Ahead of the 2023 general elections, Babatunde Raji Fashola, SAN, the minister of works and housing, has called on the electorate to organise debates and town hall meetings to grill the candidates contesting various positions.
Fashola, in his keynote lecture delivered on the occasion of the 6th annual BRF Gabfest with the theme,’’ What am I voting For?” urged the electorate to be very careful in their choice of candidates to vote into office.
He said, ‘’I urge you to vote by holding debates and town halls where you put questions to the candidates to test their abilities. I urge you to vote by looking at what the candidates have done before, this is like asking for the referees during an interview or talking to a previous employer. This is how to recruit an employee. Not by anger.’’
The minister who argued that the local government by virtue of its closeness to the people at the grassroots pointed out that local government remains a critical tier of government.
He said, ‘’If you do, you are likely to agree with me about the importance of the local government, because you will find that it is the local government that is responsible for primary education and primary health.
‘’The Federal Government and by extension the Presidency to whom we often look for the solutions to our problems do not own one primary school or one primary healthcare facility.
‘’It is in these facilities that the foundations of literacy, early education, antenatal care, immunisation for the first five years of a child’s life are undertaken. This is where the odds of a child’s life, whether he or she will survive early childhood diseases and become skilled and productive in future, are determined.
‘’When you add to this, the responsibility of the local government for sanitation, which is the heart of public health, that determines whether your child will be exposed to diseases and fall sick or not, please ask yourself the question posed by the theme of this GABFEST: “What am I voting for?” if you vote at all during local government elections.’’
The minister pointed out that,’’ Out of the over 200,000 Km of roads in Nigeria, the Federal government owns 35,000 KM (17.5%); the state government owns 31,000 km (17.5%), while the local governments own 132,000km (65%).