Celebrities can win elections — Edochie
Pete Edochie
Veteran Nollywood actor, Pete Edochie, in this interview with TOBI AWORINDE,
says entertainers should be given a chance to occupy political
positions and should not be condemned for running for public office
How would you react to artistes’ involvement in politics?
There is nothing wrong with that. If an
artiste decides to go into politics, it is welcome. In some parts of the
world, you have people who take time off from acting to go into
politics. In the United States of America, for instance, we have Ronald
Reagan, who was a Hollywood actor that later went into politics,
eventually becoming the President of the US. (Arnold) Schwarzenegger, as
you know, is also a Hollywood actor. He got into politics and became
the Governor of California. There is nothing wrong with it at all.
Observers have been asking, ‘Why are many artistes rushing into politics at the same time?’
What is wrong with that? Most of those
actors are brilliant young men (and women) and I think they can make
some good contributions; unlike most of the people who are there, who
just cart away money and don’t contribute anything. I think it is good
for the industry. We’ve got to let the nation know that these are not
dropouts. They are well-educated young men (and women) who can hold
their own anywhere in the world. If they go into politics and they are
voted for, fantastic! I will be very happy about it.
Politics is largely about leadership. Some have questioned whether these artistes have the requisite experience to govern.
How many politicians do you know that had
to undergo tutelage anywhere before they went into politics? If you
have the requisite qualification and you are running your family without
interference from others; if you can run your family, you can run a
country. I have been running my family for the past 45 years and I can
run the country comfortably. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with
that. People go on and on about leadership. If you are well-educated and
you know what your priorities are, that is what makes leadership. It is
not just saying, ‘I am a leader.’ No. How you react to challenging
situations is what makes you a leader. Therefore, I believe that these
artistes, if they are given the opportunity, can make their mark. I am
in support of them.
What innovations do you think artistes can bring to governance in Nigeria?
That is hypothetical. Why don’t you wait
until the artiste goes in? It is like someone going to get married, and
you say, ‘Don’t you think your first child is going to be a boy?’ It is
hypothetical. Let us wait until they get it; we see the situations that
will confront them and then we determine from their reactions what
quality of leadership they have.
A controversial artiste
recently criticised the idea of artistes going into politics, saying a
lot of them don’t have anything to offer and that they want to embezzle
money. Does he have a point?
He is entitled to his opinion on any
issue whatsoever. There is nothing wrong in his opinion. I mean, I am
talking to you; I have never met you. But if tomorrow you say you’re
going into politics, I wouldn’t say you’re going to be a thief, when I
have never read from anywhere that you stole something. The artiste you
referred to always wants to be sensational. I am not for sensationalism;
I am being practical. I retired from the civil service as a director
and a big one too. There is nobody in the industry that got to that mark
before retiring, if they got into the civil service at all. When I make
comments, I make constructive, philosophical, critical, mature
comments. I don’t just talk carelessly. If somebody says he is going
into politics, fine; encourage that person. We are always talking about
lack of leadership. How do you know if somebody can lead, if you don’t
give him the opportunity? That is my contention. If anybody says he is
getting into politics, give the person a chance. If the people who are
going to vote for him vote for him because they know who he is, who are
we to challenge his choice? This is why I believe the artistes who want
to go into politics are entitled to their choice of life outside of
acting. It doesn’t make them any less of actors. But when they get into
political office, we can then assess them. After all, Abike Dabiri-Erewa
was on television; then she went into politics and my assessment of her
is that she has been doing marvelously well. And she’s not the only
person. Let’s give them a chance.
Politicians are arguably
unpopular mainly for failing to fulfill the promises they make during
elections. Coming from the world of make-believe, do you think these
artistes may be faced with the dilemma of proving to the electorate that
they are not ‘acting’?
It’s like someone saying, ‘If he goes
into politics, what is he going to do? Won’t he be seeing politics as
just another arena for histrionics?’ If I can stay with my family, with
my wife, for 45 years, and nobody has come in to say, ‘Please, stop
beating her up’ or ‘Please, stop insulting this man’; if I can raise my
five sons through the university; if I can sit down and say proudly,
‘Today, I have 10 grandchildren and I am expecting more,’ don’t you
think I can run a country if asked to? Don’t you think if given a
portfolio, I can defend it?
I left the civil service as a director. I
ran a radio station and it was voted the best radio station in the
country. I was doing that because the British Broadcasting Corporation
trained me. If it is decided tomorrow that I should be given an
appointment as Chairman of the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria, are
you going to say, ‘He doesn’t have any experience’? Are you going to
say, ‘He will just be an actor’? No. This is why I am saying we are
jumping the gun. Why don’t you allow them to contest first? If they win,
assess them through their reactions to challenging situations. This is
what makes a man. You’re not going to say, ‘Because this man was an
actor for a couple of years, he wants to go into politics. He can’t make
it.’ That is silly. That is nonsense. I have counted two or three
actors on the international plane who made it as actors in politics. I
mentioned Ronald Reagan; he ran the United States and he was one of the
most serious, established, dependable politicians that the Republican
Party had. Again, you have Schwarzenegger — an Austrian, by the way,
being naturalised as an American. He contested and won. There’s also a
bodybuilder called Jesse Ventura. When Ventura was doing bodybuilding
and wrestling, nobody knew he was going to make a good politician, until
he became the governor of Massachusetts. History is replete with such
characters. Why should Nigeria be different, I ask you? There is even a
tendency to under-assess people, because of what we see, and that is not
fair. I am a Christian and I am gladly one. I don’t condemn people as
guilty before they are listened to. It is like how, in Nigeria, the
police beat you to a pulp before you are proven innocent.
But then, a significant number of these artistes have had troubled marriages and other such problems on the home front…
Most of the people we have in Nigerian
politics have not had marital successes in their homes. We must be
honest to ourselves. When we look at some of the earliest breed of
politicians, some of them were not married; some of them were divorced;
some were polygamous, and so on. If you are to assess people based on
their marital experiments, it may not be a very fine yardstick for
determining somebody’s political competence, because you don’t know the
circumstances that led to the breakups. It is true that, if you have a
successful marital life, it can lead unto, again, a successful political
life, because the problems you have as a married man, one encounters
along the line as a politician. More so, it is because of the
individuals who are unmanageable, cantankerous, cranky, or
irresponsible. But you have to look for what is acceptable in their
characters. There are people who have ineradicable flaws in their
constitution; still, there are redeeming aspects in their personal
lives. When you get to meet such people, get what you think is a plus
from them. It is just like managing footballers. Footballers are very
difficult characters to manage. A lot of them have habits I wouldn’t
really like to talk about. But when they get into the field of play,
they score goals and they win odds. That is their area of
specialisation. It is difficult to find a person who is perfect. If
people say, because these people have had failed marriages, they cannot
succeed, that is not a fair assessment. It’s not proper to assess
somebody like that. I believe, in all honesty, that the people who will
vote for them are people who already know them; people who have
interacted with them one-on-one and are in a position to tell you how
good or disagreeable they are. Why don’t we leave this to the electorate
to handle?
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