NLC, LP crisis: CSO tasks Labour Party on deepening democratic practice, ideology

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Executive Director, Peers Advocacy and Advancement Centre (PAACA), a Civil Society Organisation (CSO), Mr Ezenwa Nwagwu, has urged the Labour Party (LP) to deepen its democratic structures and practices, to overcome the crisis facing it.

Nwagwu made the call in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Saturday.

He said those who had run the LP, from Chief Dan Nwanyanwu to date, have not been running it as a party.

He added that those who have run it from Nwanyanwu to date, had not worked to deepen democratic practices within the political party.

Ezenwa said the Nigerian Labour Congress registered the party and that it was common knowledge, that the certificate of registration was still with the NLC.

According to him the LP has not invested in being a political party, it has only presented itself to people who could not get elected in the main stream political parties.

“The challenge with political party formation in Nigeria has to do with them being more vote-catching machines than political parties.

“The Labour Party has not invested in itself as a political party, it presented itself as a vehicle for those who could not find space in the two dominant political parties.

“They have not worked to deepen political practices within the party, so the owners of the party which is the Nigerian labour Congress has the responsibility to redirect the way the party was being run, and that is the conflict.

“It is the conflict between ideology and merchant; People who just want to trade and those who want to run a political party.

“It is a party with so much promise but is still what Doyin Okupe called Special Purpose Vehicle for those who want to run elections.

“I wish that the conflict engenders a resolution in which the real owners of the party – NLC, will take it over and then present to Nigerians a true party that is Labour-centric, that thinks and operates with the welfare of the masses in mind.

Explaining further he said people were not rooted to the political party, adding that 90 per cent who contested under the Labour Party and won election joined through waivers.

“So in what way are they connected to the identity of the party. That is why in the national assembly where you should have different views, position and ideology, there is none.

“I should not just be a member of a political party, I should subscribe to the programmes that the party presents.

“The Labour Party is Anti-IMF and World Bank, their presidential candidate is a market person interested in privatisation and commercialisation, can you see the disconnect.

And this is why the Nigerian Labour Congress has decided that it is time it redirects the party back to the purpose for which it was founded. (NAN)