How party’s
tolerance of rebel MPs was typical of its tolerance of other ills and a danger
to democracy
Finally, the
NRM decided to expel it’s so called “rebel MPs”. Many critics of President
Yoweri Museveni and the NRM have denounced this decision. The MPs themselves
are challenging it in a constitutional court. Yet most of this criticism is out
of ignorance or opportunism.
These MPs were violating the Loi fondamentale of
party politics. In most multi-party democracies, they would have suffered a
similar fate.
When it was
publicised, popular discontent erupted, paralysing Athens with mass
demonstrations. Seven MPs including three cabinet ministers defied their
parties and publicly denounced it. Their respective parties kicked them out.
As I was
watching this news on CNN, I tuned on NTV. The NRM had held a party caucus
meeting to discuss the 13 resolutions passed by parliament in October about
alleged oil bribes. The party caucus accepted nine but rejected four and
instructed its members to reverse the resolutions. On NTV were MPs Theodore
Sekikubo and Mohamed Nsereko declaring that they would not accept to be bound
by the resolutions of their party.
A political
party exists as a voluntary association of people who share common political
objectives, an ideology and policy preferences.
You join a
political party because you share in its ideals. A party has to have rules for
internal discipline to ensure that its members, and most especially its
leaders, adhere to its agenda. That is why many have whips to enforce party
discipline.
Those who run
on the party ticket largely accept that they must abide by its rules – unless
it accepts varying degrees of deviations. Candidates on the party ticket are
supposed to follow the party program.
If anyone
feels that the party machinery has values at odds with their aspirations, or
that the party leadership is not adhering to its own values, they are free to
leave; join another party or form a new one. If you choose to fight for change
from within, you would still be bound by party discipline.
It means you
have to use the official party channels to register your dissent especially so
when you are a leader. NRM’s rebel MPs did neither. Why did they claim to be
members of NRM when they did not agree with its policies, rules and practices?
This is where
my frustration with Uganda’s elite class begins. Our politics must be based on
values which we uphold even when they sometimes do not work in our favour.
Assuming
Uganda had a parliament of 300 members and FDC had 120 and NRM 180. Assuming
NRM wants to amend the constitution and remove term limits on the presidency so
that Museveni can become, as he has, a presidential monarch. Assume further
that this needs two thirds of all MPs i.e. 200 votes. FDC holds a caucus and
they adopt a position against such an amendment.
Then 30 FDC
MPs publically denounce the official party position. They hit the radio and TV
talk show circuit and even call press conferences declaring that they will vote
with NRM. What would FDC do? I know that if it kicked them out of its
ranks and insisted they relinquish their seats, the same people condemning NRM
would be the ones praising FDC.
These MPs are
a danger to democracy. They do not agree in principle with what is happening in
our country especially the poor quality of leadership offered by NRM on some of
the most important issues concerning our future. But because they know that NRM
is strong in their constituencies, they opportunistically run on its ticket to
win elections.
However,
either their conscious or desire for popular favor in the media and diplomatic
circles, they denounce the very party they are helping entrench in power. Yet
by their opportunism, they have denied the opposition their reputational
capital and organisational and political-mobilisation skills so desperately
needed to challenge the NRM.
The length of
time it has taken for NRM to kick these “rebel MPs” out of the party is typical
of Museveni’s style of leadership. Things can go awfully wrong and for a very long
time as he sits-by with exasperating patience.
A corruption
scandal erupts and everyone expects the President to take action but Museveni
remains silent – thus causing suspicions that he is complicit in it. Often when
he acts, it is too little too late and the damage is too big.
I have argued
before that Museveni is a complete man. The way he has tolerated these “rebel
MPs” and their antics is the same way he has tolerated corruption, incompetence
and overt subversion of the public good by his political hangers on and civil
servants – hence the bad state of our public goods and services.
Someone could
argue that Museveni tolerates all these ills because it is the most reasonable
way to hold the flabby and heterogeneous coalition of Uganda’s myriad ethnicities
together. That rush decisions of firing the incompetent, the corrupt and the
undisciplined may cause rapture leading to civil war and the dismemberment of
the country.
That the
president has survived long in power and kept Uganda together because his style
of leadership appreciates the peculiar configuration of the Ugandan state and
society and the necessary concessions and compromises needed to hold it
together.
May be this
argument holds water. May it does not. Whichever the case, Uganda needs a leader
who is quick, resolute and decisive not just in the preservation of power but
also in serving the public good. The cost of tolerating all sorts of ills is
also hindering the ability of the state in Uganda to serve the majority of its
citizens.
It is possible
that this fear of rocking the boat is overstated because whenever our president
has felt the need to take quick and decisive action especially against threats
to his power, like he does with Kizza Besigye, there has been no rapture. It is
possible that the same can be done to the thieves and the incompetent without
the country falling apart.
2 comments:
Catch a clue dear reader: the NRM is bankrupt. There is no credible opposition. Fortunately, there IS an "app" for that...
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