Tag: 2015 presidency

  • 2015 presidency: Three parties under watch, says Okorie

    2015 presidency: Three parties under watch, says Okorie

    UPP zones seat to Southeast

    The National Chairman of the United Progressives Party (UPP), Chief Chekwas Okorie, said yesterday that next year’s presidential election would be fought among three parties.

    He said the parties are the All Progressives Congress (APC), the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the UPP.

    Okorie spoke at the UPP secretariat in Awka, the Anambra State capital, at the inauguration of the Working Committee of the party.

    Dr. Sylvester Igwilo was sworn in as the chairman, while Pat Achukwu became the deputy chairman. Dave Ogwuno is the secretary, among others.

    Addressing members, Okorie said the battle line had been drawn between UPP, which he said was the party of the progressives and others.

    He said it was going to be a battle between the progressives and the reactionaries, adding that UPP zoned its presidential ticket to the Southeast.

    The former National Chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) said the UPP national executives would storm Anambra State to start a battle.

    He said: “UPP is targeting the presidency. President Goodluck Jonathan is performing, but a UPP president will do better. Let nobody think we are joking.

    “There have been countries where a party with the popular manifesto, popular candidate won the presidency without controlling the National Assembly. Greece is an example.

    “As for the National Assembly, our target is to win in the Southeast to start with. We will later make inroads into other places. We are not telling you that we will win the whole country.”

    Okorie vowed that the UPP would chase out the PDP in the Southeast.

    He said the leaders of the PDP in the zone could not win their constituencies in next year’s general elections.

    The Chairman of the Working Committee, Igwilo, promised to carry members along to take the party to the promised land.

  • 2015 Presidency: Atiku’s narrowing options

    2015 Presidency: Atiku’s narrowing options

    The recent omission of former Vice President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar’s name from the list of delegates to the yet unscheduled mini- convention of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) from his home state, Adamawa, may be a clear pointer that he has, once again, lost out in the power struggle for the nation’s number one job, reports Remi Adelowo

    Time was about some minutes to 6pm. It was in the middle of the Ramadan period in 2001 at the official residence of the then vice-president, Atiku Abubakar, within the exclusive confines of the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

    The nation’s number two man was playing host to influential politicians, including eight northern governors, two of whom were Christians, ministers, presidential aides and top players in the private sector, who had come to break the fast with him.

    The glittering dining table which could contain about 40 people was fully occupied. It was not until about 12pm that guests started to call it a day.

    The above scenario was a daily occurrence in the life of Abubakar either in his office or at his residence.

    That was how courted and influential Atiku Abubakar was. At that period, not a few Nigerians believed that Abubakar was just a breather away from stepping into the big shoes of his boss, Olusegun Obasanjo.

    Seen as the then most powerful man in government, the Adamawa State-born politician wielded enormous powers, so much so that he was described as the most powerful vice-president the country has ever had.

    Not only was Abubakar allegedly credited to have influenced the appointment of several people into key positions in government, including ministers, heads of government agencies and parastatals, he also supervised the running of strategic government agencies such as the Bureau for Public Enterprises (BPE), Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF), amongst several others.

    For most people within and outside Nigeria, Abubakar was the go-to man if you want anything in government.

    Abubakar’s larger-than-life status in government at that period was said to be the aftermath of an understanding between him and Obasanjo, on the management of the country.

    Due to the long years of military, which has made Nigeria a pariah in the comity of nations, Obasanjo as the story had it, decided to concentrate more on rebuilding the country’s battered image with other foreign countries.

    This necessitated his trips to about one hundred countries, leaving him little or no time, making Atiku to hold the forte to take care of domestic responsibilities.

    Abubakar leveraged on this opportunity to the fullest. His powers to dispense patronage, coupled with his liberal disposition to life and politics, easily drew people from low and high places to him.

    For majority of the governors elected on the platform of the PDP, their closeness and loyalty to Abubakar was total and almost absolute. In him, they saw a listening man who they could relate to and a man that was on the same page with them on issues of common interests.

    The manouverings and intense politics in the run-up to the 2003 general elections was the genesis of Abubakar’s political vulnerability after all.

    Obasanjo as a first term democratically elected president wanted a second term in office. But he was handicapped.

    PDP governors wanted him out and rooted for Abubakar. Being in control of the PDP structures both at the state and federal levels, the governors held the ace and were determined to maximise it.

    In the middle of this came barrage of opinion articles in the media that Obasanjo should adopt the ‘Mandela option’ which literally meant that he should tow the path of former President of South Africa, Nelson Mandela, who spent a term in office and handed over to a younger politician, Thabo Mbeki.

    Obasanjo, according to reports, was livid, but he kept his cool. He allegedly fingered his deputy as the brain behind this ‘one term’ call.

    Before the 2003 PDP primaries:

    There were reports that based on the promptings of some governors; Abubakar had obtained the form to contest for the presidential ticket with his boss. But he never returned the form, contrary to the advice of his political associates.

    With the solid backing of majority of expected delegates at the convention who were loyalists of the governors, Abubakar’s victory was assured.

    Perhaps having come to the realisation that his loss at the primaries was imminent, Obasanjo, according to reports, at a one-on-one, closed door meeting with Abubakar, allegedly pleaded that he should be allowed a second term, while also allegedly assuring his deputy that he would back his presidential ambition in 2007.

    D-day of the PDP presidential primaries came with Obasanjo winning the ticket. He ended up clinching a second term after winning the 2003 presidential election.

    From this point, he began to bare his fangs on his real and perceived opponents that wanted to stop him from winning a second term in office. Abubakar therefore became the major casualty.

    First, his media aides, Chris Mammah and Adeolu Akande were fired by Obasanjo, for being the masterminds of ‘no second term for Obasanjo’ reports in the media.

    As a further measure to clip his deputy’s powers, Obasanjo ordered the collapsing of the Presidency into one structure. The implication was that nothing was done by the vice president’s office without his approval.

    This war of attrition between the two men continued, forcing Atiku to leave the PDP for the former Action Congress in early 2007, after being deregistered along with some of his supporters who included governors.

    His nomination as the presidential candidate of the then AC even as a sitting vice president did not come as as surprise, as most of his close associates, like the former Governor of Lagos State, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, were the major promoters of the new party.

    Abubakar’s lifelong ambition to rule the country again hit the rocks as he lost in the 2007 presidential elections, adjudged as the worst ever conducted in the country.

    In a move that is still a source of debate among his associates, Abubakar sometime in 2008 returned to PDP. But ever since then, things have not been the same for him again in the party where he was once revered.

    Again in 2011, the former vice president contested the PDP ticket with the incumbent president, Goodluck Jonathan, following his nomination as the consensus candidate of the Northern Elders Forum (NEF).

    But he received a drubbing at the PDP primaries with Jonathan winning the presidential ticket by a wide margin.

    In the current configuration of the PDP, the former vice president virtually has no say in the running of the party. Aside his regular scathing criticisms of how the party is being run, the latest being his condemnation of the recent fracas in the Rivers State House of Assembly where five members purportedly impeached the Speaker, Otelemaba Dan Amachree, Abubakar’s influence in the ruling party has reached an all time low.

    Every passing day, it appears that the options before the former vice president to finally realising his dream for the Presidency are diminishing at a fast pace.

    For the 2015 presidential race, the odds are heavily stacked against Abubakar winning the PDP ticket, against the backdrop of an alleged plan to give the incumbent president an automatic ticket.

    But even if a primary is conducted, can Abubakar defeat Jonathan with the party structures firmly in the latter’s hands?

    If the political realities on ground, however, remain in place till 2015, then Abubakar’s dream to become the next president under the platform of PDP seems far fetched.

  • 2015 Presidency: Okorocha and South-East schemes

    2015 Presidency: Okorocha and South-East schemes

    Sam Egburonu reports that a lot of South-East’s plots for 2015 Presidential contest currently revolve around Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State and the G21 political group.

    The night before the January 3, 2012 traditional wedding of Governor Rochas Okorocha’s daughter, Uloma to Hon. Uche Nwosu, was one of intense political meetings in far away Ogboko village in Idiato South Local Government Area of Imo State.

    The meetings continued on Friday, January 4 and Saturday, January 5, when the church wedding held. Unlike similar political meetings convened by the governor’s men, weeks before the social gathering, the January meetings had wider attendance outside the governor’s known political associates within the G21 group and the All Progressives Grand Alliance family. While the Wednesday and Thursday meetings had in attendance more political leaders from the northern parts of Nigeria, the Friday and Saturday meetings had in attendance governors and other political leaders from the South-West and South-South. It would be recalled that amongst the top political leaders that attended the wedding included former President Olusegun Obasanjo and former Military Head of State, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, who are considered to be amongst the most politically influential personalities in the country today.

    A source close to Okorocha told The Nation in Owerri that the major issue on the agenda of virtually all the meetings both in Ogboko and Owerri was 2015 presidency and the role that would be played by the South-East. The source, a top player in his own rights however denied allegation that some northern governors and other leaders may have convinced the group that South-East should support the North in 2015 and that the zone would be adequately compensated politically and be given the chance after 2015.

    According to him, “That is not the vision of our group. We are, as you can see, gathering support for Igbo presidency in 2015. The support we have gathered so far is enormous and it is mere mischief for anybody to try to make such suggestions.” He equally revealed that the group is working with different political parties with the aim of achieving unity and a set objective.

    Another source however told The Nation that the group’s decision to work with other political families across the country may not have impressed some top members of All Progressives Grand Alliance outside Imo State, who are afraid of Okorocha’s alleged domineering influence. The source said that such members and leaders are worried that the alliances being negotiated may not benefit APGA and Ndigbo in the long run. He said that such APGA chieftains are worried that G21, or close associates of Okorocha may subsume APGA’s interest under Okorocha’s ambition.

    But the Chairman of G21, Senator Annie Okonkwo, told The Nation in a telephone chat on Friday that what happened at the wedding of Governor Okorocha’s daughter last weekend was a confirmation of the current political understanding between the South-East and the rest of the country, particularly the North and the South-West. According to him “what you saw shows that it is possible for the South-East to produce the next president of Nigeria. I say so because most of the people, who came to Owerri and saw the level of performance and political mobilisation, have come to accept that what Nigeria needs at a time like this is a practical leader like Okorocha.”

    Okonkwo did not also deny claims that various political meetings held recently in Owerri and outside Owerri were meant to promote the possibility of an alliance that would fertilise the vision of a president of Igbo extraction in 2015, especially Okorocha’s alleged ambition. Asked if the large turnout of top political leaders and traditional leaders was a confirmation of Okorocha’s involvement in the 2015 negotiations for the presidential elections and if there would be a possible North and South-East alliance in that regard, Okonkwo said candidly, “Of course, that is the original alliance that has held Nigeria as one. The major concern of C21, as a political group, is to make sure that the dream of producing a Nigerian president of Igbo extraction becomes a reality. With what is happening now, it is now very clear that a North and South-East alliance, for this very purpose, is possible and real,” he said.

    Reminded that a lot of governors and leaders of Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) also attended the wedding, Okonkwo said, “yes, that is also a confirmation that at this period in the political history of Nigeria, a South-East presidential candidate will receive the support of the West. Don’t forget that a lot of Igbo investment is in Lagos and the South-West and so an alliance with the South-West is also most needful. That is what we are working towards and that social gathering, the wedding, is just a confirmation of the successes recorded so far,” he said.

    Obasanjo, while making remarks at the wedding ceremony, had harped on the need to foster unity in the country and amongst political leaders across the nation.

    Given the varied political leanings of the political leaders that showed solidarity to the Imo State governor as he hands over his first daughter to her heartthrob, there have been varied political interpretations. Some observers said Okorocha, an APGA governor, can no longer be pinned down to a particular political party. Others swore that the governor is set to go back to the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), where he may be fully compensated. Such analysts points to Obasanjo’s comment at the wedding, where he jocularly asked Okorocha when he would be returning to his natural political family, the People’s Democratic Party. A close associate of Okorocha, who claimed to be quoting the governor, however told The Nation in Owerri that such questions would not arise as he (Okorocha) is not thinking in that direction now. He pointed out the governor is only interested in reaching out to all the parts of the country to ensure that the South-East is no longer short changed in the political equilibrium.

    As the negotiations continue, it is not yet clear which political party Okorocha, who is believed in some quarters to be interested in re-election as governor of Imo State, will eventually use to fulfill his alleged presidential ambition in 2015 as many believe APGA, as it is today, can hardly win a presidential election alone.

  • North West governors and  2015 presidency

    North West governors and 2015 presidency

    Individual ambition of some northern governors may scuttle the desire of the zone to produce a successor to President Goodluck Jonathan, sources have revealed. In the last few weeks, several news reports have indicated that the Governor of Jigawa State, Sule Lamido, may contest the 2015 presidency. But Ripples can reveal that aside Lamido, about four other governors in the North-West zone, who are presently serving a second term in office, are also alleged to be interested in the nation’s number one seat. The list: Ibrahim Shema of Katsina; Rabiu Musa Kwakwanso of Kano; Aliyu Wammako of Sokoto and Saidu Dakingari of Kebbi State.

  • Get ready for 2015 presidency, Ezeife, Madubuike tell Ndigbo

    Get ready for 2015 presidency, Ezeife, Madubuike tell Ndigbo

    AS the debate over the fate of the South-East geo-political zone in the 2015 presidential race gathers momentum, two Igbo leaders, Dr. Chukwuemeka Ezeife, a former governor of Anambra State and Dr. Ihechukwu Madubuike, a former minister of health and education, have called on the zone to get its house in order, in preparation for the race.

    The two political leaders, who spoke to The Nation in Lagos, when they led other Igbo leaders to pay a solidarity visit to the management of Nigeria Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) on the recent appointment of Mr. Calistus Obi, as Executive Director of the federal government agency, said it has become necessary for Ndigbo to be ready for the 2015 race.

    Ndigbo, Ezeife said, “should prepare and be ready as an interest group. We are not out to haunt President Goodluck Jonathan, but at the appropriate time, we will make the necessary negotiation.”

    Madubuike spoke in the same fashion, saying that “Ndigbo are aware there is an incumbent president, a president that was supported by the zone during his election into office.”

    They, however, pointed out that the support the president got from the zone was based on some expectations and that at the appropriate time the president’s fulfilment of his promises to Ndigbo and the expectations of the people will count.

    They said the leaders and people of South-East zone are not toying with the 2015 presidency. “We are meeting and preparing. As you know, Ndigbo deserve, more than any other, to produce the next president of Nigeria.”

    Recently, there have been mixed reports on the position of Ndigbo on whether to support President Jonathan’s presidential bid in 2015 or to insist on Igbo presidency.

    Speaking at the event, NIMASA Director-General, Patrick Akpobololokemi, said it would be difficult for Nigeria to make progress without the Igbo nation, primarily because of their contribution in trade and technology.

    He assured the visitors that Obi will serve as a bridge between Ndigbo and NIMASA

     

  • 2015 presidency: Look beyond PDP, ANPP boss tells Igbo leaders

    2015 presidency: Look beyond PDP, ANPP boss tells Igbo leaders

    The Igbo should look beyond the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)to actualise their quest to produce the President in 2015, All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) National chair Ogbonnaya Onu advised yesterday.

    Dr. Onu spoke at the Igbo Leadership Forum of the World Igbo Congress Convention at Orlando, Florida, United States.

    His speech is titled: “The Igbo: The Path To Nigeria’s Presidency In 2015”.

    The ANPP chairman said the Igbo must not fail to realise that the Constitution makes no provision for independent candidates, and therefore they need a political platform to realise their political aspiration.

    His words: ‘‘Anyone who wants to run for an elective office, whether as a Councillor in a Local Government or as the President of the Federal Republic , must be sponsored by a political party. The first important step in running for election is to contest and win the primaries of a political party and become its candidate.

    ‘‘It is remarkable that of all the major ethnic groups in our dear country, the Igbo are the only ones who are indigenous only in our country. There is no other country in the world where Igbo are an indigenous people. Today, propelled by the indomitable spirit of adventure and entrepreneurship, the Igbo are found in every part of our dear country and in virtually every country of the world.”

    Onu said: ‘‘For the Igbo to do well in politics, they should not put their eggs in one basket. What we have today is that most of the Igbo elite are in the ruling party. They believe that the ruling party is where the action is. This has its advantages. It certainly has many disadvantages.

    ‘‘It is very important to always consider what happens in such a case if, for one reason or the other, the ruling party is unable to make available its platform. In that case every effort made, then comes to nothing. Should this be allowed to be so? No.

    ‘‘The Igbo in politics should look beyond the ruling party. We should study the political terrain very carefully and take decisions which are in our own very best interest. We should always remember what our ancestors taught us, that when answering the call of nature, we should go with two pieces of sticks. If one falls by the wayside unnoticed, the other can still be relied upon to perform its duty when the need arises.

    ‘‘The Igbo need an alternative political party that has a national reach and is not perceived by the general public as a regionally-based party. The All Nigeria Peoples Party, ANPP, is that political party which the Igbo should embrace so that they can always make a viable choice. The Igbo need to diversify, as an insurance against the unknown and the unseen.

    “For twelve years (1999-2011), the ANPP remained the second largest political party in the country. It initially controlled nine States which spread across three geo-political zones. It also controlled slightly above one quarter of the membership of the National Assembly. Even though its fortunes have declined, it now controls three States. The ANPP has a Senator from Kogi State in North Central Nigeria and a Member of the House of Representatives from Ebonyi State in the Southeast Nigeria.

    ‘‘The time has come when the Igbo should stop putting all their political eggs into one basket, particularly when the basket is in the custody of others. Allowing the Igbo ambition to be determined by only the ruling political party can result in disappointment at a time that no remedy exists. This cannot be the right road to follow.

    ‘‘The Igbo should remember that its political leaders were the founding leaders of the All Peoples Party, APP, that later became the ANPP. These great Igbo sons and daughters laid the foundation and nurtured the Party to what it was in 1999. These Igbo political leaders include Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, Chief Sam Mbakwe, Chief C. C. Onoh, Chief E. C. Iwuanyanwu, Chief Arthur Nzeribe, Chief Evan Enwerem, Chief Ken Nnamani, Prince Vincent Ogbulafor, Dr Hyde Onuaguluchi, Chief Martin Elechi, Chief Chekwas Okorie, Chief Ben Obi, Chief (Mrs) Joy Emordi, Dr Ezekiel Izuogu, Chief Gbazuagu Nweke Gbazuagu, Chief Chris Nwankwo, Chief Frank Ogbuewu, Chief Lynda Ikpeazu.