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Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari - Politics - Nairaland

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Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Johnnyessence(m): 6:04am On Apr 19, 2015
•We will go into action before we are sworn-in
•‘Our priorities on security, economy, unemployment, corruption’
•On indiscipline: People are more prepared to behave than in 1983


If statements from the president-elect, Major-General Muhammadu Buhari, are to be believed, the incoming administration, to be inaugurated on May 29, will hit the ground running. Buhari says he intends to put together a small cabinet that may go into action even before the swearing-in. In a nutshell, he speaks on the shape of things to come in this interview.

By Levinus Nwabughiogu

There has been an influx of defectors from the ruling People’s Democratic Party, PDP, to your party, APC, since after your victory at the polls. Many think the development may destabilise the APC. How do you intend to manage the situation?

I think this is a question meant for the party. I wish John Oyegun was here to answer you because we have a system. Just because I am the presidential candidate and the president-elect, I don’t think the system has allowed me to usurp the power of the party executives. But, certainly, in a multi-party democratic system, fundamentally, it is the number that matters for the people. But for the party, what matters is the ability to manage the number so that the majority will have its way and there will be justice. No matter what happens to the PDP by May 29, I assure you or I assure them through you that there will be justice in the APC.

A new government, which you will head, will soon be inaugurated. Can you tell us what criteria you will be using in selecting those who you will work with?

It is a difficult time for Nigerians as you all know. I have said it in the past that, in the last 16 years, Nigeria has never realised the amount of revenue it received. The price of a barrel of crude oil rose to about 140 dollars and then crashed to about 50 dollars. During the 16 years, we know what happened to some big companies that employ a lot of Nigerians and give them training facilities like the Nigeria Airways, Nigeria National Shipping Line.
Even Nigeria Railway is managing to be on paper with some refurbished engines moving from Lagos to Ibadan and a few other places. If you go to their stations all over the country, you will realise that they are in a terrible shape. The important thing in a country with a huge population of youths with more than 60 percent of them under the age of 30 who are unemployed is that you need these institutions to give jobs and training to them. It is very disappointing that the PDP government virtually failed to use those resources to grow the economy.
I think the worst thing is the lack of accountability and the terrible budgetary system. Imagine that over 90 percent of Nigerian budget is on recurrent.

How can you sustain development in a country like Nigeria with only about 10 percent of your income?

Things just have to change. There must be more money available for infrastructure, for investment in getting the factories back, employment and getting goods and services for the population. I think the sins of PDP will be coming out for several years to come.

Do we expect a government of national unity?

Again, you want me to encroach on the party’s main power. Even if I, as president-elect, want to form a broad based government, I think that the executive of the party will have some influence on that decision. So, for me to maintain a good rapport with the leadership of the party, I want to keep your question in abeyance until further notice.

The 2015 elections did not go without pockets of violence here and there. Does that strike you in any way?

I think there are less disruptions in the second leg of the general elections on April 11 than we had during the presidential and National Assembly elections. I hope it was as a result of the bandwagon effect because APC had the upper hand during the first leg of elections. But what happened in the South-South and the South-East cannot be compared to what happened on April 11.

What I saw was that there was a few ballot snatching in some local government areas of Bayelsa State and a few disruptions in Adamawa, but that is nothing near what happened on March 28. I don’t think what happened on 11 is up to 25 percent of what happened on March 28? I think that after the elections, both parties, APC and PDP, will perhaps make their representations to INEC or the courts and then more details will emerge. Maybe we had less infractions on April 11 because the turnout was much lower. Maybe the people just wanted a president and once they got one, they just walked away. They are Nigerians and there is nothing we can do, but to convince them that they have to use this weapon which is the permanent voter cards (PVCs)

Reports from Rivers and some states on April 11 indicated violence. How do you feel about this?

I think we should allow INEC to give its comprehensive report. Meanwhile, as you mentioned in some of the states, especially in Rivers and Lagos, the two parties slugged it out. I think we have to take our time and let us get as much report as possible in accordance with the Electoral Act. I personally want to be legal about this so that people will appreciate that we believe in a system. What we need to do is to modify the system according to the law if we don’t like it, and no one should come out and do to the system whatever he likes. For what happened in Lagos, I think that for whatever political reason, the PDP wanted to have Lagos by all means.

I have a lot of respect for the governor of Rivers State for his courage. At a certain time, the Commissioner of Police virtually hijacked the state and the governor was virtually sentenced to the streets fighting thugs without law enforcement agents while the Constitution makes it very clear that the governor is the Chief Security Officer of the state.

So, a lot of lawless acts of the PDP are on record and we intend to make the PDP understand it and make sure that, according to the law, those who are responsible for that are taken to the court and properly charged. We are in this system because we believe in it and we want it to stabilize because it is good for our country. If Nigerians have the confidence that their votes count, then they will mind their business and I assure you that there will be more security in the country.

But when people feel that they are abandoned, then they will resist. I think that by nature, human beings are rebels especially in Nigeria. You must try and placate them, convince them and show them that their rights are respected or you will not have peace. On what we hear about the money that changed hands, it would have been impossible for APC to win anything in this country because we don’t have the treasury in our pocket. There was no amount of money that could convince Nigerians this time around.

A lot of them took the money and did exactly what their conscience wanted them to do, while some even returned the money. Somehow, Rivers and Lagos were seen as strategic to the PDP. Otherwise, how could APC have a marginal 100,000 votes over APC in Lagos which is virtually the capital of the APC in the South- West? A lot of things will come out, but we want to do it basically on facts which can be verified and quantified.

To some extent, the general elections are seen by many to be credible. Will you try to retain the INEC Chairman to build on the successes recorded even though he said he wouldn’t accept another term of office?

I think Prof. Jega knows exactly what to do. He has already said that he is not going to accept a renewal of his tenure in June. I believe that he has learnt enough and will submit a comprehensive hand over notes some of which he seems to have written. At the last National Council of States meeting, he submitted a document of INEC activities right from the 2011 general elections to date with attachment showing the personnel trained, acquisition of election materials, the distributions, security, among others, and I don’t think that such that report can be faulted.

In fact, INEC was forced to accept the six weeks extension by the Office of the National Security Adviser. Luckily, those six weeks were accommodated within the constitutional time limit within which election must hold. The law says election must hold 30 days before 29th of May. So, INEC did not have much trouble to agreeing to the six weeks extension. As people say, it has come to pass.

For many years, Nigerians have been clamouring that something be done to punish those involved in election rigging. The Uwais Committee recommended a special court to try electoral offenders, but government has refused to implement that recommendation. Will your government set up a special court to try electoral offenders?


No matter how you the media try, you will not catch me undermining the authority of the party. I will look for understanding and cooperation from the National Assembly when a change of the Constitution or the Electoral Act is necessary. So for me to make up my mind here and later try to lobby is out of it because, some of them, if they are very hard, they will give me a tough time.

I will say that I haven’t read the Uwais Report, but l have read a few extracts from news papers. l think it is a good thing and we will encourage it. But we need to get a comprehensive report from the field. The running battle in Rivers, South-East and South-South, especially by Governor Amaechi, Rochas Okorocha and governor of Edo state with INEC officials and law enforcement agencies and the army is remarkable and I think it has to be totally exposed so that Nigerians will know which of the law enforcement agencies and at what levels is undermining the Constitution of Nigeria because the Electoral Act is derived from the Constitution of the country so that, in future, those who are in position will know that they are not above the law. I think that is what will bring more stability into the system. In view of that, I will try and work with the National Assembly to make sure that we do something about it.

There are speculations that looting of public treasury is ongoing in the land. What do you intend to do to check this problem?

I will like to work within the system because we believe in it. I have just told you about three governors and the battle they have with law enforcement agents in their states. We discussed and I advised them to try and document these things so that they can be taken before the court and we will make sure that we register the cooperation of the court so that people who work against the law are prosecuted, especially those who have lost their immunity because this is the best way to stabilize the system.

People must not benefit from being lawless. You can’t be in a position by virtue of the Constitution, subvert the Constitution and continue to enjoy the privileges offered by the Constitution. I don’t think that will be acceptable by the APC. So, whether you are in the opposition or government, you have to behave yourself. I think that is the way we can make progress.

APC preaches transparency and accountability. But a lot of people with apparent questionable characters are moving into the APC. Don’t you think they will also pollute the APC?

For those that are coming into the APC, I have no fear because we have our party structure. The fact that you were a party Chairman or you were a minister before you joined the APC, we appreciate the fact that you remain relevant in your immediate locality. But when it comes to the centre, there is equality in the way the government will handle you.
If we win majority of members of the National Assembly and House of Assembly in the states, it means that it is with the agreement of their constituencies that the Federal Government has the power that it has. If the Federal Government is insisting on accountability and being responsible, even if they go back to their constituencies, there is nothing they can do about the decision of the government. We are banking on that. I will give you an example of my state, Katsina.

In 2011, the CPC won all the senatorial seats and 13 out of the 15 House of Representatives seats but lost the governorship. Who did the election? Did people from space come to do the election? That is the bad thing about lack of cohesion in a party. Leadership at all levels must work in concert. Otherwise, what Katsina State suffered, any state or the centre can suffer same. Those who were chief executives from local government, to states will be encouraged to work together.


So, those that are coming in, I hope they will accept that they are coming to join those who succeeded and they should cooperate with them. They can’t come and say that because they were once ministers under PDP, they will join APC and become ministers the following month or so. I don’t think that it will be acceptable even by their constituencies.

You introduced War Against Indiscipline, WAI, as the military Head of State in 1984 to fight indiscipline. Years after, the cankerworm has remained? How do you intend to handle this?

I will mention how it came about. When we had our first Supreme Council meeting and governors were appointed, in my office, it was only me and the late Tunde Idiagbon, we discussed and agreed that the main problem of Nigeria was indiscipline. If we could get majority of Nigerians to accept, which ever level they were, we will make a lot of progress. I could recall that I advised that we should go to the Ministry of Information because there were a lot of people with first degree, masters and Ph.D who were sociologists and criminologists just warming their seats.

They should get together and come up with a programme that will last for years and not just for six months and fizzle out. That was how we came about WAI. It was very well thought out. It was a military system. In democracy, people want a lot of freedom, but if they see the restraint in advanced democracies in Europe and America, they will realise that discipline is forced on people. There are things that, no matter how much you want to do them, you can’t do them.

I think that we have suffered enough as a people and I think that people are more prepared to behave properly now. About two years ago, I made some remarks in Hausa and people felt, now, some senior civil servants who are Directors either at the state or federal can’t educate four children because the level of education has gone down so much. Those that can afford will rather send their children to Ghana or Sudan and those who can afford it more send theirs to America and Europe because the educational system in Nigeria has virtually collapsed.

Therefore, we feel that, by voting APC into power, Nigerians are placing confidence in us. On security, economy, especially unemployment and corruption, I believe that Nigerians will give us the understanding to make sure that we get our priorities right. Education is going to be very important because when you educate the people, you solve half of your problems because there is a level that an educated person will not accept. But when people are sentenced to illiteracy, when they are exposed to all manner of social vices such as ethnicity and religion so that people don’t move forward, they are used to fight themselves.

During your campaigns you promised to declare your assets if elected. Now that you have been elected, will you stick to your position?

I made a statement which has not been correctly captured by the media. I said that our generation, from the Murtala, made sure that those who had appointments must declare their assets and this was later articulated in the Constitution.

It is up to government to make sure that those who borrow money to build a house and end up with another house somewhere else with 50 bedrooms and 20 living rooms should explain to Nigerians how they got the money. I could recall that I declared my assets three times. First was when I got my first political appointment as governor of Borno State; secondly, when I was leaving government to go to the United States War College. I declared my assets then because I was closing my political chapter then technically. I could recall that Gen. Jemibewon was the Adjutant General of the Nigerian Army then. I had to declare my assets, deposit it there to be taken to court before I was allowed to proceed to the United States for my course.

The third one was when I became Head of State. From General Obasanjo down till now, those of us who were in the Supreme Military Council, Council of State, Executive Council and even those who were Permanent Secretaries, at the time we got our appointment, the courts should be made to produce our declarations. So, all the noise about people being rich and nobody is saying anything about it, why can’t you prick the conscience of the existing government or are some of you part of the cover up?

There have been reports that you promised to end the Boko Haram insurgency within two months, but your media team reacted saying you never said so. Can you now set the record straight?

I think I am too experienced in internal security to give two months deadline on Boko Haram. I don’t think I would have made that mistake because I tried to look at some of my experiences even when I was in uniform with the rebels from Chad when I was GOC in Jos and with Maitatsine. So, for me to say that when I come into office, I will get rid of Boko Haram in two months, I don’t think I would have made that statement. I didn’t.

As I have mentioned on several occasions, we that have, at one time or the other, wore Nigeria military uniform felt terribly embarrassed that for six years, the military couldn’t bring order to 14 out of 774 local governments in the country after Burma, Zaire, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Dafur where Nigerian military earned respect internationally for their performance.
To fail to secure 14 out of 774 local governments. I still can’t reconcile myself with that disgrace. We will try and work with our neigbours such as Chad, Cameroon and Niger who are fighting Boko Haram for us. Look at Chad helping Nigeria or Niger, or Cameroon itself. This nation has been humiliated by the PDP. God willing, with our experiences, we will quickly marshal support and we are asking Boko Haram to pack and go.

Can we know when your Transition Committee would be in place?

We have started discussing about it. Personally, I will make sure that it is not too big because if it is big, they will start thinking of how to influence the choice of ministers either for themselves or those they want to be ministers. But my idea is to get knowledgable and experienced technocrats who are really patriotic to study the handing over notes by ministries and make recommendations.

I want them to be completely detached people who are patriotic Nigerians, who are knowledgable and experienced. If we get majority of politicians involved it will lead to a lot of row and we may end up with inconclusive recommendations which are not very helpful in our condition.

When I get it ready and before it is published, I will show it to the leadership of my party and the terms of reference as well as the time limit and the result of their work, we will quickly study before the inauguration so that before we are sworn-in, we get into action.


http://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/04/why-my-cabinet-will-be-small-president-elect-buhari/

32 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by agarawu23(m): 6:05am On Apr 19, 2015
Baba even if your cabinet big, "ko kan aye". All we want is....



























A better Nigeria

38 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by angelawoko(m): 6:06am On Apr 19, 2015
Just in case

1 Like

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Rawani: 6:06am On Apr 19, 2015
Being proactive is a recipe for success. OP kindly make the questions bold and use paragraphs for easy reading.

19 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by bewla(m): 6:09am On Apr 19, 2015
SAI BABA and Osinbajo

33 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by GboyegaD(m): 6:12am On Apr 19, 2015
I live this man. He already had plans and mechanisms to execute them.

50 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by AlfaSeltzer(m): 6:12am On Apr 19, 2015
small dick, small cabinet

2 Likes

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by kettykin: 6:19am On Apr 19, 2015
Small cabinet can lead to excessive bureaucracy, where a single minister will be manning up to 4 big government agencies some which he doesn't have knowledge about

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Nobody: 6:22am On Apr 19, 2015
Message 2 our president Elect BUHARI # baba If You Get To ASO
ROCK
1) Dont come-up with 36-point
agenda.
Just give us Light and security. Odas
will fall in place
2) Reduce the costs for data bundles
3) Make Fashola a minister with 10
portfolios. He
can handle it.
4) Baba, d number of fish in each tin of Titus
sardine used to be 8 in 1999. Please
do
something about it.
5) shut all borders. Our jail candidates
must not be allowed to escape to Cotonou.
6) Don’t Use 1billion Naira to Eat. No Be
Food We
Say Make U Go Chop!
7) Please arrest dat lady that says your
call credit is low please recharge!
cool stop jumbo salary 4 d politicians &
pay dem
like civil servant 2 discourage rogues
from our
politics cool don’t use all our money to buy shoes
and private jets. use ur old military
boots and
okada if necessary
9) let there be electricity, we don’t
want to be hugging transformers
10) we want NTA to be clear like CNN,
BBC, Aljazeera and so on

158 Likes 18 Shares

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by realtestament(m): 6:25am On Apr 19, 2015
Gej sets up a committee on every single issue dat comes up and dat didn't workout well 4 him....Baba's moves might be d best

#WeAreWatching

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by nzeobi(m): 6:57am On Apr 19, 2015
But I understand the constitution says that every state must be represented in the State executive council

1 Like

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Entchidodo: 7:03am On Apr 19, 2015
Anything to reduce cost of governance and thieffnubu's influence is ok by us....Sai Baba.

15 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Medley(m): 7:15am On Apr 19, 2015
cost of governance and budget spent on recurrent expenditur should be reduced in all. Some were angry GEJ spent 1billion on food for aso-villa,love to see how much it will be in your time so that Nigerians will understand that the food is not for GEJs family alone.

9 Likes

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by mekaboy(m): 7:21am On Apr 19, 2015
Have big cabinet na, let me know where the money to fund them will come from.

3 Likes

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by LaRoyalHighness(f): 7:23am On Apr 19, 2015
Now that I have spent my time to read this epistle. Please Baba don't deny this tomorrow. Meanwhile! Action and less talk.

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by arsetalkshere: 7:26am On Apr 19, 2015
Very good interview. Each interview this man renders gives me hope.

He already have a plan which is key and he knows that even as the president he doesn't have the absolute power. This is also key to his success in government.

Just fix electricity, please. That is the main for us. Every other will auto fix themselves. Fix the electricity, there will be more money to be saved by our companies, more profit for companies will amount to more earning for people, more earning means there will be a middle class thereby reducing poverty. A reduction in poverty level will enhance our life span as a possible. It will also increase the number of SME which will lead to more jobs.

The effect of sorting the electricity finally is numerous.

37 Likes

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by efilefun(m): 7:28am On Apr 19, 2015
the smaller the cabinet the less corrupt people will be and they would be easily tamed Moreover the numbers of trusted and hardworking politicians are few so it's better to stick to the good ones than pollute the cabinet with corrupt and self centered politicians... You just can't hate baba... He reasons far ahead of those fools saying trash around instead of shutting up when baba is talking

6 Likes

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by IbokUtoroh(m): 7:47am On Apr 19, 2015
parade don change gear.
y him lie about routing out boko haram in 2mnths?
also y not answer the question are u going to declare ur assets?
y give us long sermon n history lectures hw he did it 3times in d past n at d end, endup not answeing that question.
me i knw say u wont deliver, all u wanted was to see hw aso rock be like. but if u fail, i will personally campaign for ur continuity cos u must rule till u tire!

10 Likes

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by acenazt: 7:59am On Apr 19, 2015
STPEACE:
Message 2 our president Elect BUHARI # baba If You Get To ASO
ROCK
1) Dont come-up with 36-point
agenda.
Just give us Light and security. Odas
will fall in place
2) Reduce the costs for data bundles
3) Make Fashola a minister with 10
portfolios. He
can handle it.
4) Baba, d number of fish in each tin of Titus
sardine used to be 8 in 1999. Please
do
something about it.
5) shut all borders. Our jail candidates
must not be allowed to escape to Cotonou.
6) Don’t Use 1billion Naira to Eat. No Be
Food We
Say Make U Go Chop!
7) Please arrest dat lady that says your
call credit is low please recharge!
cool stop jumbo salary 4 d politicians &
pay dem
like civil servant 2 discourage rogues
from our
politics cool don’t use all our money to buy shoes
and private jets. use ur old military
boots and
okada if necessary
9) let there be electricity, we don’t
want to be hugging transformers
10) we want NTA to be clear like CNN,
BBC, Aljazeera and so on
mehn I dey feel u

2 Likes

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by kolomax(m): 8:01am On Apr 19, 2015
realtestament:
Gej sets up a committee on every single issue dat comes up and dat didn't workout well 4 him....Baba's moves might be d best

#WeAreWatching
which of The committee abeg? Is it that of minister of petroleum or which one abeg
Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by acenazt: 8:18am On Apr 19, 2015
Please Baba I need you to do this
1-Kick out Mtn and Dstv or force them to give us what is due to us I.e fair services for what we pay
2-Steady water and light supply
3- Modernize Our Transport system (Railway,Ports and Airlines),television station and Radio.
4- build more Universities and oil refineries
5- strengthen our Sports industry. Gej did well for the movie industry but they still make crappy movies
7- This North needs infrastructural development and Modernization.
8- if by God's grace Gej or you clears this B.H menace, please Explore and develope the Oil sector there so Igbos and Asari will stop forming
9- Re open those dead Textile companies in Kaduna and many more companies to create jobs for us
10- GEJ has started a good work please complete his Agricultural Projects.

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by ShowYourCertificate: 9:05am On Apr 19, 2015
Whether your cabinet is big or small is irrelevant. What the masses want is constant electricity, reduced fuel price, cheap food commodities, jobs and a stronger naira. Failure to do that will brand you a failure regardless of whether u ran a small govt or whether u slaughtered corruption grin

And ermmmmmm, I'm also waiting to see Buhari's original WAEC certificate grin

15 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Basildvalour(m): 9:09am On Apr 19, 2015
No illicit spending

No duplicity of offices

No Ghosting


Baba, Act!!!

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by imsuboi(m): 9:16am On Apr 19, 2015
if you like, let your cabinet be as large as daura,

I'm waiting for 24hrs power supply, 1dollar = 1naira promise &
5000naira monthly allowance;
to mention but a few.

Illiterate

12 Likes

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Gbawe: 9:33am On Apr 19, 2015
ShowYourCertificate:
Whether your cabinet is big or small is irrelevant. What the masses want is constant electricity, reduced fuel price, cheap food commodities, jobs and a stronger naira. Failure to do that will brand you a failure regardless of whether u ran a small govt or whether u slaughtered corruption grin

And ermmmmmm, I'm also waiting to see Buhari's original WAEC certificate grin

To be honest, people like you should cease commenting on governance issues from now on because it is obvious you will never comment objectively since you remain bitter about ending up on the losing side. A smaller cabinet is very praiseworthy and one of the solutions demanded of Nigerian Presidents because it s directly related to Nigeria's success.

Is it not obvious there is a direct link between a smaller cabinet and cutting the annual recurrent expenditure of Nigeria, now running ridiculous at well over the traditional 70%, and making more money available for much-needed capital spending? How you can then say "Whether your cabinet is big or small is irrelevant" shows you have nothing to add here but nonsensical and petty comments. If your comments are going to be driven by childish bitterness then stop commenting and only read the input of other posters who know how to think and talk/criticise maturely for the benefit of the progress of their nation.

63 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Gbawe: 9:37am On Apr 19, 2015
Education is going to be very
important because when you educate the people,
you solve half of your problems because there is
a level that an educated person will not accept.

But when people are sentenced to illiteracy, when
they are exposed to all manner of social vices
such as ethnicity and religion so that people
don’t move forward, they are used to fight
themselves.

cool cool cool 100% correct.

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by ShowYourCertificate: 9:39am On Apr 19, 2015
Gbawe:


To be honest, people like you should cease commenting on governance issues from now on because it is obvious you will never comment objectively since you remain bitter about ending up on the losing side. A smaller cabinet is very praiseworthy and one of the solutions demanded of Nigerian Presidents because it s directly related to Nigeria's success.

Is it not obvious there is a direct link between a smaller cabinet and cutting the annual recurrent expenditure of Nigeria, now running ridiculous at well over the traditional 70%, and making more money available for much-needed capital spending? How you can then say "Whether your cabinet is big or small is irrelevant" shows you have nothing to add here but nonsensical and petty comments. If your comments are going to be driven by childish bitterness then stop commenting and only read the input of other posters who know how to think and talk/criticise maturely for the benefit of the progress of their nation.
I still maintain my stand that it's irrelevant whether Buhari runs a small or big government. What matters is the results. If he runs a small government but failed to deliver on his manifesto promises will you congratulate him for running a small cabinet? No. It's the outcome that's important in a policy, not input or output.

We expect to see constant electricity, affordable and accessible fuel, cheap food commodity, jobs and a stronger naira against the dollar. How he intends achieving this is his own headache, not mine.

12 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Gbawe: 9:47am On Apr 19, 2015
But my idea is
to get knowledgable and experienced technocrats
who are really patriotic to study the handing over
notes by ministries and make recommendations.
I want them to be completely detached people
who are patriotic Nigerians, who are
knowledgable and experienced. If we get majority
of politicians involved it will lead to a lot of row
and we may end up with inconclusive
recommendations which are not very helpful in
our condition.

Wow. Is it not now obvious that it is most Nigerians who will not give Buhari a chance and insist on calling him "illiterate", because of ethnno-religious prejudice, who are the real illiterates. GMB showing the soundness of his thinking Jonathan could not match with his 419 PHD. It is obvious Nigerians like to be deceived by PHD-style political 'bling' but I am personally enjoying how Buhari is showing he is the real deal to the disgrace and consternation of the enemies of Nigeria's progress.

What he states above is 24 carat gold and it is what I told a friend the other day. It is not only about bringing in technocrats, because the likes of Allison-Madueke and NOI plus Aganga can be called that, but bringing in technocrats who are very patriotic and will be prone to doing the right thing for Nigeria, like Falana, and not their paymaster as the PDP lot did to the detriment of Nigeria. This the key difference the "illiterate" Buhari identifies that can be the determinant of whether a cabinet succeeds or fail. Buhari's cabinet, as much as possible, has to be a group of patriots above everything else.

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Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by londoner: 9:55am On Apr 19, 2015
This is good news, now on to WHO will make up that cabinet. If he gets both issues right, Nigeria will have a better chance of experiencing actual change. The truth is, if he does the right thing, he will upset those who believe their support for him equates directly to appointents and business as usual ESPECIALLY the pre-election decampees from PDP. He will be putting himself up as a target, the same way GEJ became a target to be brought down when he tried to change the status quo.

I hope he is ready for the backlash, because there will be some. I wish him and Nigeria the best.......we have to start addressing these very important issues that have strangled Nigeria til date.

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Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Gbawe: 10:04am On Apr 19, 2015
ShowYourCertificate:
I still maintain my stand that it's irrelevant whether Buhari runs a small or big government. What matters is the results. If he runs a small government but failed to deliver on his manifesto promises will you congratulate him for running a small cabinet? No. It's the outcome that's important in a policy, not input or output.

We expect to see constant electricity, affordable and accessible fuel, cheap food commodity, jobs and a stronger naira against the dollar. How he intends achieving this is his own headache, not mine.

Please give it a rest. You will only make a bigger fool of yourself. Learn to give credit where due. Leaner cabinet is a prerequisite to making more money available for capital spending. It is as simple as that and this development is something every Nigerian should praise even if you will add a cautionary note that this must translate into tangible and visible progress in other sectors like road/transport infrastructure. To say a smaller cabinet is "irrelevant" show you are one of those wishing GMB to fail since you have no interest in acknowledging the laudable and much-desired action all PDP Presidents, bar OBJ, have rejected outright to persevere with bloated governance which is always a sign a new Government is 'dead on arrival' . This is how some of us knew the GEJ you supported feverishly was another 'dead on arrival' President. I.e his announcement in 2011 that "Leaner cabinet not possible".

Whether you wish to give him credit for it or not, all Nigerians will know Buhari's pursuit of a leaner cabinet is a step in the right direction. Nigerians are already seeing the difference and enemies of our Nations progress who wanted GEJ to take her down will be shamed. How a progressive polity behave is to praise/acknowledge leaders when they do the right things and criticise them when they err. Go to the thread below to see how we did it in 2011. Note that had GEJ done what he should have then he would have had the support of even those who did not vote for or believe in him as long as we are talking of people who believe in the progress of Nigeria above everything else. GMB is already showing he wants to do the right things others have neglected/rejected.


https://www.nairaland.com/671177/jonathan-leaner-cabinet-impossible-now

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Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Sweetguy25: 10:13am On Apr 19, 2015
Nothing changes still.

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Re: Why My Cabinet Will Be Small – Buhari by Gbawe: 10:23am On Apr 19, 2015
Sweetguy25:
Nothing changes still.

Yes because you want nothing to change and will never acknowledge anything positive that is a step in the right direction. Buhari has to lead by example, and encourage cost cutting and the reduction of bloated governance, if Nigeria is to overcome the conundrum of high recurrent spending that will continue to see us stagnate like a Dog chasing its own tail on the same spot and never moving forward. That is an excerpt from an Article. Read the full article to see how an intelligent Nigerian, genuinely interested in the progress of Nigeria, views things. "Illiterate" Buhari is already showing he fully understands what Emmanuel Nwachucku, a London-based business consultant, is saying below. Wish him failure all you want and come here in cynicism daily to announce that "nothing changes still" but you will live to see, because Buhari has many like Nwachukwu already helping him shape policies, the progress of Nigeria. Insha Allah.

Sanusi and the debate on infrastructure funding

DECEMBER 11, 2012 : EMMANUEL NWACHUKWU




Apart from, perhaps Lagos State, and a few oil-rich states in the Niger Delta, most states in Nigeria are cash-strapped with entire budgets reportedly spent on paying salaries, leaving no funds for infrastructure development or job creation. We like, as Nigerians, to believe the myth that we are a very rich nation because we have oil, forgetting that we are the seventh most populous country on earth, with more mouths to feed. The truth is that, based on GDP per head of population, Nigeria is one of the poorest countries in the world with a GDP per head of about $1,452 in 2011 (Source: World Bank), compared to, say, South Africa with a GDP per head of $8,070. This is notwithstanding our oil, although we don’t like to hear this truth. Apart from Iran with a population of about 75 million people, Nigeria’s population is about the same as the rest of the 10 OPEC countries put together. We really must wake up and smell the coffee. We cannot have the country’s entire budget, whether at federal or state level shared among politicians, senior civil servants, personal assistants and personal advisers – a tiny percentage of the population.

The lessons from India, Brazil, Dubai and the Marshall Plan that rebuilt Western Europe after the 2nd World War are that investment in infrastructure is key to economic growth and the creation of jobs, with a multiplier effect on the rest of the economy. We need to grow the size of the national cake by creating more wealth through investment in infrastructure. Any loss of jobs from a rationalisation of the public sector will be offset by the creation of more jobs in the private sector, if the savings generated are properly invested in infrastructure development.

Anyone who has stepped out of this country would agree that we are a century behind developed economies and most emerging economies in infrastructure development. You almost want to shed a tear for Nigeria when you go to places like Dubai or Singapore. Even tiny countries like Rwanda will put Nigeria to shame in terms of the level of their infrastructure development. The challenge for us as a nation is how to fund our infrastructure gap, estimated at N33tn. So we need to be clever on the budget choices we make in carving up our resources and must not allow the debate on these matters to be drowned in emotions and sentiments. The cost of governance is critical in this debate but is not the only solution. The government must also be seen to be delivering on the war against corruption. It is not enough for the President to placate Nigerians by telling us that individuals are being prosecuted in court. These prosecutions must be sped up, as justice delayed is justice denied. Until we begin to see bus loads of corrupt officials who have stolen from the public purse locked up in prison for many years, Nigerians will not believe the sincerity of government in its supposed fight against corruption.

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