Ahead of the proclamation of the eighth Senate of the National Assembly, and the election of its leadership in 2015, the name of George Akume was a recurring decimal. He ticked the boxes, meeting all the criteria laid out for a President of the Senate, for that season. He was highly favoured to clinch the top job.
Among other considerations, he is from the North Central geopolitical zone to which the office was zoned. Secondly, he was a ranking Senator, having been first elected to represent Benue North West in 2007 and reelected in 2015. Akume previously served for two terms as Governor of his state, Benue between 1999 and 2007. This implied that he had substantial grounding in governance, policy and statecraft.
He was indeed a career bureaucrat who rose to the peak of his calling before contesting for public office. Akume and I developed a robust relationship during his years as governor which has been sustained up till the present. Did I hear someone re-echo the truism that cultivating and sustaining relationships is second nature for self-confident, amiable and questing journalists?
I was a close aide of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, during which I held a number of critical briefs. I was something of a regular fixture not only in the President’s local engagements, but also his official movements around the country and on the global scene. Elsewhere, I’ve been described as a ‘multitasking professional’, which would suggest that I get to manage many schedules and assignments at the same time. I was equally close to Akume’s deputy at the time, Ogiri Ajene, the down-to-earth, jolly blue-blood from Idoma land, who sadly passed about a decade ago.
My good friend and brother of over four decades beginning from our years in the classroom in the University of Ilorin, Tivlumun Gabriel Nyitse, was also prominent in the Benue State bureaucracy. He subsequently became a notable figure in the politics of the state. First, he rose to the position of Managing Director and Chief Executive of the state-owned newspapers The Voice. He was later appointed Permanent Secretary by Akume and functioned variously in the Office of the Secretary to the State Government, and the Ministry of Information and Culture. Such was my interconnectedness with the Benue system, which has endured till this time.
In the weeks preceding the proclamation of the eighth Senate, Akume’s Maitama, Abuja home became a Mecca for the political class. There was a virtual round-the-clock streaming in and out by fellow politicians, friends and associates, who bought into the prospects of an Akume Senate presidency. Quite a number of latter day top functionaries in the Muhammadu Buhari presidency, including subsequent members of the Federal Executive Council took their places in his waiting room, bidding their time in the listless comings and goings, those days. The otherwise spacious premises of Akume’s home, shrank, literally overwhelmed by the sudden invasion of political supporters and admirers alike. His kitchen relocated to an external annex to cope with the culinary demands of the ever surging human traffic.
A few of us, media friends of Akume, thought of how best to impact the project. We constituted ourselves into an informal ‘support group’. We reasoned among other things, that Akume needed heightened media visibility so as to properly position him for the coming battle. We wrote essays and articles which were accorded wide ventilation in the mainstream and online press. We followed up on his consultations, engagements and meetings across the country in that quest, and regularly put out new stories. The “rapid response” component of the team replied real-time to media distortions and jaundiced representations of our “candidate”. It was an amazed and appreciative Akume who woke up each day to his file of national dailies to see the good job done on him by volunteers who were sold on his aspiration.
Akume, unfortunately, didn’t make it to the Senate presidency. As we say, the rest is history. Bukola Saraki, his colleague who won the contest, assigned him the chairmanship of the Senate Committee on the Nigerian Army. In the seventh Senate between 2011 to 2015, Akume was Minority Leader. That was when the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) dominated the executive and legislative arms of government, under the superintendence of President Goodluck Jonathan. He had previously chaired important committees in the upper legislature and served in a broad spectrum of other organs of the parliament. He become something of a repository of legislative experience. Such systemic entrenchment is imperative for the growth and development of democratic structures in a country notorious for its scant attention for the preservation of institutional memory.
The former Benue State chief executive did not make it in his attempt to return to the Senate for a fourth term in 2019. The experiences he had garnered over time, however, recommended him for appointment as Minister for Special Duties and Inter-governmental Affairs by then President Buhari. This consecrated him as a member of the Federal Executive Committee, where he was in a position to canvas for attention for his home state, to complement the efforts of the state government. Akume’s critics despised his schedule describing it as a “no job” ministry. He was, however, resolved to prove doubters wrong. Whereas the Buhari administration never hosted one singular ceremony to recognise deserving Nigerians with national honours all through its first term, it is credit to Akume’s hardwork that two such events were hosted within 12 months while he was minister.
Friday, 2nd June 2023, Akume was appointed Secretary to the Government of the Federation by President Bola Tinubu. On Wednesday, 7th June, he was sworn-in as Nigeria’s 21st occupant of that office which is easily the very heart of federal governance. A consummate public servant, charismatic politician and inimitable legislator, Akume will be 70 on Wednesday, 27th December 2023, this season of the yuletide. He obtained a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology and a Master’s in Labour Relations, both from the University of Ibadan, Nigeria’s premier university.
In the early days of his public service career, he was local government secretary and later, chairman, in his home state, Benue. He was subsequently Director of Protocol in Government House, Makurdi, and would go on to obtain a leave-of-absence to support the former PDP National Chairman, Iyorchia Ayu during his stint as President of the Senate and Minister of Education between 1992 and 1995. Those were the years of the former military President Ibrahim Babangida’s unending tinkering with the colour, texture and character of the nation’s democracy. Akume’s leave-of-absence subsisted into the early years of the rulership of General Sani Abacha who retained major players in the aborted Third Republic, including Ayu, his principal at the time, in his scheme. He returned to the employ of the Benue State Civil Service therefore, from where he retired as Permanent Secretary, to contest for the governorship in 1998.
Akume was governor for two terms between 1999 and 2007, on the platform of the PDP. He was famous for prioritising workers’ welfare, against the backdrop of his personal, hands-on acquaintance with the tides and traditions in the public service. He was succeeded by Gabriel Suswam in 2007, even as he proceeded to the Senate where he selflessly represented Benue North-West. Within the specific context of Tiv politics, Akume holds the all time record of being the only Senator serially elected on three successive occasions. In global Benue politics and probably Nigeria’s, David Alechenu Bonaventure Mark is perhaps the only Nigerian to have been elected on five consecutive occasions into the Senate.
Symbolically, Akume ran for his second term in the Senate on the platform of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), in 2011. Two years later, four political parties: ACN, All Nigeria Peoples Party, Congress for Progressive Change, and factions of the PDP (new PDP, also known as nPDP), and All Peoples Grand Alliance, coalesced to birth the All Progressives Congress (APC). Akume’s third shot at the Senate was therefore on the podium of the APC. He is easily one of few Nigerian politicians to have flown the flag of three different political brands in popular elections.
Akume is substantially credited with the odyssey of the APC in Benue politics and would further lead it to takeover the governorship during the 2015 elections. He latched on latent disaffection within the ranks of the PDP during the party’s gubernatorial primary in December 2014, and poached Samuel Ioraer Ortom, who felt hard done by the process which produced the PDP flagbearer. Ortom, who was immediate past Minister of State for Trade and Investment, thereafter defeated the candidate of the PDP, Terhemen Tarzoor, at the general polls. Akume and Ortom would, in a short while, go their different ways as is characteristic of “godfather-godson” relationships in Nigerian politics.
More recently, Akume rallied everything, every stunt in his arsenal as a dominant political force in Benue State to upstage the PDP during the general elections in February and March, this year. His candidate, Hyacinth Alia, a Catholic priest, trounced Titus Tyoapine Uba, former Speaker of the state House of Assembly, who was favoured to win since he was backed by a sitting PDP government. The Akume whirlwind equally swept two of the three senatorial seats in the state, into the bag of his party, among other harvests. The Idoma/Agatu peoples of Zone C in Benue politics, survived the Tsunami and stood solidly behind their PDP candidate, Abba Moro, who contested for the senatorial position for a second time.
Having been Governor, Senator and Minister all within the initial 24-year span of Nigeria’s contemporary politics, Akume, without dispute, is one of the most prepared Nigerians to drive the engine of governance and administration at this epoch in the nation’s development. Yes, he has seen it all beginning from the padded swivel chair of Government House; to the theatre-style, red-laquered parliament, and thenceforth to the marbled interiors of the chambers of the federal executive council. Articulate, accessible, unassuming, experienced, broad-minded and thoroughly pan-Nigerian, he can be trusted to deliver.
Akume is happily married to Regina Akume, a serving member of the House of Representatives; and together they are happy parents and proud grandparents. He holds the coveted national honour of Commander of the Order of the Niger, which could yet metamorphose into that of Commander of the Order of the Federal Republic at the end of his present brief.
Olusunle, PhD, poet, journalist, scholar and author, is a Fellow of the Association of Nigerian Authors