How I survived as deputy to two governors — Senator Hadeija
By Bilesanmi Olalekan
Senator Ibrahim Hassan Hadejia is the immediate past deputy governor of Jigawa State. Hadeija is one of the first-time senators elected to the National Assembly to represent Jigawa North-East.
He is the deputy chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Account. The senator, in this interview, speaks, among other issues, on his time in Jigawa Government House.
You have worked with two governors in eleven years. If given the opportunity again, who would you wish to work with again among the two governors?
You are talking about management style of these two distinguished personalities and which one suits me the most while I worked with them? Well, former Governor Saminu Turaki gave me the opportunity to serve my state for the period I served with him as deputy.
I became deputy to Saminu in 2001, that is, completing the remainder of his first term and then fully completed the second term with him. I returned as deputy to Badaru. I completed a full term with him, making it a full two terms mandatory as enshrine in the Constitution. However, I think Turaki is not strong on processes and procedures of doing things. He is not that thorough.
I was the third deputy to work with him within one and a half years. For Muhammad Badaru, his administration was completely different. He is performance-driven. It was fantastic working with him. I think that is the difference between those in the private sector who find themselves in public service.

That is why I tell people that my job is to make laws, laws that would be beneficial to my people and everyone. I don’t have executive powers; however, whatever projects from the federal government that I can bring to my people, I will do everything to ensure they get to my immediate community.
You have been in active politics for roughly 20 years. What, for you, is the sore point since democracy was ushered in 1999?
I think the sore point in politics for me would be the way we practice internal democracy. It leaves much to be desired. How candidates emerge is very important, it is even more important than on the day of the actual election. And this awkward process, in my view, has discouraged quite a sizable number of good people from participating in politics.
In most cases, it is most of the time selection at the primary instead of election. That is why even after election, the tribunal, Court of Appeal and even Supreme Court is still adjudicating about pre- election matters. That is one of the reasons I support electronic voting. Pre-2003, there was no election, they were just writing results. Results were just being written and they announce.
But I think we are evolving. We are not where we used to be in 2003. And because the process is improving by every election cycle, the calibre of contestants has also improved. You know during the last election, the number of voters that came out to vote for Badaru during the governorship election, even when it was postponed twice, was far more than the presidential election. I think party managers must change their perceptive about internal democracy. That is the first thing we must improve upon. Without internal democracy, there would continue to be more election matters at the tribunal.
Former Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, once admonished people not to marry than what their income can cater for and provide education for the children. What is an elite like you doing to ensure that this message sinks?
I think the word there should be affordability. Followers just do what comes to them their mind, no matter what you say. I know a cook that has 4 wives and 15 children. How he wriggles out of it I don’t know. That is why you have a lot of almajirai on the streets because there is no capability to take care of the children. They procreate without the economic wherewithal to bring up the children and even empower the wives.
I have always had passion for women education even before I came to the Senate. Once you are educated, your mind is liberated, you think better. So even if you end up being a second or third wife, with your education, you are able to look for job or go into business or trading. And this brings me to the issue of drug abuse which, of course, results to violence in the home. Our youths, not all, these days are into drugs. They consume all manner of drugs. And that is why you have violence in terms of beating their wives in such homes.
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