THIS
 is a review, and an update, of my Notes on geopolitical alliances, 
which appeared in this column on Thursday, August 18, 2005.  That piece 
was inspired by the well-publicised and orchestrated alliance talks 
ahead of the 2007 general elections in Nigeria.  In a similar manner the
 present piece was instigated, so to say, by what is now going on – 
ahead of the 2015 elections, or rather, anticipated 2015 elections. 
Since access to the 2005 article may not be easy for every reader, I 
think I should begin this review and update with a summary of the key 
points of the original discussion to which the present one is a sequel.
In
 the 2005 Notes on geopolitical alliances, I said that “these 
realignments, as some journalists call them, are mainly, but not 
exclusively, between geo-political fractions of the ruling blocs and 
satellite political forces aspiring to move nearer to the centre of 
political power”.  Although this general description is still valid, it 
can benefit, in clarity, from appreciation of the political developments
 in the country since 2005 – particularly the development of the two 
power blocs and the two main opposition parties in the country:  the 
Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and Congress of Progressive Change 
(CPC).  For instance, when we say “opposition parties” we must not 
forget that ACN and CPC are not “underdogs” in all parts of the 
country.  They are very strong parties in large segments of the country.
 Beyond that they are the leading mainstream constitutional political 
forces in (national) opposition to the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), 
and to Federal Government, which the party controls.
In the 2005 
article, I said: “Historically, geopolitical alliances in Nigeria have 
been of three types.  Call them A, B and C. Under Type A are alliances 
between non-ruling political parties, which recognise their respective 
strengths – mainly electoral – in different parts of the country and 
therefore hope that by coming together they will be able to command an 
electoral majority in the country, and thus displace the ruling party”. I
 would, today, add that it is not all the parties involved in current 
alliance talks – openly or secretly – that are informed and directed by 
this broad strategy. Some of the smaller parties in alliance talks are 
primarily concerned with remaining alive – by “linking up” – in face of 
PDP’s pressure.
For similar reasons of survival, some small 
parties, which were former factions of PDP may now be moving back to 
their original home. It is also true that this “life-saving” 
strategy informed several political alliances from the years preceding 
Nigeria’s independence in 1960, up to the coup of January 1966 and in 
the Second Republic (1979 - 1983).
Under Type B “are alliances 
between regional, zonal or ethnic segments of the (national) ruling 
party. Confident that their party will remain the ruling party, these 
segments then aspire to strengthen their positions or “bargaining power”
 in the party by coming together. The alliances are targeted at the 
hegemonic segment or segments of the party. The message to the hegemonic
 segment is: “If you refuse to recognise our combined strength and yield
 to our common demands, then we shall move to an opposition party or 
form a new party”. What can be added here, in view of the current level 
of bitterness within and outside mainstream politics, and indications 
that this tendency will continue to rise, is that the strategy of the 
“internal” opposition may now include to seize power by any means 
possible, or to make the country “ungovernable”.
Under Type C “are
 alliances between the ruling party and one or more non-ruling parties, 
and this happens when the ruling party is not so sure of remaining the 
ruling party if it does not go into such alliances”. This 2005 analysis 
remains largely valid today. But I would like to correct a particular 
impression that can be created by it. That analysis would seem to 
suggest that the terms of an alliance (attempted or consummated) were 
based only on the relative ‘electoral’ strengths of the parties 
involved. That impression is not correct, or rather, no longer correct. 
Relative extra-electoral strengths would now enter into calculation. And
 by extra –electoral strengths I mean forces that can be mobilised and 
deployed, not to the voting booths, but in the streets and in the media,
 or simply inspired, to oppose or support an electoral verdict or 
anticipated verdict. If, in the period up to 2005, this factor was not 
significant, and not consciously and deliberately put into calculation, 
it will be so in the coming electoral contest.
The preceding point
 can be made stronger. In the alliances currently being negotiated and 
others that will be negotiated in the period between now and the 2015 
general elections, the ability to mobilise and deploy or inspire 
“political troops” or “political enforcers” or “militants” will come 
into serious calculation. I say this, first, in view of the current 
political trends in the country, particularly the increasingly 
militarised language of political disputation and, secondly, against the
 background of last year’s post-election violence.
As I said 
earlier, I still endorse my 2005 analysis of political alliances – when 
account is taken of the clarification (and update) sketched above. But a
 different picture is obtained if we separate alliances entered into, or
 attempted, ahead of a general election from alliances entered into, or 
attempted, after the election. The difference between the two sets of 
alliances is that in the alliances before a general election, the 
objective is to win the election, or to shift the balance of (political)
 forces in the country, whereas in the alliances after a general 
election the objective, for the “winner,” is to strengthen the ability 
to rule – preferably, with ineffective opposition. For the “loser”, the 
objective of post-election alliance is to strengthen the opposition and 
its “bargaining power” with the government and, as a long-term 
objective, to prepare for the next election.
We can see that 
integrating the two analyses – the one of 2005 and the one just sketched
 – gives a fuller historical picture of political alliances in Nigeria. 
We then have a composite alliance map in which the division of alliances
 into pre-election and post-election types is superimposed on types A, 
B, and C alliances. Another type of differentiation may, however, be 
produced if we introduce ideology, that is, the question of ideological 
orientations of the political parties involved in an alliance or 
alliance negotiation. The concrete question would be:  Are the parties 
in alliance ideologically compatible?
Before I say anything else, I
 must enter a caveat. Many people, including myself, have argued that 
there is no fundamental difference between the leading mainstream 
constitutional parties in existence in Nigeria today. For instance, all 
these parties, without exception, endorse and uphold the  neoliberal 
capitalist economic ideology and its twin – partner, the need for large 
and  heavily “moneyed” political parties and practices, where  politics 
now  obey the laws of the market (market forces).  However, even if we 
say that there is no fundamental difference between Party A and Party B,
 there will still be differences between them that are not fundamental. 
 Or else, A and B would be identical and we would not be talking of two 
parties, but one, and our entire analysis would collapse.
Although
 we may then say that, historically, two types of alliances have existed
 in Nigeria – alliances between parties that have no fundamental 
differences (although they may have differences that are not 
fundamental) and alliances between parties that have fundamental 
differences we must hasten to add that in mot cases what drives 
alliance-seekers is not ideological compatibility, but survival, and 
then, distribution of proceeds of power.
Political alliances are 
at different levels: local, regional and national. At each level an 
alliance may be between parties or between individual candidates, or 
both. To throw more light on this differentiation, I will simply remind 
readers that a legally nominated candidate may not be supported or fully
 supported by his or her party leadership. In this case of betrayal of a
 candidate by his or her party leadership, the candidate resorts to 
self-help and local “arrangement” to win the election.  Betrayal may 
also happen in the opposite direction, that is, a candidate betraying 
his or her party by supporting the opposing candidate and helping him or
 her to win.  We are also aware of instances where alliances constructed
 nationally are rejected or betrayed or frustrated at the regional or 
local levels.
Every local “arrangement” or “agreement” is 
affected, not freely, but with heavy dosages of money – in the 
appropriate currencies. All these, complexities are introduced here for 
the sake of analytical completeness. Our focus in the present discussion
 is on alliances between political parties, and at the national level.
 
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