Nigerians are so used to the idea that an incumbent should win
presidential elections that President Goodluck Jonathan’s failure to
beat Gen Muhammadu Buhari needs some explaining.
Here are five reasons why the opposition won:
1: Harder to rig
Past elections have been marred by serious irregularities and
suspicions of rigging. In 2007 observers said the presidential poll was
not “credible”. In 2011 the vote was considered to be better run but
observers said that rigging and fraud still took place.
This time the electoral commission took more steps to prevent rigging, including new biometric voters cards.
Also President Jonathan’s party, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP),
had lost control of some key states which meant it could not control
the electoral process there.
2: Boko Haram and security
The election took place against the background of an Islamist
insurgency in the north-east of the country. The Boko Haram militant
group has killed 20,000 people and forced some three million others from
their homes and President Jonathan was criticised for not getting to
grips with this.
The poll was delayed for six weeks to give time for the security
situation to improve, but even though most areas controlled by Boko
Haram were recaptured, it seems to have come too late for many peopleUnited opposition, crumbling PDP
The PDP has been described as an election-winning machine. When it
was created it united a northern elite with leading politicians from the
south, but that alliance has broken up and the party lost some key
figures. Even former President Olusegun Obasanjo came out against Mr
Jonathan.
At the same time, the opposition managed to unite under the All
Progressives Congress (APC) banner. The last six weeks of desperate and
dirty campaigning, in which the APC responded in kind, was not enough to
turn the tide
.: Economy
Nigeria is Africa’s biggest oil producer and its largest economy, but
many fail to feel the benefits with nearly half the population living
below the poverty line. Continued corruption is seen as partly being to
blame.
National income is due to grow by more than 5% this year and next
year, but people did not seem in the mood to thank Mr Jonathan for this.
Time for a change
APC supporters chanted “change” wherever they went and it seems to
have caught the mood. The PDP has been in power since the end of
military rule in 1999, and 2015 is the year that Nigerians decided that
someone else should have a go at sorting things out.
President-elect Buhari now has to prove he really can change things.
.
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