The Battle Osinbajo Couldn’t Win, By Babafemi Ojudu

In a period of two months, he must have visited the Victoria Garden City (VGC) more than fifteen times. Town hall meeting here, parlour meeting there and street walk on the other side. He met with professionals and engaged resident associations, just as he dialogued with people of faith.

At the end of the election, they would still not let him deliver his unit.

I have received many calls and text messages asking what happened? It is not far-fetched.

It is a combination of an ethnic rally, an elite mentality and living in the midst of people who the policies of the administration does not favour.

As we held those meetings, I saw it coming and remarked to colleagues that coming to VGC and appealing to the voters there might be a waste of time. I could see it in their utterances, their body language. The bile was palpable and in some cases, one could perceive hostility. Osinbajo, as we have known, is a never-say-die person. He dug at it with the severity of a tunnel digger, in the belief that there would be light at the end.

At the last meeting he had, which was on the Wednesday before the initial February 19th election day, I slipped away to rest, so as to be strong for the following day’s task.

Only an Osinbajo will depart Uyo for Lagos at 9.00 pm, after a hard day’s campaign in Plateau and Akwa Ibom States, and take an arduous ride through the Lekki traffic to VGC from the airport, sometimes for one-and-a-half hours, and still go on to address a motley crowd of thirty residents.

Those engagements were, for me, a spectacle. I get easily irritated. Many of his aides were disgusted like I was.

Not Osinbajo who would take his time in fielding all manners of questions and sometimes subtle and not so subtle insults.

There were cases of some fellows who had nothing to say than, “Osinbajo you have come now and you didn’t bring kola, how do you want us to vote for you again?” Kola in the local parlance means money gifts or simply a bribe. And this is a supposed elite environment. I was shocked on hearing this. Some said since he was elected they expected him to have donated a mini-stadium to VGC. Some wanted him to have solved the problem of flooding there. A fellow said he and Buhari stand blamed for the loss of his would-have-been first child who died when his pregnant wife walked into an electrified flood water in his house.

One expressed disgust at his men for parking in front of his gate. Another accused him of lying that the Second Niger Bridge project had taken off. Every effort to convince him was ignored and he kept interjecting until Osinbajo moved on to other topics.

He took all of this with calmness and gave time, hours at a time, explaining government policies: why the administration is fighting corruption and why Nigeria must not depend on imports from other nations; the infrastructural projects going on across Nigeria, etc.

All of this was like pouring water on the back of a calabash. To be honest, there were a handful who were civil and patriotic. Some others were sympathetic and could reason with the logic of his presentation and the sincerity of his purpose.

I could hear the voices of some who shared his dream of a greater Nigeria; one in which leaders pursued the good of the majority, as opposed to the minority. Some suggested great ideas and offered criticisms that could help sharpen policy. Some offered to join the Osinbajo train.

Some too were taken in by his humility and understanding of the problem. A particular person right there and then sought to have an account number to which he could pay in a donation and a few others must have too. Some were generous in offering us snacks and drinks for our parched throats.

Most were however new money: importers of all manners of things, beneficiaries of the abuse the Buhari administration is dedicated to stamping out. Some others were driven mainly by ethnic hatred.

This, however, is understandable. Even in America many still make their political choices on the basis of colour of the skin. The majority of the British who voted for Brexit did so due to aversion for Eastern Europeans who come to their country seeking a better life, not minding the harm such a decision will do to the economy of their country. Good or bad, every voter has the right to the choice he makes. No one can deprive him of that. That is the essence of democracy.

It was easy, therefore, to see that this was a battle this ajantala would not win. I knew they were not going to vote for him.

He was however relentless and persistent, calling on the tenacity that has taken him to the height he has reached in life today – the best grade in secondary school, a first class in the university and becoming a lecturer at the age of 23, a professor of law, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, an exceptional attorney-general in Lagos for eight years, and an accomplished vice president of the Federal Republic for close to four years now. To top it all, he is a reputable pastor.

Yes, Osinbajo lost the vote in his neighbourhood of VGC. VGC is not his constituency. Certainly not. He could easily have gone to vote in Ikenne, his ancestral home town, where he is deeply loved and revered. He could have queued to vote in the Somolu area of Lagos where he was born and raised and where his aged mother lived and adored. He could still have chosen to cast his vote in Akoka, on the premises of the University of Lagos where he taught for many years and his polling unit could have embraced and given him a landslide victory, but Osinbajo is one who never runs away from a problem. He digs his teeth in it until he is able to bite through.

Knowing him, he will not quit VGC until he is able to make the new money residents see reason.

Left to me, he ought to move his base to that glorious abode of late Obafemi Awolowo, a place of history, a community that is synonymous with progressive politics and intellectual pursuit.

By the way I am told that the small town has produced up to thirteen Senior Advocates of Nigeria, more than most states of Nigeria have produced.

After all, one of the first SANs was our leader, Pa Obafemi Awolowo, who must have been smiling down on his grand son-in-law as he displayed the brilliance and tenacity only an Awoist can pull off. Only this time, he lost the battle but won the war!

Congratulations Mr. Vice President.

Babafemi Ojudu, the special adviser on political matters to the president, writes from Abuja

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