On Legitimacy and Legacy: Tinubu’s head and Troubles ahead (3)

On Tinubu’s One Year in Office

“Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown 👑 until the crown is removed.”

This was the opening line of the first in this series 7 months ago. 

Now, with the 7 issues that threatened the legitimacy of his government resolved by 7 Supreme Court justices, Tinubu’s crown has finally come to stay on his head, albeit with the pleasant unease of troubles ahead.

With victory at the Supreme Court last Thursday, no other charge is more fitting for the septuagenarian President than the closing lines of the second piece in the series: “For a man who was not served his certificate of return “a la carte”, nor indeed many of his certificates, he must brace up to surmount the enormous challenges that come with bearing the burden of 200 million people – of wearing the much-coveted crown of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and serving as the Commander in Chief of its Armed Forces.”

One of the 7 significant threats to Tinubu’s victory at the polls was his certificates. For instance, his opponent, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, travelled over land and sea to prove that Tinubu had presented a fake certificate to the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC.

Beyond Tinubu’s victory at the court, the conduct of INEC in this election attracted the least number of petitions since the 2003 elections.

If the number of election petitions is used as a proxy to measure the conduct of an election umpire, data suggests that the election that brought in President Tinubu and the others in the February 2023 polls could have produced more legitimate governments at the federal and state levels than the previous ones in the last 20 years of Nigeria’s unbroken democracy.

Yes, the legal actions against Tinubu’s legitimacy are now behind, but Tinubu’s legacy is still very much on the line.

In the first piece, we captured 3 commitments Tinubu made that he would be judged by: “Tinubu’s extemporaneous and extraneous mix of words revealed 3 troubles that were top of his subconscious mind: food insecurity, general insecurity, and interethnic insecurities.” 

The question now has gone beyond “What will they eat? “Corn, agabado, ewa, and yam in the afternoon…,” to “Why they often don’t eat?”

On Tinubu’s watch, it’s harder for the people to eat his promised diet due to skyrocketing food prices.

Food inflation, a measure of the rate of increase in prices of food, has increased from 24.8% in May, when Tinubu was sworn in, to 30.6% in September.

This is compounded by the free fall of the Naira against the dollar and other international currencies. Inflation in the local and international context threatens the affordability and availability of food and all that is necessary for human survival and well-being.

Besides the high food inflation rate, the high population growth rate could also be responsible for Nigeria’s food insecurity. “Since the return to democracy in 1999 till 2020, the average population growth rate of 2.7% exceeded the food production growth rate of 2.6%.

In a seeming emergency response to this, the President launched an 11-point plan to revamp agricultural production immediately. “As with most emergencies, there are immediate, medium- and long-term interventions and solutions. In the immediate term, we intend to deploy some savings from the fuel subsidy removal into the agriculture sector focusing on revamping the agricultural sector,” the statement read.

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