The former National Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Mahmood Yakubu, has said that the failure of politicians to fulfil campaign promises contributes to the low turn out of voters during elections.
He said people no longer trust politicians and are tired of hearing the same promises during electioneering campaigns, so they stay home during elections.
Yakubu made this comment on Thursday when he appeared before the Senate Committee on INEC for screening for his second tenure.
The screening comes barely three days after the Senate received President Muhammadu Buhari’s letter seeking confirmation of his appointment as chairman of the commission for a second and final term.
During the screening, the former INEC boss who was asked the reasons for low voters turnout, highlighted several factors including inadequate mobilisation of voters, violence and failed promises by elected officials.
“Violence or threat of violence, people don’t tend to vote simply for that fear. Some people just stay on the side of caution by staying away instead of risking it by going out to vote.
“Sometimes, the performance of those elected is a very important factor. Some voters will ask ‘why should I go and vote? Because four years earlier some people made the same promise so nothing has changed.’
“It is a shared responsibility that we all have to put our heads together to solve but we will continue to do what is required by the law in the area of voter registration and publicity,” he said.
He said encouraging voters to turn out is an important function that is supposed to be discharged particularly by political parties and agencies like the National Orientation Agency.
Yakubu also said that one of the most difficult challenges he had in his first term was postponing the 2019 general elections by a week.
“It was really a painful decision for the commission to take. We are learning from that experience and we are working very hard to ensure that this kind of experience does not happen again,” he said.
He hoped that the commission, in the next few years, would consolidate to the extent “that Nigerians can vote and go home confident that their vote will count and only their votes will determine who will eventually win the election.”