AMERICAN
POLITICAL SYSTEM
The United States is by size of electorate the second largest
democracy on the universe or globe while India is the second largest and
Indonesia comes third. America is the most powerful nation on earth,
politically, economically and militarily, but its political system is in many
important respected, unlike any other in the world. To
understand any country's political system, it is helpful to know something of
the history of the nation and the background to the creation of the (latest)
constitution. But this is a fundamental necessity in the case of the American
political system. This is because the Constitution of the United States is so
different from those of other nations and because that Constitution is, in all
material respects, the same document as it was over two centuries ago.
There were four main factors in the minds of the 'founding
fathers' who drafted the US Constitution:
- The
United States had just fought and won a bloody War of Independence from
Britain and it was determined to create a political system that was totally
different from the British system in which considerable authority still
resided in a hereditary King (George III at that time) or Queen and in
which Parliament was increasingly assertive in the exercise of its growing
powers. Therefore the new constitution deliberately spread power between
the three arms of government - executive, legislature and judiciary - and
ensured that each arm was able to limit the exercise of power by the other
arms.
- The
United States was already a large country with problems of communications
and a population of varied background and education. Therefore, for all
the intentions to be a new democracy, it was seen as important to limit
the influence of swings in public opinion. So the election of the
president was placed in the hands of an Electoral College, rather than the
subject of direct election, and the terms of office of the president and
the two chambers of the legislature were all set at different lengths.
- The
United States was the creation of 13 individual states, each of which
valued its traditions and powers, and so the overarching federal
government was deliberately limited in its powers compared to the position
of the central government in other nations. Arguably the later Civil War
was about states' rights more than it was about slavery and there is still
a real tension today between the states and federal government.
- The
original 13 states of the USA were of very different size in terms of
population and from the beginning there was a determination by the smaller
states that political power should not be excessively in the hands of the
larger states. Therefore the Constitution is built on a 'Great Compromise'
between the Virginia plan (representation by population) and the New
Jersey plan (equal representation for all states) which resulted in the
House of Representatives being constructed on the basis of population and
the Senate being composed of an equal number of representatives regardless
of population. This is why today six states have only one member in the
House of Representatives but two members in the Senate.
Whatever the 'founding fathers' intended, the
sheer longevity of the Constitution and the profound changes in America since
its drafting means that today the balance of power is not necessarily what the
drafters of the Constitution had in mind. So originally the legislature was
seen as the most powerful arm of government (it is described first in the
Constitution) but, over time, both the Presidency (starting with the time of
Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War) and the Supreme Court (especially on social
issues like desegregation, marriage and abortion) have assumed more power.
THE CONSTITUTION
The American political
system is clearly defined by basic documents. The Declaration of Independence
of 1776 and the Constitution of 1789 form the foundations of the United States
federal government. The Declaration of Independence establishes the United
States as an independent political entity, while the Constitution creates the
basic structure of the federal government. Both documents are on display in the
National Archives and Records Administration Building in Washington, D.C.
Further information on the thinking expressed in the Constitution can be found
in the Federalist Papers which are a series of 85 articles and essays published
in 1787-1788 promoting the ratification of the Constitution.
The United States Constitution is both the longest-lasting in the
world, being over two centuries old, and the shortest in the world, having just
seven articles and 27 amendments. As well as its age and brevity, the US
Constitution is notable for being a remarkably stable document. The first 10
amendments were all carried in 1789 - the same year as the original
constitution - and are collectively known as the Bill of Rights. If one accepts
that these first 10 amendments were in effect part of the original
constitutional settlement, there have only been 17 amendments in over 200 years
(the last substantive one - reduction of the voting age to 18 - in 1971).
One of the major reasons for this relative immutability is that -
quite deliberately on the part of its drafters - the Constitution is a very
difficult instrument to change. First, a proposed amendment has to secure a
two-thirds vote of members present in both houses of Congress. Then
three-quarters of the state legislatures have to ratify the proposed change
(this stage may or may not be governed by a specific time limit).
As an indication of how challenging this process is, consider the
case of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA). This was first written in 1920,
shortly after women were given the vote in the USA. The proposed amendment was
introduced in Congress unsuccessfully in every legislative year from 1923 until
it was finally passed in 1972. It was then sent to each state for ratification
but, by 1982, it was still three states short of the minimum of the 38 needed
to add it to the constitution. Various attempts since 1982 to revive the
amendment have failed.
At the heart of the US Constitution is the principle known
as 'separation of powers', a term coined by the French political,
enlightenment thinker Montesquieu. This means that power is spread between
three institutions of the state - the executive (President & Cabinet), the
legislature (House of Representatives & Senate) and the judiciary (Supreme
Court & federal circuits) - and no one institution has too much power and
no individual can be a member of more than one institution. This principle is
also known as 'checks and balances', since each of the three
branches of the state has some authority to act on its own, some authority to
regulate the other two branches, and has some of its own authority, in turn,
regulated by the other branches.
Not only is power spread between the different branches; the
members of those branches are deliberately granted by the Constitution different
terms of office which is a further brake on rapid political change. So the
President has a term of four years, while members of the Senate serve for six
years and members of the House of Representatives serve for two years. Members
of the Supreme Court effectively serve for life.
The great benefit of this system is that power is spread and
counter-balanced and the 'founding fathers' - the 55 delegates who drafted the
Constitution - clearly wished to create a political system which was in sharp
contrast to, and much more democratic than, the monarchical system then in
force in Britain. The great weakness of the system is that it makes government
slow, complicated and legalistic which is a particular disadvantage in a world
- unlike that of 1776 - in which political and economic developments are
fast-moving and the USA was seen as super power.
Since the Constitution is so short, so old and so difficult to change,
for it to be meaningful to contemporary society it requires interpretation by
the courts and ultimately it is the Supreme Court which determines what the
Constitution means. There are very different approaches to the interpretation
of the Constitution with the two main strands of thought being known as originality and
the Living Constitution.
Originality is a principle of interpretation that
tries to discover the original meaning or intent of the constitution. It is
based on the principle that the judiciary is not supposed to create, amend or
repeal laws (which is the realm of the legislative branch) but only to uphold
them. This approach tends to be supported by conservatives.
Living Constitution is a concept which claims
that the Constitution has a dynamic meaning and that contemporary society
should be taken into account when interpreting key constitutional phrases.
Instead of seeking to divine the views of the drafters of the document, it
claims that they deliberately wrote the Constitution in broad terms so that it
would remain flexible. This approach tends to be supported by liberals.
THE PRESIDENCY
The President is the head of the executive branch of the federal
government of the United State, the position has always been held by a man. He is
both the head of state and the head of government, as well as the military
commander-in-chief and chief diplomat.
The President presides over the executive branch of the
government, a vast organization numbering about four million people, including
one million active-duty military personnel. The Hatch Act of 1939 forbids
anyone in the executive branch - except the President or Vice-President - from
using his or her official position to engage in political activity.
Eligibility to become a President of USA
To be President, one has to:
- be
a natural-born citizen of the United States
- be
at least 35 years old
- have
lived in the US for at least 14 years
Election of a President
The President is elected for a fixed term of four years and may
serve a maximum of two terms. Originally there was no constitutional limit on
the number of terms that a President could serve in office and the first
President George Washington set the precedent of serving simply two terms.
Following the election of Franklin D Roosevelt to a record four terms, it was
decided to limit terms to two and the relevant constitutional change - the 22nd
Amendment - was enacted in 1951. Elections are always held on the first Tuesday
after the first Monday in November to coincide with Congressional elections. So
the last election was held on 8 November 2016 and the next election will be
held on 3 November 2020.
The President is not elected directly by the voters but by an
Electoral College representing each state on the basis of a combination of the
number of members in the Senate (two for each state regardless of size) and the
number of members in the House of Representatives (roughly proportional to
population). The states with the largest number of votes are California (55),
Texas (38) and New York (29). The states with the smallest number of votes -
there are seven of them - have only three votes. The District of Columbia,
which has no voting representation in Congress, has three Electoral College
votes. In effect, therefore, the Presidential election is not one election but
51.
The total Electoral College vote is 538. This means that, to
become President, a candidate has to win at least 270 electoral votes. The
voting system awards the Electoral College votes from each state to delegates
committed to vote for a certain candidate in a "winner take all"
system, with the exception of Maine and Nebraska (which award their Electoral
College votes according to Congressional Districts rather than for the state as
a whole). In practice, most states are firmly Democrat - for instance,
California and New York - or firmly Republican - for instance, Texas and
Tennessee. Therefore, candidates concentrate their appearances and resources on
the so-called "battleground states", those that might go to either
party. The three largest battleground or swing states are Florida (29 votes),
Pennsylvania (20) and Ohio (18). Others include North Carolina (15), Virginia
(13), Wisconsin (10), Colorado (9), Iowa (6) and Nevada (6).
This system of election means that a candidate can win the largest
number of votes nationwide but fail to win the largest number of votes in the
Electoral College and therefore fail to become President. In practice, this has
happened four times in US history: 1876, 1888, 2000 and 2016. On the last
occasion, the losing candidate (Hillary Clinton) actually secured 2.9 million
more votes than the winning candidate (Donald Trump). If this seems strange (at
least to non-Americans), the explanation is that the 'founding fathers' who
drafted the American Constitution did not wish to give too much power to the
people and so devised a system that gives the ultimate power of electing the
President to members of the Electoral College. The same Constitution, however,
enables each state to determine how its members in the Electoral College are
chosen and since the 1820s states have chosen their electors by a direct vote
of the people. The United States is the only example in the world of an
indirectly elected executive president.
In the event that the Electoral College is evenly divided between
two candidates or no candidate secures a majority of the votes, the
constitution provides that the choice of President is made by the House of
Representatives and the choice of Vice-President is made by the Senate. In the
first case, the representatives of each state have to agree collectively on the
allocation of a single vote. In the second case, each senator has one vote.
This has actually happened twice - in 1800 and 1824. In 1800, the House of
Representatives, after 35 votes in which neither Thomas Jefferson nor Aaron
Burr obtained a majority, elected Jefferson on the 36th ballot. In 1824,
neither John Quincy Adams nor Andrew Jackson was able to secure a majority of
the votes in the Electoral College and the House of Representatives chose Adams
even though he had fewer Electoral College votes and fewer votes at the ballot
boxes than Jackson.
The powers of the President
1.
Within the executive branch, the President has broad constitutional
powers to manage national affairs and the workings of the federal government.
- The
President may issue executive orders to affect internal policies. The use
of executive orders has varied enormously between presidents and is often
a controversial matter since, in effect; it is bypassing the Congress to
achieve what would otherwise require legislation. Very few such orders
were issued until the time of Abraham Lincoln (the Emancipation
Declaration was such an order); use of executive orders was considerable
and peaked during the terms of the seven presidents from Theodore
Roosevelt to Franklin D Roosevelt (1901-1945); but, since the Second World
War, use has been more modest with Democrats tending to issue them a bit
more than Republicans. Barack Obama has made very sparing use of this
power, notably to reform immigration law and to tighten gun controls.
Executive orders can be overturned by a succeeding President.
- The
President has the power to recommend measures to Congress and may sign or
veto legislation passed by Congress. The Congress may override a
presidential veto but only by a two-thirds majority in each house.
4.
The President has the authority to appoint Cabinet members,
Supreme Court justices. Federal judges, and ambassadors but only with the 'advice
and consent' of the Senate which can be problematic especially when the Senate
is controlled by a different political party to that of the President.
- The
President has the power to pardon criminals convicted of offences against
the federal government and most controversially President Gerald Ford used
this power to pardon his predecessor Richard Nixon.
Besides the formal powers of the President, there are informal
means of exercising influence. Most notably, Teddy Roosvelt introduced the
notion of 'the bully pulpit': the ability of the President to use his standing
to influence public opinion. Over time, the changing nature of media -
newspapers, radio, television, the Internet, social media - has presented a
variety of instruments for the White House to use to 'push' Congress or other
political players or indeed communicate directly with the electorate. Currently
Donald Trump uses his personal Twitter account to issue several messages a day
to (as at summer 2017) some 32.4 million
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
The House of Representatives is the lower chamber in the bicameral
legislature known collectively as Congress. The founders of the United States
intended the House to be the politically dominant entity in the federal system
and, in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, the House served as the primary
forum for political debate. However, subsequently the Senate has been the
dominant body.
Eligibility to become a member of the House
To be a member of the House, one has to:
- be at least 25 years old
- have been a US citizen for at least
seven years
- live in the state which one
represents (but not the actual district)
How to choose a member of
the House
The House consists of 435 members (set in 1911), each of whom represents a congressional district and serves for a two-year term. House seats are apportioned among the states by population according to each decennial (every 10 years) census, but every state must have at least one member and in fact seven states have only one Representative each (Alaska, Delaware, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont and Wyoming). Typically a House constituency would represent around 700,000 people.
Once House seats are reapportioned to the states, it is state
legislatures that must redraw the physical boundaries of Congressional
districts. Although the states are bound by limits established by Congress and
the Supreme Court, there is scope for gerrymandering to ensure electoral
advantage for the dominant political party in the state. Such reapportionment
of members of the House takes effect three years after the decennial census so,
as the next census will take place in 2020, reapportionment will take effect
for the 118th Congress (2023-2025).
Members of the House are elected by first-past-the-post voting in
every state except Louisiana and Washington, which have run-offs if no
candidate secures more than 50% of the vote. Elections are always held on the
first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in even numbered years. Voting
in congressional elections - especially to the House - is generally much lower
than levels in other liberal democracies. In a year when there is a
Presidential election, turnout is typically around 50%; in years when there is
no Presidential election (known as mid-terms), it usually falls to around one
third of the electorate.
In the event that a member of the House of Representatives dies or
resigns before the end of the two-year term, a special election is held to fill
the vacancy.
The House has five non-voting delegates from the District of
Columbia (1971), Guam (1972) the Virgin Islands (1976), American Samoa (1981)
and the Northern Mariana Islands (2008) and one resident commissioner for
Puerto Rico (1976), bringing the total formal membership to 441. Non-voting
delegates are not allowed floor votes, but can vote in any committees to which
they are assigned.
Powers of the House
- The House of Representatives is
one of the two chambers that can initiate and pass legislation, although
to become law any legislation has to be approved by the Senate as well.
- Each chamber of Congress has
particular exclusive powers. The House must introduce any bills for the
purpose of raising revenue.
- If the Electoral College is
tied, the choice of President is made by the House of Representatives.
- The House has a key role in any
impeachment proceedings against the President or Vice-President. It lays
the charges which are then passed to the Senate for a trial.
- The House (and the Senate) has
the power to declare war - although the last time this happened was in
1941.
The Senate is the upper chamber in the bicameral legislature known
collectively as Congress. The original intention of the authors of the US
Constitution was that the Senate should be a regulatory group, less politically
dominant than the House. However, since the mid 19th century, the Senate has
been the dominant chamber and indeed today it is perhaps the most powerful upper
house of any legislative body in the world.
Eligibility to become a member of the Senate
To be a member of the Senate, one has to:
- be at least 30 years old
- have been a US citizen for at
least nine years
- live in the state which one
represents
How to choose member of the Senate
The Senate consists of 100 members, each of whom represents a
state and serves for a six-year term (one third of the Senate stands for
election every two years).
Each state has two Senators, regardless of population, and, since
there are 50 states, then there are 100 senators. This equality of Senate seats
between states has the effect of producing huge variations in constituency
population (the two senators from Wyoming represent less than half a million
electors, while the two senators from California represent 34M people) with
gross over-representation of the smaller states and serious
under-representation of racial and ethnic minorities.
For a long time, Senators were elected by the individual state
legislatures. However, since the 17th Amendment to the Constitution in 1913,
members of the Senate are elected by first-past-the-post voting in every state
except Louisiana and Washington, which have run-offs. Elections are always held
on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in even numbered years.
Each Senator is known as the senior or junior Senator for his or
her state, based on length of service.
In the event that a member of the Senate dies or resigns before
the end of the six-year term, a special election is not normally held at that
time (this is the case for 46 states). Instead the Governor of the state that
the Senator represented nominates someone to serve until the next set of
Congressional elections when the special election is held to fill the vacancy.
Powers of the Senate
- The Senate is one of the two
chambers that can initiate and pass legislation, although to become law
any legislation has to be approved by the House of Representatives as
well.
- Each chamber of Congress has
particular exclusive powers. The Senate must give 'advice and consent' to
many important Presidential appointments including Cabinet members,
Supreme Court justices. Federal Judges and Ambassadors.
- The Senate has the
responsibility of ratifying treaties.
- If the Electoral College is
tied, the choice of Vice-President is made by the Senate.
- The Senate has a key role in
any impeachment proceedings against the President or Vice-President. Once
the House of Representatives has laid the charges, the Senate then
conducts a trial on these charges. The Supreme Court Chief Justice
presides over such a trial. A two-thirds majority of the Senate is
required to uphold impeachment charges.
- The Senate (and the House) has
the power to declare war - although the last time this happened was in
1941.
THE SUPREME COURT
The Supreme Court is the highest court in the land. Originally it
had five members but over time this number has increased. Since 1869, it has
consisted of nine Justices: the Chief Justice of the United States and eight
Associate Justices. They have equal weight when voting on a case and the Chief Justice
has no casting vote or power to instruct colleagues. Decisions are made by a
simple majority.
Below the Supreme Court, there is a system of Courts of Appeal,
and, below these courts, there are District Courts. Together, these three
levels of courts represent the federal judicial system.
Eligible to become a member of the Court
The Constitution does not specify qualifications for Justices such
as age, education, profession, or native-born citizenship. A Justice does not
have to be a lawyer or a law school graduate, but all Justices have been
trained in the law. Many of the 18th and 19th century Justices studied law
under a mentor because there were few law schools in the country. The last Justice to be appointed who did not attend any law school
was James F. Byrnes (1941-1942). He did not graduate from high school and
taught himself law, passing the bar at the age of 23.
All Supreme Court judges are appointed for life.
How to choose a member of the Court
The Justices are nominated by the President and confirmed with the 'advice and consent' of the Senate. As federal judges, the Justices serve during "good behavior", meaning essentially that they serve for life and can be removed only by resignation or by impeachment and subsequent conviction.
Since the Supreme Court makes so many 'political' decisions and
its members are appointed so rarely, the appointment of Justices by the
President is often a very charged and controversial matter. Justices serve for
life, and therefore usually beyond the term of office of the appointing
President, such appointment are often regarded as an important part of any
particular President's legacy.
Powers of the Court
The Supreme Court is the highest court in the United States. The
court deals with matters pertaining to the federal government, disputes between
states, and interpretation of the Constitution.
It can declare legislation or executive action made at any level
of the government as unconstitutional, nullifying the law and creating
precedence for future law and decisions.
However, the Supreme Court can only rule on a lower court decision
so it cannot take the initiative to consider a matter.
AMERICA’S POLITICAL PARTIES & ELECTIONS
The American political
system is dominated by two political parties: the Democratic Party and the
Republican Party (often known as the 'Grand Old Party' or GOP). These are very
old and very stable parties - the Democrats go back to 1824 and the Republicans
were founded in 1854.
In illustrations and promotional material, the Democratic Party is
often represented as a donkey, while the Republican Party is featured as an
elephant. The origin of these symbols is the political cartoonist Thomas Nast
who came up with them in 1870 and 1874 respectively.
The main reason for the dominance of these two parties is that -
like most other Anglo-Saxon countries (notably Britain) - the electoral system
is 'first past the post' or simple majority which, combined with the large
voter size of the constituencies in the House and (even more) the Senate,
ensures that effectively only two parties can play. The other key factor is the
huge influence of money in the American electoral system. Since effectively a
candidate can spend any amount he can raise (not allowed in many other
countries) and since one can buy broadcasting time (again not allowed in many
countries), the US can only 'afford' two parties or, to put it another way,
candidates of any other party face a formidable financial barrier to entry.
Some people tend to view the division between the Democratic Party
and the Republican Party in the United States as the same as that between
Labour and Conservative in Britain or between Social Democrats and Christian
Democrats in Germany. The comparison is valid in the sense that, in each
country, one political party was characterized as Centre-Left and the other as
Centre-Right or, to put it another way, one party is more economically
interventionist and socially radical than the other. However, the analogy has
many weaknesses.
- The Centre in American politics
is considerably to the Right of the Centre in most European states
including Britain, Germany, France, Italy and (even more especially) the
Scandinavian countries. So, for instance, most members of the Conservative
Party in the UK would support a national health service, whereas many
members of the Democratic Party in the US would not.
- As a consequence of the
enormous geographical size of the United States and the different
histories of the different states (exemplified by the Civil War),
geography is a factor in ideological positioning to a much greater extent
than in other democratic countries. For instance, a Northern Republican
could be more liberal than a Southern Democrat. Conversely there is a
group of Democratic Congressmen that are fiscally very conservative - they
are known as "blue dog" Democrats or even DINO (Democrats in
Name Only).
- In the United States, divisions
over social matters - such as abortion, capital punishment, same-sex
relationships and stem cell research - matter and follow party lines in a
way which is not true of most European countries. In Britain, for
instance, these sorts of issues would be regarded as matters of personal
conscience and would not feature prominently in election debates between
candidates and parties.
- In the USA, religion is a
factor in politics in a way unique in western democracies. Candidates
openly proclaim their faith in a manner which would be regarded as bizarre
elswhere (even in a Catholic country like France) and religious groupings
- such as the Christian Coalition of America - exert a significiant
political influence in a manner which would be regarded as improper in
most European countries (Poland is an exception here).
- In the United States, the
'whipping system' - that is the instructions to members of the House and
the Senate on how to vote - is not as strict or effective as it is in most
European countries. As a consequence, members of Congress are less
constrained by party affiliation and freer to act individually.
- In the USA, political parties
are much weaker institutions than they are in other democracies. Between
the selections of candidates, they are less active than their counterparts
in other countries and, during elections, they are less influential in
campaigning, with individual politicians and their campaigns having much
more influence.
- The cost of elections is much greater in the US than in other democracies which has the effects of limiting the range of candidates, increasing the influence of corporate interests and pressure groups, and enhancing the position of the incumbent office holder (especially in the winning of primaries). As long ago as 1895, the Chairman of the Republican National Committee Mark Hanna stated: Whereas in other countries, voters shape the policies and select the candidates of a party by joining it, in the USA voters register as a supporter of one of the major parties and then vote in primary elections to determine who should be the party's candidate in the 'real' election.
One
other oddity of the American party system is that, whereas in most countries of
the world the colour red is associated with the Left-wing party and the colour
blue with the Right-wing party, in the United States the reverse is the case.
So the 'blue states' are those traditionally won by the Democrats, while the
'red states' are those normally controlled by the Republicans.
Two interesting features of American political elections are low
turnout and the importance of incumbency. Traditionally turnout in US congressional elections are much lower
than in other liberal democracies especially those of Western Europe. When
there is a presidential election, turnout is only about half; when there is no
presidential election, turnout is merely about one third. The exception was the
elections of 2008: the excitement of the candidacy of Barack Obama led to an
unusually high turnout of 63%, the highest since 1960 (the election of John F
Kennedy).
While Congress as an institution is held in popular contempt,
voters like their member of Congress and indeed there is a
phenomenon known as 'sophomore surge' whereby incumbents tend to increase their
share of the vote when they seek re-election. More generally most incumbents
win re-election for several reasons: they allocate time and resources to waging
a permanent re-election campaign; they can win "earmarks" which are
appropriations of government spending for projects in the constituency; and
they find it easier than challengers to raise money for election campaigns.
THE FEDERAL SYSTEM
Understanding the federal nature of the United States is critical to appreciating the complexities of the American political system.
Most
political systems are created top-down. A national system of government is
constructed and a certain amount of power is released to lower levels of
government. The unique history of the United States means that, in this case,
the political system was created bottom-up.
First, some 240 years ago, there were 13 autonomous states that,
following the War of Independence against the British, created a system of
government in which the various states somewhat reluctantly ceded power to the
federal government. Around a century later, the respective authority of the
federal government and the individual states was an issue at the heart of the
Civil War when there was a bloody conflict over who had the right to determine
whether slavery was or was not permissible. With the exception of Switzerland,
no other Western democracy diffuses power to the same degree as America. Today
the powers of the federal government remain strictly limited by the
Constitution - the critical Tenth Amendment of 1791 - which leaves a great deal
of authority to the individual states.
Each state has an executive, a legislature and a judiciary.
The head of the executive is the Governor who is directly elected.
As with the President at federal level, state Governors can issue Executive
Orders.
The legislature consists of a Senate and a House of
Representatives (the exception is the state of Nebraska which has a unicameral
system).
The judiciary consists of a state system of courts.
The 50 states are divided into counties (parishes in Louisiana and
boroughs in Alaska). Each county has its court. Although the Constitution prescribes precisely when Presidential
and Congressional elections will be held, the dates and times of state and
local elections are determined by state governments. Therefore there is a
plethora of elections in the United States and, at almost all times, an
election is being held somewhere in the country. State and local elections,
like federal elections, use the 'first past the post' system of election.
The fact is that most states choose to elect the governor and legislature
when Congressional elections are held on the first Tuesday after the first
Monday in November in even numbered years. Exceptions are the states of
Virginia and New Jersey which hold their governor and legislature elections in
odd numbered years (known as "off-year elections"). This means that
these states provide the first electoral indication of how voters view the
performance of a newly-elected President and/or Congress. Meanwhile many states - especially those west of the Rockies -
have what has been called "the fourth arm of government": this is the
ballot or referendum initiative. This enables a policy question to be put to
the electorate as a result of the collection of a certain number of signatures
or the decision of the state legislation. Over the last century, some 3,000
such initiatives have been conducted - in some cases (such as California) with
profound results.
Not much was known about the earliest history of
Nigeria. But by C.2000 B.C. most of the country was sparsely inhabited by
persons who had a rudimentary knowledge of raising domesticated food plants and
of herding animals. Then from C.800 B.C. to C.A.D. 200 the Nok culture (named
for the town where archaeological findings were first made) flourished on the
Jos Plateau; the Nok people made fine terra-cotta sculptures and probably knew
how to work tin and iron. The first important centralized state to influence
Nigeria was Kanem-Bornu, which probably was founded in the 8th century A.D., to
the north of Lake Chad outside modern Nigeria. In the 11th century, by that
time its rulers had been converted to Islam. Kanem-Bornu expanded south of Lake
Chad into present day Nigeria, and in the late 15th century its capital was
moved there.
Beginning from the 11th century, seven independent
Hausa city states were founded in the Northern Nigeria Biram, Daura, Gobir,
Kano, Katsina Rano, and Zaria. Kano and Katsina competed for the lucrative trans-Saharan
trade with Kanem-Bornu, and for a time had to pay tribute to the kingdom. In
the early 16th century all the Hausa land was briefly held by the Songhai Empire. Songhai empire,
also spelled Songhay, great trading state
of West Africa (fl.
15th–16th century), centered on the middle reaches of the Niger River
in what is now central Mali and
eventually extending west to the Atlantic coast and east into Niger and Nigeria.
However, in the late 16th century, Kanem-Bornu replaced Songhai as the leading power in Northern Nigeria, and the Hausa states regained their autonomy. In southwest Nigeria two states Oyo and Benin had developed by the 14th century; the rulers of both states traced their origins to Ife, renowned for its naturalistic terra-cotta and brass sculpture. Benin was the leading state in the 15th century but began to decline in the 17th century, and by the 18th century Oyo controlled Yoruba land and also Dahomey. The Igbo people in the southeast lived in small village communities. In the late 15th century Portuguese navigators became the first Europeans to visit Nigeria. They soon began to purchase slaves and agricultural produce from coastal middlemen; the slaves had been captured further inland by the middlemen. The Portuguese were followed by British, French, and Dutch traders. Among the Igbo and Ibibio a number of city-states were established by individuals who had become wealthy by engaging in the slave trade; these included Bonny, Owome, and Okrika.
To understand Nigerian politics is to study the
direction of their history that will help us to understand more about their
political system. History is very important to explain the way and why some
political system of a nation varies from the other. On like so many other
modern African states, Nigeria is the creation of European imperialism. It is
named after the great Niger River; and the country’s name was suggested in the
1890s by British journalist Flora Shaw, who later became the wife of colonial
governor Frederick Lugard. The modern history of Nigeria as a political state
encompassing 250 to 400 ethnic groups of widely varied cultures and modes of
political organizations dated from the completion of the British conquest in
1903 and the amalgamation of northern and southern Nigeria into the Colony and
Protectorate of Nigeria in 1914. The history of the Nigerian people extends
backward in time for some three millennia. Archaeological evidence, oral traditions,
and written documentation established the existence of dynamic societies and
well developed political systems whose history had an important influence on
colonial rule and has continued to shape independent Nigeria. Nigerian history
is fragmented in the sense that it evolved from a variety of traditions, but
many of the most outstanding features of modern society reflected the strong
influence of the three regionally dominant ethnic groups the Hausa in the
north, the Yoruba in the west, and the Igbo in the east.
There are several dominant themes in Nigerian
history that are essential in understanding contemporary Nigerian politics and
society. First, is the spread of Islam, predominantly in the north but later in
southwestern Nigeria as well, began a millennium ago. The creation of the
Sokoto Caliphate in the jihad (holy war) of 1804 to 1808 brought most of the
northern region and adjacent parts of Niger and Cameroon under a single Islamic
government. The great extension of Islam within the area of the present day
Nigeria dated from the nineteenth century and the consolidation of the
caliphate. This history helps account for the dichotomy between north and south
and for the divisions within the north that have been so strong during the
colonial and postcolonial eras.
Second, the slave trade, both across the Sahara
Desert and the Atlantic Ocean, had a profound influence on virtually all parts
of Nigeria. The transatlantic trade in particular accounted for the forced
migration of about 3.5 million people between the 1650s and the 1860s, while a
steady stream of slaves flowed north across the Sahara for a millennium, ending
at the beginning of the twentieth century. Within Nigeria, slavery was
widespread, with social implications that are still evident till date. The
Sokoto Caliphate, for example, had more slaves than any other modern country,
except the United States in 1860s. Slaves were also numerous among the Igbo,
the Yoruba, and many other ethnic groups. There were, many ethnic distinctions,
especially in the middle belt the area between the north and south were
reinforced because of slave raiding and defensive measures that were adopted
for protection against enslavement. Conversion to Islam and the spread of
Christianity were intricately associated with issues relating to slavery and
with efforts to promote political and cultural autonomy.
Third, the colonial era
was relatively brief; lasting for six decades or so, depending upon the part of
Nigeria, but it unleashed such rapid change that the full impact was still felt
in the contemporary period. There was
the expansion of agricultural products as the principal export earner and the
corresponding development of infrastructure resulted in severely distorted
economic growth that has subsequently collapsed. Also the social dislocation
associated with the decline of slavery and the internal movement of population
between regions and to the cities necessitated the reassessment of ethnic
loyalties, which in turn have been reflected in politics and religion.
In the three/third decades since the independence
of Nigeria in 1960, a period of the colonial era, Nigeria has experienced a
number of successful and attempted military coups d'état and a brutal civil
war, let corrupt civilian governments siphon off the profits from the oil boom
of the 1970s, and faced economic collapse in the 1980s. As the most populous
country in Africa, and one of the ten most populous countries in the world,
Nigeria has a history that is important in its own reason than to understand how
and why this nation became as it is today.
There were major internal changes in Nigeria in
the 19th century in 1804; Usman Dan Fodio (1754–1817), a Fulani and a pious Muslim began a holy war to
reform the practice of Islam in the north. He soon conquered the Hausa
city-states, but Bornu, led by Muhammad al-Kanemi (also a Muslim reformer)
until 1835, maintained its independence. In 1817, Usuman dan Fodio's son,
Muhammad Bello (D.1837) established a state centered at Sokoto,
which controlled most of Northern Nigeria until the coming of the British in
(1900–1906). Under both Usuman dan Fodio and Muhammad Bello, Muslim culture,
and also trade, flourished in the Fulani Empire. In Bornu, Muhammad al-Kanemi
was succeeded by Umar (reigned 1835–80), under whom the empire disintegrated.
In 1807, Great Britain abandoned the slave trade;
however, other countries continued it until about 1875. Meanwhile, many African
middlemen turned to selling palm products, which were Nigeria's chief export by
the middle of the century. In 1817 a long series of civil wars began in the Oyo
Empire; they lasted until 1893 (when Britain intervened), by which time the
empire had disintegrated completely.
In order to stop the slave trade there, Britain
annexed Lagos in 1861. In 1879, Sir George Goldie gained control of all the British firms trading on the Niger, and in the 1880s
he took over two French companies active there and signed treaties with
numerous African leaders. Largely because of Goldie's efforts, Great Britain
was able to claim Southern Nigeria at the Conference of Berlin ( Belin Conference 1884/1885).
In the following years, the British established
their rule in South Western Nigeria, partly by signing treaties (as in the
Lagos hinterland) and partly by using force (as at Benin in 1897). King Jaja,
a leading African trader based at Opobo in the Niger delta and strongly opposed the European competition, was captured
in 1887 and deported. Goldie's firm, given (1886) a British royal charter, as
the Royal Niger Company, to administer the Niger River and Northern Nigeria,
antagonized Europeans and Africans alike by its monopoly of trade on the Niger;
in addition, it was not sufficiently powerful to gain effective control over Northern
Nigeria, which was also soughted by the French.
Colonialism
In 1900 the Royal Niger Company's charter was
revoked and British forces under Frederick Lugard conquered the north, taking Sokoto in 1903. By 1906, Britain controlled
Nigeria, which was divided into the Colony (i.e., Lagos), and Protectorate of
Southern Nigeria and the Protectorate of Northern Nigeria. In 1914 the two
regions were amalgamated and the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria was
established.
The administration of Nigeria was based on a
system devised by Lord, Lugard and called "indirect rule"; under this
system, Britain ruled through existing political institutions rather than
establishing a wholly new administrative network. In some areas (especially the
southeast) new African officials (resembling the traditional rulers in other
parts of the country) were set up; in most cases they were not accepted by the
masses and were able to rule just because British power stood behind them. All
important decisions were made by the British governor, and the African rulers,
partly by being associated with the colonialists, most of their traditional
authority lost within a twinkle of an eye. Occasionally (as in Aba in 1929)
discontent with colonial rule flared into open protest where by Aba women
rioted and protested against payment of tax.
Under the British, railroads and roads were built
and the production of cash crops, such as palm nuts and kernels, cocoa, cotton,
and peanuts, was promoted. The country was urbanized as Lagos, Ibadan, Kano,
Onitsha, and other cities grew in size and became important as prominent towns.
From 1922, African representatives from Lagos and Calabar were elected to the
legislative council of Southern Nigeria; they constituted only a small minority,
and Africans otherwise continued to have no role in the higher levels of
government. Self help groups organized on ethnic lines were established in the
cities. Small Western educated elite developed in Lagos and a few other
southern cities.
In 1947, Great Britain promulgated a constitution
that gave the traditional authorities a greater voice in national affairs. The
Western educated elite was excluded, and, led by Herbert Macaulay and Nnamdi, Azikiwe,
its members vigorously denounced the constitution. As a result, a new
constitution was provided for elected representation on a regional basis, which
was instituted in 1951.
There were a major political parties emerge the
National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC; from 1960 known as the
National Convention of Nigerian Citizens), led by Azikiwe and largely based
among the Igbo; the Action Group, (AG) led by Obafemi Awolowo constitutes with mostly Yoruba membership; and the Northern People's Congress
(NPC), led by Ahmadu Bello and based in the north. The constitution proved
unworkable by 1952, and a new one, solidifying the division of Nigeria into
three regions (Eastern, Western, and Northern) including the Federal Territory
of Lagos, came into force in 1954. In 1956 the Eastern and Western regions
became internally self-governing, and the Northern region achieved this status
in 1959. Going by this knowledge we may say that, that was the reason why the
northerners clinked to power till date.
Independence and
Political Internal Conflict/Nigerian Politics with Bitterness
At that time the Nigerian independence was scheduled
for 1960, while elections were held in 1959. No party won a majority, and the
NPC combined with the NCNC to form a government. Nigeria attained independence
on Oct. 1, 1960, with Abubakar Tafawa Balewa of the NPC as the prime minister and Azikiwe of the NCNC as governor-general
(ceremonial head of government); when Nigeria became a republic in 1963,
Azikiwe was made the first Nigerian president which lasted only but a short
time due to corruption. The first years of independence as at that time were
characterized by severe conflicts within and between regions. In the Western
region, a bloc of the Action Group split off (1962) under S. I. Akintola to
form the Nigerian National Democratic party (NNDP); in 1963 the Mid-Western
region (whose population was mostly Edo) was formed from a part of the Western
region. National elections late in 1964 were hotly contested, with an NPC-NNDP
coalition (called the National Alliance) emerging victorious.
In Jan., 1966, Igbo army officers presently known
as the south-south and south-East staged a successful coup, which resulted in
the deaths of Federal Prime Minister Balewa, Northern Prime Minister Ahmadu
Bello, and Western Prime Minister S. I. Akintola. Whereas, Maj. Gen. Johnson T.
U. Aguiyi-Ironsi, an Igbo, became head of a military government and suspended
the national and regional constitutions; the new government was met with a
violent reaction in the north. In July, 1966, a coup led by Hausa army officers
ousted Ironsi was killed, and instituted Lt. Col. Yakubu Gowon as the head of a new military regime. This caused violent in the north especially in
Kano state. In Sept. 1966, many Igbos
living in the north were massacred. In fact it was a gruesome killing where
people were shown no mercy.
Note: as at that time the South-South and
South-East were regarded as the Igbo people because they do things in common.
It was after the civil war (Biafra vs Nigeria) that the divisions or hatred to
the South-East started. Even at that till date these two geopolitical zones are
regarded as the Igbos in the eyes of the Northerners and nothing can change
that. The South-South comprises Cross-River, Akwa-Ibom, Delta, Edo, Bayelsa,
and Rivers. The South-East comprised Enugu, Ebonyi, Anambra, Imo and Abia. It
is interesting to note that Major General Kaduna Nzeogwu come from South-South present Delta state. He
was the one who headed in plotting the coup of 1966.
The Igbos resisted the leadership of Gowon who
attempted to start Nigeria along the road to civilian government. The
resistance of the Igbo was caused by the disagreement of Gowon to implement the
Aburi accord of which Ojukwu stood firm in that agreement of which he presented
a press conference disagreeing with Gowon’s agenda to Nigeria. As a result
Gowon proclaimed a state of emergency, and, as a gesture to the Igbos, re divided
Nigeria into 12 states (including one, the East-Central state that comprised
most of the Igbo people). However, on May 30, Ojukwu proclaimed the independent
Republic of Biafra,
and in July fighting broke out between Biafra and Nigeria. Biafra made some
advances early in the war, but soon federal forces gained their ground. After
much suffering, Biafra capitulated on Jan. 15, 1970, and the secession ended.
The early 1970s were marked by reconstruction in areas that were formerly part
of Biafra, by the gradual reintegration of the Igbo into national life, and by
a slow return to civilian rule.
Modern Nigeria
Spurred by the booming petroleum industry, the
Nigerian economy quickly recovered from the effects of civil war and made
impressive advances. Nonetheless, inflation and high unemployment remained, and
the oil boom led to government corruption and uneven distribution of wealth.
Nigeria joined the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries in 1971. The prolonged drought that
desiccated the Sahel region of Africa in the early 1970s had a profound effect
on N Nigeria, resulting in a migration of peoples into the less arid areas and
into the cities of the south.
Gowon's regime was overthrown in 1975 by Gen.
Murtala Muhammad and a group of officers who pledged a return to civilian rule.
In the mid-1970s plans were approved for a new capital to be built at Abuja, a
move that drained the national economy. Muhammad was assassinated in an
attempted coup one year after taking office and succeeded by Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo.
In a crisis brought on by rapidly falling oil revenues, the government
restricted public opposition to the regime, controlled union activity and
student movements, nationalized land, and increased oil industry regulation.
Nigeria sought Western support under Obasanjo while supporting African
nationalist movements.
In 1979 elections were held under a new
constitution, bringing Alhaji Shehu Shagari to the presidency. Relations with the United States reached a new high in 1979
with a visit by President Jimmy Carta. The government expelled thousands of foreign laborers in 1983, citing social
disturbances as the reason. The same year, Shagari was reelected president but
overthrown after only a few months in office.
In 1985 a coup led by Maj. Gen. Ibrahim Babangida brought a new regime to power, along with the promise of a return to civilian
rule. A new constitution was promulgated in 1990, which set national elections
for 1992. Babangida annulled the results of that presidential election,
claiming fraud. A new election in 1993 ended in the apparent presidential
victory of Moshood Abiola, but Babangida again alleged fraud. Soon unrest led
to Babangida's resignation. Ernest Shonekan, a civilian appointed as interim
leader, was forced out after three months by Gen. Sani Abacha, a long-time ally
of Babangida, who became president and banned all political institutions and
labor unions. In 1994, Abiola was arrested and charged with treason.
In 1995, Abacha extended military rule for three
more years, while proposing a program for a return to civilian rule after that
period; his proposal was rejected by opposition leaders, but five political
parties were established in 1996. The Abacha regime drew international
condemnation in late 1995 when Ken Saro-Wiwa, a prominent writer, and eight
other human-rights activists were executed; the trial was condemned by
human-rights groups and led to Nigeria's suspension from the Commonwealth of
Nations. Also in 1995, a number of army officers, including former head of
state General Obasanjo, were arrested in connection with an alleged coup
attempt. In 1996, Kudirat Abiola, an activist on behalf of her imprisoned
husband, was murdered.
Abacha died suddenly in June, 1998, and was
succeeded by Gen. Abdulsalam Abubakar, who immediately freed Obasanjo and other
political prisoners. Riots followed the announcement that Abiola had also died
unexpectedly in July, 1998, while in detention. Abubakar then announced an
election timetable leading to a return to civilian rule within a year. All
former political parties were disbanded and new ones formed. A series of local,
state, and federal elections were held between Dec., 1998, and Feb., 1999,
culminating in the presidential contest, won by General Obasanjo. The elections
were generally deemed fair by international monitors. The People's Democratic
party (PDP; the centrist party of General Obasanjo) dominated the elections;
the other two leading parties were the Alliance for Democracy (a Yoruba party
of the southwest, considered to be progressive), and the All People's party (a
conservative party based in the north).
Following Obasanjo's inauguration on May 29,
1999, Nigeria was readmitted to the Commonwealth. The new president said he
would combat past and present corruption in the Nigerian government and army
and develop the impoverished Niger delta area. Although there was some progress
economically, government and political corruption remained a problem. The
country also was confronted with renewed ethnic and religious tension. The
latter was in part a result of the institution of Islamic law in Nigeria's
northern states, and led to violence that has been an ongoing problem since the
return of civilian rule. Army lawlessness was a problem as well in some areas.
A small success was achieved in Apr., 2002, when Abacha's family agreed to
return $1 billion to the government; the government had sought an estimated $4
billion in looted Nigerian assets.
In Mar., 2003, the Ijaw, accusing the Itsekiri,
government, and oil companies of economic and political collusion against them,
began militia attacks against Itsekiri villages and oil facilities in the Niger
delta, leading to a halt in the delta's oil production for several weeks and
military intervention by the government. The presidential and earlier
legislative elections in Apr., 2003, were won by President Obasanjo and his
party, but the results were marred by vote rigging and some violence. The
opposition protested the results, and unsuccessfully challenged the
presidential election in court. The Ijaw-Itsekiri conflict continued into 2004,
but a peace deal was reached in mid-June. The Ijaw backed out of the agreement,
however, three weeks later. Christian-Muslim tensions also continued to be a
problem in 2004, with violent attacks occurring in Kebbi, Kano, and Plateau states.
Obasanjo's government appeared to move more
forcefully against government corruption in early 2005. Several government
ministers were fired on corruption charges, and the senate speaker resigned
after he was accused of taking bribes. A U.S. investigation targeted Nigeria's
vice president the same year, and Obasanjo himself agreed to be investigated by
the Nigerian financial crimes commission when he was accused of corruption by
Orji Uzor Kalu, the governor of Abia and a target of a corruption investigation.
Ijaw militants again threatened Niger delta oil operations in Sept., 2005, and
several times in subsequent years, resulting in cuts in Nigeria's oil
production as large as 25% at times. Since early 2006 the Niger delta area has
seen an increase in kidnappings of foreign oil workers and attacks on oil
operations; the resulting government focus on protecting oil facilities allowed
criminal gangs to expand their influence in populated areas there. In Oct.,
2005, the government reached an agreement to pay off much of its foreign debt
at a discount, a process that was completed in Apr., 2006.
The end of 2005 and early 2006 saw increased
contention over whether to amend the constitution to permit the president and
state governors to run for more than two terms. The idea had been rejected in
July, 2005, by a national political reform conference, but senators reviewing
the conference's proposals indicated they supported an end to term limits. The
change was opposed by Vice President Atiku Abubakar,
but other PDP leaders who objected were removed from their party posts. A
censusa contentious event because of ethnic and religious divisions in
Nigeria was taken in Mar., 2006, but the head count was marred by a lack of
resources and a number of violent clashes, and many Nigerians were believed to
have been left uncounted. In May the Nigerian legislature ended consideration
of a third presidential term when it became clear that there was insufficient
support for amending the constitution. Nigeria agreed in June, 2006, to turn
over the Bakassi peninsula to Cameroon after a two-year transition period; the
region was finally ceded in Aug., 2008.
In July the vice president denied taking bribes
from a U.S. congressman, but in September the president called for the Nigerian
senate to remove the vice president from office for fraud, based on an
investigation by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). The
senate agreed to investigate the charges, and the PDP suspended the vice
president, blocking him from seeking the party's presidential nomination.
Abubakar counteraccused Obasanjo of corruption. The EFCC was also investigating
most of Nigeria's state governors, but the commission itself was tainted by
charges that it was used for political retaliation by Obasanjo and his allies.
Several state governors were impeached by legally unsound proceedings, moves
that were seen as an attempt by Obasanjo to tighten his control prior to the
2007 presidential election.
When the vice president accepted (Dec., 2006) the
presidential nomination of a group of opposition parties, the president accused
him of technically resigning and sought to have him removed, an action Abubakar
challenged in court; the government backed down the following month, and the
courts later sided with Abubakar. In Jan., 2007, the results of the 2006 census
were released, and they proved as divisive as previous Nigerian censuses. The
census showed that the largely Muslim north had more inhabitants than the
south, and many southern political leaders vehemently rejected the results.
In February, the EFCC declared Abubakar and more
than 130 other candidates for the April elections unfit due to corruption, and
the election commission barred those candidates from running. Abubakar fought
the move in court, but the ruling was not overturned until days before the
presidential election. The state elections were marred by widespread and
blatant vote fraud and intimidation, but the election commission certified
nearly all the results, handing gubernatorial victories to the PDP in 27
states. In the presidential election, Umaru Yar' Adua,
the relatively unknown governor of Katsina state who was hand-picked by
Obasanjo to be the PDP candidate, was declared the winner with 70% of the vote,
but fraud and intimidation were so blatant that EU observers called the
election a "charade" and the president was forced to admit it was
"flawed." Nonetheless, Yar'Adua's inauguration (May) marked the first
transition of power between two elected civilian presidents in Nigeria's
post-colonial history.
Yar'Adua subsequently moved to reorganize and
reform the national petroleum company, but those efforts stalled, as did action
to fight government corruption. The federal government did not, however,
interfere with challenges in the courts to state elections. In Dec., 2008,
challenges in the courts to Yar'Adua's election came to an end when the supreme
court ruled that opposition lawyers had not provided sufficient evidence to
annul the vote.
In Feb., 2009, KBR, a U.S. company, pleaded
guilty in U.S. court to giving $180 million in bribes to Nigerian officials to
obtain a contract to build a liquefied natural gas plant. A significant army
offensive against Niger delta militants that began in May, 2009, provoked an
increased round of attacks against oil facilities, particularly pipelines. At
the same time, however, Yar'Adua offered (June) amnesty to militants who lay
down their weapons by Oct. 4, and many militants ultimately accepted the
amnesty, though some did not. Subsequent slow progress by the government led to
increased tensions in 2010. In July, 2009, Boko Haram, an extremist Islamist
sect, launched attacks against the government in NE Nigeria after several
leaders were arrested; the subsequent fighting was especially fierce in
Maiduguri, where the group's headquarters was destroyed and some 700 died. The
group began a new series of attacks in Sept., 2010, that continued into
subsequent years, with the attacks become more significant beginning in
mid-2011.
The president traveled to Saudi Arabia in Nov.,
2009, to seek medical treatment. As his stay there prolonged into 2010 many prominent
Nigerians called for executive powers to be transferred on an interim basis to
the vice president, Goodluck Jonathan but the president did not initiate the constitutional process necessary for it
to happen. In Feb., 2010, the National Assembly unanimously voted to make
Jonathan acting president, but the lack of a formal letter from the president
notifying the Assembly of his absence raised constitutional issues. Jonathan
remained acting president after Yar'Adua returned later in the month, and
succeeded him as president when Yar'Adua died in May.
Jonathan's subsequent decision to run for a
presidential term in his own right threatened to split the PDP, which had alternated
fielding northern and southern presidential candidates. In Dec., 2010, however,
he won the support of most of the state governors who were members of the PDP,
and the following month the PDP nominated him for the presidency. In Sept.,
2010, orne faction of Niger delta militants announced an end to their
cease-fire, and the group subsequently set off car bombs in Abuja during an
Independence Day parade on October 1.
The Apr., 2011, elections were won by Jonathan
and the PDP. Jonathan won 57% of the vote, but overwhelmingly majorities in a
number of southern states led to charges of vote rigging. The opposition
candidates challenged the results, and in some northern states, where support
for the opposition was strong, there were riots after the results were
announced. International observers, however, generally described the
presidential election as the country's freest and fairest in many years. In the
National Assembly elections, the PDP won with a reduced majority in both
houses, and it also lost control of a number of governorships in the subsequent
gubernatorial elections.
By the first half of 2012 the increasingly
violent, ongoing insurgency by the Islamic militant group Boko Haram was
stoking sectarian tensions and worsening the economic situation in the already
economically stagnant N Nigeria; the situation had also led to significantly
larger government expenditures on security, diverting money from other needs.
In May, 2013, after increasing Islamist-related violence, Nigeria imposed
martial law in three northern states and launched an off ensive against Islamist
militants, but in many cases the militants fled without confronting the army,
and subsequently theyowlaunched a number of murderous attacks as clashes
increased later in the year. In August tensions in the PDP led to a split in
the party, and several governeors and a number of legislators left to form the
New PDP; later in the year, most of them joined the All Progressives Congress
(APC), an opposition group formed by the merger of several parties earlier in
2013.
Comment
The Nigeria political system cannot be compared to the American system that deals with true democracy. The democractic government in Nigeria is a kangoroo one that lacks rule of law where the rich cannot be prosecuted and the poor are made to face the law. For instance a poor man steals a goat and go to jail and the wealthy man embezzeles billions of naira he uses the money to settle the authority and goes court free; that buries the case. Nigeria is a survival of the fittest. All that is required is just make the money and take laws into your hand. Law breakers are the rich ones whereas the down trodden obeys the law to the core. We are still not ripe for democracy due to the mentality of our people. Also the corruption in the country seems like a heritage from one administration to the other. Even the present government of PMB that creies wolf over corruption is also indepted in corruption. It takes only the rich to participate in Nigerian politics. A situation whereby the elite are silenced in terms of taking decision. The main problem of democratic system in Nigeria are: greed, lost, selfishness, indecision, mediocrity, power drunk, tribalism, nepotism, ethnic politics, foreign power intervention, multinational interest etc. Our democratic system can only survive if we do away with corruption bringing in people with sound mind, progressive people, profeesionals and allowing the political scientist do their thing; operating in their territories freely without the interventions of the Godfathers and the rest of them that wants to continue from the mistakes of our forefathers.
Comment
The Nigeria political system cannot be compared to the American system that deals with true democracy. The democractic government in Nigeria is a kangoroo one that lacks rule of law where the rich cannot be prosecuted and the poor are made to face the law. For instance a poor man steals a goat and go to jail and the wealthy man embezzeles billions of naira he uses the money to settle the authority and goes court free; that buries the case. Nigeria is a survival of the fittest. All that is required is just make the money and take laws into your hand. Law breakers are the rich ones whereas the down trodden obeys the law to the core. We are still not ripe for democracy due to the mentality of our people. Also the corruption in the country seems like a heritage from one administration to the other. Even the present government of PMB that creies wolf over corruption is also indepted in corruption. It takes only the rich to participate in Nigerian politics. A situation whereby the elite are silenced in terms of taking decision. The main problem of democratic system in Nigeria are: greed, lost, selfishness, indecision, mediocrity, power drunk, tribalism, nepotism, ethnic politics, foreign power intervention, multinational interest etc. Our democratic system can only survive if we do away with corruption bringing in people with sound mind, progressive people, profeesionals and allowing the political scientist do their thing; operating in their territories freely without the interventions of the Godfathers and the rest of them that wants to continue from the mistakes of our forefathers.
Please make your comments l will appriciate that may God bless you as you that
ReplyDeletesorry as you do that your comment is important for us to forge ahead it shows that you are following my teaching you can also ask questions and also make your own contribution don't be shy about bringing up your idea in limelight
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