IS NORBERT MAO’S POLITICAL CAREER OVER?; What Happens To The Principal Of A School With A Center Number But Without Students?
Norbert Mao,
also famously known as chairman Mao is a man known for his intellectual wit,
balanced debating skills and one of the few Ugandan orators blessed with very
good idioms.
But the
former district chairman and Member of Parliament for Gulu municipality has
endured a very chaotic reign as leader of the Democratic Party.
The ping-pong
between him and a large section of DP members has dragged on for long without
getting settled until it resulted into a mass defection to the recently formed
NUP.
Out of the
many DP members of parliament who have deserted, he has only remained with four!.
And all the twelve members of The Grand Old Party have defected to the newly
created National Unity Party and swore allegiance to the party president Hon
Robert Kyagulanyi.
As a former
guild president of Makerere University, Mao surprisingly doesn’t seem to have
gained enough political experience to thrust him into a successful leader at
the national level. He was expected to play his cards with a lot of caution to
avoid what befell him.
HOW HE MESSED IT
During a
television program on the Thursday night, in a bid to water down the mass
defection of DP members, Mao said that Bobiwine has a slogan which says that ‘’bikwasse
Kyagulanyi’’ , which literally translates that ‘’handover all your excess baggage
to kyagulanyi’’.
He therefore
qualified the statement by saying that all the DP members who had defected were
part of ‘the excess baggage that had left DP and handed over to kyagulanyi’.
But one
strong DP members who also happens to have defected to NUP, Mukono municipality
MP Hon Betty Namboze quickly challenged him to also handover his wife Naomi to
kyagulanyi , (Mao also had a bitter divorce with his wife Naomi recently)
Mao, was
shocked to the marrow and couldn’t handle the rest of the proceedings of the
debate as he pondered on how to disentangle himself from the mess he has found
himself into.
Later on he
made a honest statement when he said that he believes that someday, Ugandans
will look for him and recognize his relevance.
That was an
admission of guilt in itself that denotes that perhaps his time in the politics
of the Democratic Party in particular and Uganda in general had come to an
unexpected end.
He had thrown
in the proverbial towel!. He is clever enough to know that his fate has been
sealed.
Mao’s political deeds
But we need
to cross examine how Mao has played his political cards in the most recent years
to determine where it all went wrong.
Mao had been
one of the most consistent members of the opposition who has opposed president
Museveni for close to three decades.
He has
contested for the Ugandan presidency and registered miserable percentage votes and
knows how it feels.
He also tried his hands at forging an alliance with the then overhyped former Ugandan Prime Minister Hon Amama Mbabazi in the TDA in the run up to the 2016 election-but evaporated without any impact.
When TDA
failed to takeoff, Mao ran back to DP and tried to consolidate himself as the
party president but was faced with very hostile forces within the party.
He made
mistakes of resorting to insults to address his detractors like Kampala mayor
Erias Lukwago. This constant bickering has eventually resulted into a political
disaster with almost the entire DP senior hierarchy deserting him.
But Mao
should be blamed for failing to read the political temperature in the country
today.
Almost every
tom, dick and harry knows that this political season is largely dominated by
political rookie Hon Robert Kyagulanyi aka Bobiwine.
Mao knows
and has witnessed that almost the entire country has embraced the candidature
of Bobiwine (NUP). If half his brain was at work, he should have found a way of
working a smart alliance with the Ugandan musician cum politician-for the
critical sake of political survival and floating on the radar of Ugandan
politics.
Instead of
acknowledging the reality of the political waves in the country, Mao chose to
ridicule and even malign Bobiwine’s pressure group, The People Power Movement.
During one
of the talk shows, Mao made a statement which buried his chances of remaining
relevant in the fast moving political times when he stated that ‘’pressure
groups like People Power are like schools without center numbers. When it’s
time for exams, they run to schools with center numbers’’.
Mao was
trying to state the dominance and political advantage of the Democratic Party
had over The People Power group. He was therefore naively saying that when
election time arrives, The People Power Movement and its leader Bobiwine will
have to run to the legally registered DP to gain access to the ballot paper.
While the
statement had a lot of legal sense, it made no political sense at all.
Why?
Because
while DP has the legal requirements to posture as a political heavy weight, it
doesn’t enjoy the mass following that Bobiwine enjoys around the country.
With all
that in perspective Mao should have been the one to lead his people to NUP and
not the other way round.
He had
overestimated his political weight –a mistake that precedes many arrogant leaders.
Now that he
has lost over twelve MPs and thousands of members of the party to NUP, he has
no choice but to either join them, which seems to be already late, or lie low
like an envelope.
It’s high
time someone reminds him that he is like a principal of a very big school with
a center number but without students.
The End Of An Epoch
It’s obvious
that his political career as an individual has literary come to an end. The
only option is to seek the tentacles of another political force.
But is it
feasible for him to join the president Museveni’s NRM? Not at all, because his
twenty five year fight against Museveni will have been in vain. I don’t think
that he can afford to join Museveni because he will vindicate those who
considered him to be Museveni’s spy.
Does he
posses the will to join forces with another political group within the
opposition?
Yes he can probably join the other political
forces but they will have no impact given the fact that the same forces are not
as powerful as the NUP group.
If Mao, for
instance joins FDC, he will be running away from the proverbial frying pan to
the fire itself.
Why? Because
the FDC itself has run out of ideas and is looking for ways of floating in
stormy waters.
The FDC are
in a dilemma of having the monotonous candidature of Dr Kiiza Besigye who has
already contested and lost five consecutive times. You don’t need rocket
science to deduce that Besigye’s time in Ugandan politics is virtually over.
The FDC had
tried to unveil Erias lukwago , but the lord mayor calculated and realized he
has no chance of making any meaningful impact on the national scene and picked
forms to contest as Kampala mayor again.
Mao can only
resurrect as a king maker by supporting the emerging forces, but that
possibility also point in the direction of NUP. But he blew that chance already.
Hon Betty
Namboze actually told Mao that they (the defecting DP group) had left the small
DP faction he leads to join more feasible forces that can beat Museveni at the
polls.
This means
that Mao should swallow his pride and lead that small faction and join another
political force like that of Maj Gen (rtd) Mugisha Muntu’s Alliance for
National Transformation party.
Muntu is
moderate in his political actions and is a more welcome political option for
some member of the NRM ruling party. Muntu therefore resonates very well with
the moderates from the opposition and the ruling party.
But the
problem with Muntu’s ANT is that while he has got a rational message of
preparing a more peaceful transition from Museveni, he has got no political
grounding with Ugandans.
Joining Muntu
is as a wasted an effort as a man who runs and climbs a tree to evade a
leopard-which is more seasoned mountain climber.
THE CONCLUSION
As of now,
Norbert Mao can only resign to the fate of licking his political wounds. If he
is not very careful, his political career is as good as done and dusted.
The reality
is that Chairman Mao maybe a good orator, good at idioms with a language for
press conferences but he lacks the magical political touch to propel him to the
Ugandan presidency.
He should
swallow his ride and contend with the fact that he can do well as a kingmaker
than seeking to be a king himself.
Maybe time will be kind to him in the future.
The author Fred Daka
Kamwada is political analyst and a blogger
kamwadafred@gmail.com
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