APC counterpart in Jigawa State. It didn’t matter. But today, legislators of all party persuasion now live in the same complex; go to work in the same legislative chambers; serve in the same committees; attend the same churches and mosques; eat the same rice; and have just taken delivery of the same jeeps that are good for the worst roads!

Essentially, their struggles are the same and their enemies everywhere are also the same. In the legislatures everywhere, there is an esprit de corps that cannot be broken, no matter how hard anyone tries. Look at it this way: The battles and wars have been fought, won, and lost. In a manner of speaking, treaties have been signed.

It is a new lease of life for the legislators. After the bitter struggles for their elections, they have now arrived in Abuja – some in public transport and some in their old jalopies. But they have recently taken delivery of their N160million jeeps that can ply the worst roads without qualms. This is without party coloration.

Since arriving to Abuja, the legislators have been located to their various legislative quarters that have been tastily furnished.

At the National Assembly, the factors that unite the members – government or opposition – are a lot more than the ones that divide them.

This is the season of unity and full cooperation – the appropriation time. More than any time else, this is the time when legislators bond together to see their Constituency Projects into the budget. The bonding becomes necessary as every legislator sees this as an opportunity to impact his or her constituency.

Every year, the President presents to the National Assembly, an Appropriation Bill for the following financial year. After a short period in the Assembly, the Bill limps out, invariably higher than it was at presentation. Apparently, the Constituency Projects have become a fact of life in Nigeria.

The environment in the National Assembly is one of groupthink and teamwork, rather than confrontation and stark opposition. In retrospect, it would be difficult to imagine how the Late Edwin Ume-Ezeoke (of the NPN/NPP Coalition) would have coped without the active support of his old friend, Hon. Debo Akande of then opposition Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN). During those intensive and acrimonious debates, when it appeared that the roofs were going to come crumbling down, Mr. Speaker had a way of signaling Akande, who would promptly respond. They would put their heads together for a few minutes, after which Mr. Speaker was ready to put the question. This is the type of relationship that exists in most legislatures till today.

READ ALSO  OPINION | We Are All Out of School, By Josef Omorotionmwan

Contrary to the imagination of the distant observer, it would be impossible for the opposition legislator to press for division on every issue that comes before the Assembly. And it is not every time the opposition legislator plays along with the government side that he must be seen as a sell-out or one that has been compromised. He is the one on the spot; and he is the one who must be allowed to exercise discretion.

The foregoing does not vitiate the fact that the leadership of a political party must keep its members together. There must be cohesion within the party. Ideally, this cohesion flows from disciplined leadership.

We remember the Late Chief Obafemi Awolowo (1909 – 1987). In the Second Republic, he kept his eyes on the ball on issues of the UPN. He held regular parliamentary meetings with the UPN members of the National Assembly at his Park Avenue residence in Apapa, Lagos. When it came to issues on which the party should take a solid stand, he issued specific instructions to frontline members of the party. The instructions were strictly executed. To Chief Obafemi Awolowo, any party that is left rudderless, soon faces the risk of extinction.

Truly, a viable opposition exists to put government constantly on its toes. In doing so, the criticism of government must be constructive, and issues based.

National interest must supersede other interests, which presupposes that government and opposition must co-exist peaceably – neither blind confrontation nor total capitulation. Between the two extremes lies a situation of a healthy mutual interdependence, which smoothly oils the engine of democracy.

 

HERE’S WISHING OUR ESTEEMED READERS A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A NEW YEAR FULL OF CONTENTMENT.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Hon Josef Omorotionmwan writes from Canada

Tags: Josef OmorotionmwanNigerian DemocracyOpposition Political Parties
MetrowatchXtra

MetrowatchXtra

RELATED POST

Thoughts on the Opposition, an Insight By Dakuku Peterside
OP-ED

Thoughts on the Opposition, an Insight By Dakuku Peterside

by Kemi Sheriepha
February 10, 2025
0

Like other liberal democracies, Nigeria’s democratic system thrives on the existence of a vibrant and functional opposition. However, the current...

Read moreDetails
Judiciary Biggest Threat to Nigeria’s Democracy, Says Atiku

Tinubu Blurring Line Between State Power, Personal Ambition, Atiku Says

January 30, 2025
Judiciary Biggest Threat to Nigeria’s Democracy, Says Atiku

Judiciary Biggest Threat to Nigeria’s Democracy, Says Atiku

January 28, 2025
Roseline Agbonlahor, Matriarch of Igbinedion Family of Oligie-Igbanke, Dies at 95

The Late Rose Agbonlahor Igbinedion – Nee Aisagbohin (Mama): Tribute By Josef Omorotionmwan

October 29, 2024
OPINION | An Indolent Labour Union and Matters Arising, By Hassan Gimba | METROWATCH

OPINION | Nigeria and Presidential Democracy: Any Better Alternative? … (l), By Hassan Gimba | METROWATCH

June 30, 2024
OPINION | …Manufacturing Poverty in Nigeria, By Prince Charles Dickson | METROWATCH

OPINION | Nigerians Want to ‘Dey Their Dey’…, By Prince Charles Dickson PhD | METROWATCH

March 11, 2024
Load More

APO

Recent Posts

  • JUST IN: 2 More Rivers Lawmakers Join Calls to Drop Impeachment Against Fubara
  • Glo Introduces ‘Travel Saga’, Most Powerful Gaming Experience Yet  
  • Insecurity: Gov Bago Orders Residents to Vacate Kainji Lake Area 
  • What Borno’s Servant-In-Chief,  Zulum, Served Southern Borno Last Week 
  • AFCON 2025: Osimhen Leads Super Eagles against Morocco

Recommended

Gen Chris Musa Assumes Office, Assures Nigerians ‘Shedding of Innocent Blood Over’

Gen Chris Musa Assumes Office, Assures Nigerians ‘Shedding of Innocent Blood Over’

1 month ago
Victory At Last!  Appeal Court Reinstates Adebutu as Ogun PDP Guber Candidate

EDO 2024 | PDP Appeal Panel Recommends Political Solution to Edo Crisis | METROWATCH

2 years ago
MetrowatchXtra

MetrowatchXtra is an online daily newspaper poised to act as a catalyst in our debate and desire for well-governed Nigeria and provide the much-needed platform for all, irrespective of social, religious or political divide, to express their views.
Metrowatchxtra Nigeria

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Our Privacy Policy
  • Contact

© 2024 Metrowatchxtra Nigeria Published by Miraculous Media Connect Limited. All rights reserved

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Politics
  • World
  • Business
  • Science
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Health

© 2024 Metrowatchxtra Nigeria Published by Miraculous Media Connect Limited. All rights reserved