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BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group - Politics - Nairaland

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BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by LRNZH(m): 9:26pm On Mar 14, 2015


We change our election forecast from a narrow win for incumbent Goodluck Jonathan to a victory for opposition leader Muhamadu Buhari (60% probability).

The electoral map is tilting towards Buhari in the swing regions of the southwest and middle belt, while high turnout in his core northern base will offset Jonathan’s advantage in the Niger Delta.

While a Buhari administration’s reliance on technocratic, business-oriented senior officials will lead to constructive policy initiatives, we keep our long-term trajectory at neutral given the downside risks to oil production and policy implementation challenges.



BUHARI EDGES AHEAD
We had long viewed Goodluck Jonathan as a favorite to win reelection, but a number of factors now lead us to believe the edge has swung in Buhari’s favor. The election will still be difficult to call, but our expectation of a narrow Jonathan win was predicated on several factors that are losing some saliency late in the campaign.

Chief among them is the incumbency and financial advantages of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). While this still helps Jonathan, its impact is blunted by the intensity of support for Buhari, lackluster grassroots campaigning by the PDP, and new anti-rigging measures by the electoral commission. New permanent voting cards and card readers will sharply reduce the level of rigging seen in 2011, when Jonathan beat Buhari in a landslide. Equally important are the enthusiasm gap between the candidates and widespread desire for change. Tepid support for Jonathan, even within his own party, means there is no guarantee that patronage will translate into votes. This is especially the case in the north where influential PDP governors and other leaders are taking the money but barely campaigning for Jonathan because of Buhari’s overwhelming popularity in the region.



While we expected the electoral map to favor Jonathan, current trends suggest that the swing regions may side with Buhari, including the Christian-majority and heavily populated southwest around Lagos. That could be the decisive demographic factor in the election. Jonathan won the southwest and middle belt handily in 2011, but faces an uphill task now. Buhari has reached out to the southwestern Yoruba community and brought them into the upper ranks of his campaign and potential administration, in a political alliance of the country’s two largest ethnic groups (the Hausa and Yoruba). In contrast, Jonathan has struggled to make inroads with either group.

The spotty polling data which is available is also trending in favor of Buhari. A recent poll by a credible local think tank, the Center for Public Policy Alternatives, showed a heavy 58-32% lead for Buhari in Lagos state—a state in which Jonathan handily defeated Buhari last election. While a national poll by Afrobarometer in January showed a statistical dead heat at 42% for each candidate, economic conditions with the weakening naira continue to deteriorate, along with the security environment. According to an IPSOS/Eurasia Group model for predicting elections, incumbents have a hard time winning reelection when their approval ratings are below 40%. We don’t have polling data to confirm where Jonathan is now, but given he was at around 50% at the end of last year, our best guess is that he is below 40% now.

In addition, the All Progressives Congress (APC) has suffered few defections during the campaign despite plenty of PDP inducements, suggesting a relatively united coalition whose members have confidence in the prospects of victory. In contrast, the PDP has been weakened by internal power struggles, including the dramatic departure from the party by former President Olusegun Obasanjo. Another obstacle for the PDP is the downturn in the economy, especially the naira devaluations that have hit pocketbooks hard in the import-dependent country. That has played into the APC’s rallying call for change at an inopportune time for the ruling party.

Despite some important military gains against Boko Haram in the northeast and a partial exoneration of its oil revenue management in a recent PWC audit, the PDP is starting to look desperate. Examples include: forcing the election delay, seeking (unofficially) the resignation of respected Independent Nigerian Electoral Commission (INEC) head Attahiru Jega, questioning Buhari’s health, playing sectarian politics, and casting doubts about the new permanent voter cards. This raises the possibility of another election delay, but we think that is relatively unlikely, in part because it would probably backfire politically and would certainly do so internationally. While some of his aides and military leaders may feel otherwise, Jonathan himself is unlikely to support such a maneuver.

EXPECT A CONTESTED ELECTION OUTCOME
The above does suggest, however, that the administration will contest the election if it loses, especially if it is close. Whether that contestation is violent and protracted, or limited to a court challenge (which would likely uphold INEC’s election verdict) remains to be seen; it will likely be somewhere in between the two. Worst-case scenarios like a military seizure of Abuja or a self-declaration of victory by the PDP and de facto partition (like Cote d’Ivoire in 2011) cannot be discounted entirely but are unlikely. That’s in part due to the enthusiasm gap for Jonathan and also because of his own temperament. The concern, though, is if his administration is hijacked by hardliners in the PDP who will do whatever it takes to stay in power and forestall a dreaded Buhari presidency that they fear will prosecute them for corruption.

A LOOK AHEAD AT A POSSIBLE BUHARI PRESIDENCY
Buhari is a radically different politician and leader than Jonathan, and his approach to security and corruption will be a sharp departure from the status quo, most likely for the better. When it comes to policies, however, there may be less divergence than meets the eye, especially in the economic realm. Many of Jonathan’s priorities—power and agriculture reform, local content regulations, and selective liberalization of the economy—will also be priorities under a Buhari administration, with differences of emphasis. Buhari may additionally look to liberalize the rail, refinery, and gas pipeline industries, none of which will be easy.

Even though a Buhari win may be the better outcome for investors over time, we are keeping our short-term trajectory (six months) at negative and long-term political outlook (two years) at neutral. In the near term, the post-election climate will be tense and likely contested regardless of who wins. But in contrast to Jonathan, a Buhari administration has a different mix of assets and liabilities. On the plus side, a Buhari administration would be stronger in tackling corruption, more reformist in the oil sector, and less likely to allow politics to swamp the business climate.

The reason we aren’t upgrading Nigeria’s outlook to positive, however, rests in the potential for an oil disruption and the likely pushback to Buhari’s policy agenda in a highly polarized political climate. His victory is likely to unleash a resurgence of militancy in the Niger Delta (Jonathan’s home region) that targets the oil sector. Former Delta militants have threatened to blow up oil pipelines, platforms, and personnel as in the past when they routinely took up to 500,000 barrels per day offline. There is likely some bluster in their threats. The former MEND movement barely exists, but it could be reconstituted. It is likely in the aftermath of a Buhari win that pro-Jonathan ex-militants disrupt oil production, potentially on a market-moving scale. The risk may not be sustained for long, as most of the former militants are more interested in collecting their amnesty payments, enriching themselves from oil bunkering, and tending to business interests in oil and security. Opportunists may see a chance, though, to gain leverage for future amnesty deals, especially as the current amnesty program rewards militants roughly in proportion to their rank and ruthlessness.

Second, even though fiscal management is likely to be constructive, there are still some uncertainties about the broad direction of his economic team. The austere 2015 budget proposal that now includes a low $52 oil benchmark (in the Senate version in consultation with the ministry of finance) is likely to be broadly compatible with Buhari’s own vision for fiscal policy in the near term. Despite some expansive welfare and public works pledges in his campaign manifesto, the oil price climate, together with Buhari’s top economic advisors, will dictate austerity at least in 2015. That’s also consistent with his track record when he was in office in the 1980s.

It is not clear, though, that Buhari has a strong economic policy orientation. This uncertainty is a chief risk for investors. Two different camps from inside his campaign will likely vie for control of economic (and other) policy. In short-hand, one camp is dominated by southwestern (Lagos and surrounding states) technocrats and businesspeople while the other is an old guard of northern aides and politicians with longstanding ties to Buhari. The policy gap between the two is vast, with the first group pro-business and pro-liberalization and the latter group more statist and nationalist in orientation. The signal from the campaign is that the southwestern group is ascendant when it comes to the economy while the northern group will get important posts outside of the economic realm, including national security. Such a division of labor would be positive for the investment climate, particularly since Buhari is known as a delegator outside of his core issues of national security and to a lesser extent, petroleum.

BUHARI’S LIKELY APPROACH TO TAX POLICY AND TAX
At the outset, will not be on raising or lowering taxes but rather enforcing the current tax regime, which is widely ignored by companies and individuals alike. Using successful tax enforcement models from Lagos and elsewhere in the southwest, the administration would look to combine a zero tolerance approach (stiff penalties) with greater transparency in the collection effort to ”plug leakages.” Plugging leakages is a recurring mantra among Buhari’s economic advisors, who are convinced that tax/customs enforcement, revenue transparency, and tough anti-corruption measures will bring billions of dollars into the treasury without raising taxes or even including oil revenues in the equation. That may be a hopeful assessment in the current oil price climate, but there is conviction behind it from the economic team.

Having been the petroleum minister previously, Buhari is likely to take a more hands-on approach to the sector. He will push for reforms on multiple tracks—reform of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), reform of oil revenue transmission to the state (plugging leakages), and reform of the fiscal/regulatory climate for oil companies, perhaps in that order. Buhari’s platform calls for restructuring NNPC so that it is leaner and has less regulatory authority (and conflicts of interest) in the sector. This could allow for the commercialization of its upstream operations, allowing it to borrow on international markets to make its joint venture cash calls.

The process is likely to be slow, with some pushback from vested interests. That will be countered by the president’s discretion to appoint the petroleum minister, the head and board of NNPC, and many others in decision-making positions. While corruption will not magically disappear, there will be fewer sweat-heart deals for favored local companies or opaque oil swaps, and high profile prosecutions will set a tone of accountability that has been absent under the Jonathan administration. A Buhari administration would funnel oil revenues to the Central Bank through the Single Treasury Account rather than through dozens of banks as is currently the norm. The Petroleum Investment Bill (PIB) will again be reformulated and probably streamlined into a far less expansive reform package; fiscal terms will improve of necessity for IOCs. This will open up a window of opportunity for passage of a far narrower PIB, especially if the opposition APC gains a parliamentary majority. Failing that, a Buhari government would focus on unblocking the many oil and gas disputes with IOCs (blocked by vested interests) that are forestalling additional exploration and development.

I am currently in Nigeria on research and can be reached this week and next at (+1) 202.615.9482.

Philippe de Pontet
Practice Head, Africa
(202) 903-0006
depontet@eurasiagroup.net

http://newsrescue.com/buhari-will-now-win-28-march-presidential-election-with-a-wide-margin-eurasia-group/#ixzz3UOR7I3Vw

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Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by jamace(m): 9:29pm On Mar 14, 2015
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by Sugarly: 9:30pm On Mar 14, 2015
GMB doesnt need witches, wizards, amadioha, oracle, ifa, or emere to win. God is sufficient for him

19 Likes

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by LRNZH(m): 9:32pm On Mar 14, 2015
jamace:
GEJ has won the election already:
https://www.nairaland.com/2122495/oracle-predicts-victory-jonathanin-28
https://www.nairaland.com/2195601/white-witches-back-jonathan-beat

While PDP relies on metaphysical predictions from the like of oracles, witches and palm readers, APC is doing its groundwork logically and independent pollstars are picking up the signs of a GMB/APC victory.

cc: Lalasticlala, Ishilove, Maclatunji, Obinoscopy, OAM4J

5 Likes

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by atlwireles: 9:36pm On Mar 14, 2015
grin grin grin grin grin
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by EMMYLASHTINS(m): 9:45pm On Mar 14, 2015
Na so Na so SAI BUHARI. BABA don win am alredy

3 Likes

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by LRNZH(m): 9:50pm On Mar 14, 2015
atlwireles:
grin grin grin grin grin

What are you on about?
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by atlwireles: 9:52pm On Mar 14, 2015
LRNZH:


What are you on about?

Enjoying your oluwole propaganda.
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by Collynzo419: 9:53pm On Mar 14, 2015
The International Community already know that Nigerians are yearning for Change. They can see it. They are prepared and they welcome it.

Nigerians know it, they can feel it and cannot wait to actualize the change.

No amount of dollarization can change our minds.

Change is here.

13 Likes

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by LRNZH(m): 9:55pm On Mar 14, 2015
atlwireles:


Enjoying your oluwole propaganda.

There is a name, a phone number and an email address on that article.

You can google the agency too..lemme help you

http://www.eurasiagroup.net/

4 Likes

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by fitzmayowa: 9:59pm On Mar 14, 2015
March 28 is around the corner atleast we get to rest from all this prediction and counter predictions flying around...


I would rather wait till after march 28 to know the actual winner, these election is too close to call, anybody saying he/she is certain of victory for any of the guys contesting is just been hopeful...IMO
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by emiye(m): 10:01pm On Mar 14, 2015
Na so ! victory acerta, he will win and the worst performance will be a win in 3 out of the 6 zones.(nw wit 85% ne with 75%, and sw with 65%) in the other three zones (se with 10% and ss with 15% and Nc with 45%)
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by Firefire(m): 10:25pm On Mar 14, 2015
Another forgery from Heee Feee Ceee. cheesy

Na so den dey take win election and unseat a sitting President?

Waste of time and resources
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by bakila: 10:36pm On Mar 14, 2015
See as this people summerise our life from A to Z. Funny thing is that it was 79% accurate.

2 Likes

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by confidenceikeh: 10:59pm On Mar 14, 2015
Heaven knws that there is no vacancy in Aso rock
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by cola: 11:03pm On Mar 14, 2015
Interesting analysis!

Incisive, too.

Forget the forecast. Read the analysis, pre and post poll. This should show our local business and political analysts how to earn respected readership.

I should bookmark this for reference.

1 Like

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by RoyalPriesthuud(m): 11:49pm On Mar 14, 2015
Most folks above me don't even bother reading the story. This foreign Journalist/analysts/freelance writers sometimes makes me question how our local ones are being oriented. The guy deserves kudos for this piece.


Dat guy with fire in his moniker, I don't knw wht to say o....

3 Likes

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by LRNZH(m): 12:08am On Mar 15, 2015
RoyalPriesthuud:
Most folks above me don't even bother reading the story. This foreign Journalist/analysts/freelance writers sometimes makes me question how our local ones are being oriented. The guy deserves kudos for this piece.


Dat guy with fire in his moniker, I don't knw wht to say o....
This is a balanced analysis. I don't know why the mods have not noticed this yet.

cc: Lalasticlala, Ishilove, Maclatunji, Obinoscopy, OAM4J

1 Like

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by RoyalPriesthuud(m): 12:15am On Mar 15, 2015
LRNZH:

This is a balanced analysis. I don't know why the mods have not noticed this yet.

cc: Lalasticlala, Ishilove, Maclatunji, Obinoscopy, OAM4J

Oh yeap it is.

Btw, wht's d meaning of ur moniker? Sounds similar to some chemicals we learnt in organic chemistry cheesy

1 Like

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by Nobody: 1:08am On Mar 15, 2015
vERY EXCELLENT PREDICTIONS.
FUNNY THOUGH THAT WE CANNOT GET SUCH FACTUAL REPORTS WITHIN NIGERIA.
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by Nobody: 1:16am On Mar 15, 2015

1 Like

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by boss1310(m): 2:15am On Mar 15, 2015
Buhari will win but in Lagos state
90% of nairaland APC members are based in Lagos and they always forget to notice that lagos is just one state in the federation.they use their numbers here to judge the coming elections.funny
as for the post these foreign polls will not queue with Nigerians as they re-elect their president
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by kolonigga(m): 3:27am On Mar 15, 2015
Sai Buhari all the way!!!
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by kolonigga(m): 3:28am On Mar 15, 2015
[s]
boss1310:
Buhari will win but in Lagos state
90% of nairaland APC members are based in Lagos and they always forget to notice that lagos is just one state in the federation.they use their numbers here to judge the coming elections.funny
as for the post these foreign polls will not queue with Nigerians as they re-elect their president
[/s]

Trash!!!

2 Likes

Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by boss1310(m): 5:25am On Mar 15, 2015
kolonigga:
[s][/s]

Trash!!!
hahahaha who cares about your opinion,march 28 is nigh and when it passes it will also take the hope,curses and insults by you people with it.
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by bencobenz(m): 6:35am On Mar 15, 2015
Let the witches and wizards keep supporting GEJ, as long as the Lord is on our side, change is inevitable. One with God is a majority.

#IHaveDecided!

#Sai Buhari!
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by Rawani: 6:59am On Mar 15, 2015
Clear and convincing analysis/forecast with backing facts and supporting data. Now this is how you predict an election outcome, not by relying on the cosmic fancies of drunk white witches.

Did I hear firefire mention incumbency?

"According to an IPSOS/Eurasia Group model for predicting elections, incumbents have a hard time winning reelection when their approval ratings are below 40%. We don’t have polling data to confirm where Jonathan is now, but given he was at around 50% at the end of last year, our best guess is that he is below 40% now."

-Eurasia Group, 2015.
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by omenka(m): 7:15am On Mar 15, 2015
Sugarly:
GMB doesnt need witches, wizards, amadioha, oracle, ifa, or emere to win. God is sufficient for him
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by omenka(m): 7:17am On Mar 15, 2015
It would take a miracle made in the most sacred parts of heaven for Jonathan to win this election.
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by iiichidodo: 7:29am On Mar 15, 2015
We will only believe this analysis if its speculators are based on ground here in Nigeria and have traversed its remote societal strata e.g the bike man in Lagos,the civil servant in Oshogbo, the market women in the south, the businness man in Nnewi, the trader in Adamawa.....and not sit in plush offices in Europe speculating an African election based on social media data to the immiediate relief of APC-egoats here on Nairaland who recently have seen their demi-god's popularity taken serious knocks,beatings and bruising by GEJ' transformation works, let us forget-the APC's penchant for celebrating Nigeria's disasters,deaths and whatnot for cheap points-for another topic.... Nigerians want transformation not negative change...#changethechanger
Re: BUHARI WILL NOW WIN 28 March Election With A Wide Margin – Eurasia Group by Arch1: 7:34am On Mar 15, 2015
GEJ - Goodbye Ebele Jonathan

1 Like

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