Tag: APC

  • Oyegun to PDP: Keep us on our toes

    Oyegun to PDP: Keep us on our toes

    The National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief John Odigie Oyegun, has tasked the Peoples a Democratic Party (PDP) to present a formidable opposition to the party and to keep them on their toes for the next four years.

    Speaking when he received a delegation of former governors led by former Anambra State governor, Chief Jim Nwobodo, Oyegun said one of the major problems of the PDP was the fact they tried to destroy the opposition and make them very weak.

    He said the APC desires a formidable opposition from the PDP, saying, “we want the PDP to keep us on our toes so that we don’t make the same mistake they made.”

    Oyegun said that a nation moving from one government to another and from one party to another peacefully is a major success , pointing out that the just concluded elections were quite unique  not because President Goodluck Jonathan conceded defeat, but because he did what nobody believe could be done.

    He added that terrible things could have happened after the elections, “but Jonathan was inspired by God to do what Nigerians thought will not happen.”

    “By conceding defeat, Jonathan deserves a place in the nation’s history,” he added.

    Speaking earlier, Nwobodo congratulated the APC for emerging victorious at the elections, saying the feat was historic.

     

  • APC, PDP disagree on Wike’s defection plan

    APC, PDP disagree on Wike’s defection plan

    The leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Rivers State have disagreed on the move by the state governor-elect, Chief Nyesom Wike, to join the APC.

    The Rivers State Publicity Secretary of the APC, Chris Finebone, on Thursday in Port Harcourt, disclosed that there was a subterranean move by Wike to jump defect to the party.

    The Rivers Chairman of the PDP, Chief Felix Obuah, however, dismissed the APC’s claim, describing it as malicious, baseless and a mere wishful thinking of propagators of such falsehood.

    Wike, a former Minister of State for Education, was declared winner of the April 11 governorship election in the state by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), while the governorship candidate of the APC, Dr. Dakuku Adol Peterside, has concluded arrangements to file a petition at the state’s election petitions tribunal in Abuja.

    Finebone said Wike’s move to defect to the APC was aimed at obtaining the cover of the ruling party in the state and avoid a judicial dethronement.

    He said: “Wike’s latest move comes as no surprise to those who know his antecedents. Having back-stabbed his mentors like former Senator John Mbata in the past and more recently Governor Chibuike Amaechi, he would only be living true to the unreliable ally that he has grown to be.

    “Wike’s history is replete with sabotage and dual personality, often unstable among peers. So, we are not surprised at his latest move to dump the PDP and join the APC. Such a move portrays him as unstable in relationship, having at several instances, bitten the finger that fed him. He thinks that by hiding under the canopy of APC membership, elders of the APC will prevail on Dr. Dakuku Adol Peterside, the governorship candidate of the party at the April 11 election, to abandon his quest for justice.”

    Obuah, however, claimed that it was most unthinkable that the governor-elect who is also the PDP leader in Rivers State, was considering dumping the party for the APC, saying doing so was like preferring hell, which the APC allegedly represents, to paradise.

    He said: “Rivers State is a PDP state, as demonstrated in the just-concluded general election and cannot be betrayed by the leader and holder of its mandate, who has given all he has to ensure the party is not killed by self-seeking individuals, the bulk of whom make up the membership of the APC in the state.

    “Rather than do that, the governor-elect, Chief Wike, will do all within his powers to deliver on his electioneering promises to the people to ensure they are not disappointed and to strengthen their support and belief in the PDP.”

     

  • 29 APC chairmen reaffirm support for Umana

    29 APC chairmen reaffirm support for Umana

    Chairmen of 29 chapters of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Akwa Ibom State have reaffirmed their support for the party’s governorship candidate, Obong Umana Okon Umana.

    This was contained in a communique issued yesterday in Uyo, the state capital, by the party’s chairmen after a meeting under the auspices of the Forum of Local Government (Chapter) Party Chairmen of APC.

    They denied a report that they had shifted support to the Labour Party (LP).

    The chairmen described the publication, which was aired by Akwa Ibom Broadcasting Corporation (AKBC) radio as the handiwork of political jobbers claiming to represent the APC Chapter Chairmen Forum but were deceiving the public.

    They said the authors of the publication, Amah Joseph and Monday Jackson Akpan, were neither party members nor local government party chairmen, having been expelled for “anti—party activities”.

    The communique said: “We reiterate our support and loyalty to APC and Obong Umana Okon Umana and stand fully, confident in our success at the tribunal.”

    The APC chairmen rejected the outcome of the April 11, 2015 governorship elections in the state.

    They expressed support for the party at the national and state levels, adding that the elections be cancelled.

    The chapter chairmen said they were not unaware of the destructive tendencies and intrigues by Governor Godswill Akpabio to sabotage the chances of APC and its candidate, Umana, at the tribunal.

    They noted that this was “to parade miscreants as local government party chairmen in the state and stage-manage a defection soap opera on AKBC in support of Udom Emmanuel (the PDP candidate)”.

    The APC chairmen also dissociated themselves from a media briefing where congratulatory messages were sent to Udom Emmanuel as governor-elect.

    They insisted that the April 11 governorship and House of Assembly elections in the state were neither free nor fair, adding that those who addressed the briefing were neither members nor chapter chairmen of APC in the state.

    The communiqué added: “They were impostors and hirelings of the PDP. Authentic chapter chairmen of the APC are those who signed the communiqués dated April 19, 2015.”

    The party chairmen said it was shameful that those who claimed to have won elections were burdened by the crisis of legitimacy to the extent of going round to hire dishonourable men to congratulate them.

    “Induced congratulatory messages and procured show of support will not be part of admissible evidence for defence at the tribunal,” the chairmen said.

    They urged Emmanuel to prepare to defend his purported victory at the tribunal, adding that Akpabio should stop wasting the state’s scarce resources  on frivolous congratulatory messages.

  • APC: labour plotting to frustrate impeachment

    APC: labour plotting to frustrate impeachment

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday claimed that it has uncovered an alleged conspiracy between the government and labour leaders to instigate workers into a prolonged strike to prevent Governor Ayo Fayose’s impeachment.

    The party said the deal was reportedly struck at a meeting  of April 27 with the leadership of the state Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Trade Union Congress (TUC) and Joint Negotiation Council (JNC).

    The APC claimed that the prolonged labour crisis is designed to shut down all government offices to prevent the 19 lawmakers from going ahead with the impeachment against the governor.

    However, labour has denied the allegation, describing it as “highly mischievous and illogical”.

    A statement by APC’s Publicity Secretary Taiwo Olatubosun said it was “wicked and selfish for labour leaders to secretly negotiate a multi-million naira deal for their pockets while herding their colleagues on partisan protest that is clearly against the service rule”.

    The APC said the meeting considered two options, which included a declaration of 10-day holiday from May 29 till early June.

    The second option was for the government to pay civil servants half salary, which the labour leaders would reject and thereafter declare an indefinite strike.

    Calling on labour leaders not to drag Ekiti workers into politics, the party expressed dismay at their partisan roles in flagrant abuse of labour laws.

    The party alleged that labour leaders had abandoned the interests of their members to hobnob with the government.

    The APC said it was aware that some labour leaders collected N30 million from the government for various solidarity rallies in the last six months.

    It condemned the alleged agreement of some of these labour leaders to instigate innocent workers to a politically-motivated industrial action.

    The APC noted that this was exactly the politics behind the strike of the local chapter of the Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN), which paralysed courts across the state.

    The party called on workers to remember that there is life after Governor Fayose’s administration, stressing that it is wicked for labour leaders to trade off their future for a mess of pottage that does not guarantee their growth and job security.

    State NLC Vice-Chairman Kayode Akosile said: “The allegation is highly mischievous and illogical. Who wants to impeach the governor? Is it the APC in the Diaspora or those in the state?

    “There is nothing logical in the allegation, how can somebody be paid or induced to go on strike. Labour leaders can reason very well.

    “The governor has been given a mandate to rule for four years, he should be allowed to exercise his mandate so that the people can get dividends of democracy.

    “The allegation is mischievous, if workers will go on strike, it will be because they have issues with the government.”

  • All accredited media free to cover Buhari, says APC

    THE All Progressives Congress (APC) has said that all accredited media organizations, including the African Independent Television (AIT), are free to cover the activities of the President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari.

    Its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, in a statement in Abuja yesterday, said the incoming Buhari Administration would not discriminate against any media organisation, irrespective of its role during the electioneering campaign leading up to the recent polls.

    The statement, however, enjoined all media organisations to observe the highest level of professional standards in carrying out their duties.

    “There is a Code of Ethics guiding the practice of journalism in Nigeria, and this demands every journalist to ensure a strict adherence to the highest levels of ethics and professionalism in carrying out their duties.

    “There must be repercussions, within the realms of the law, for media organisations which have wantonly breached the Code of Ethics of the journalism profession and turned themselves to partisans instead of professionals. But such repercussions will not include barring any accredited media organisation from covering the activities of the president-elect,” APC said.

     

  • Olanusi’s impeachment temporary – APC

    The All Progressive Congress in Ondo State has described the impeachment of the state’s deputy governor, Alhaji Ali Olanusi, as temporary, vowing to reclaim the mandate through legal means.

    The party, who lamented the unlawful process of the impeachment, described it as height of impunity by the Peoples Democratic Party led government in the state.

    A statement signed by the Publicity secretary of the party in the state, Omo”ba Abayomi Adesanya ,said it is laughable that a rubber stamped House of Assembly could hurriedly impeached the deputy governor and accept nomination of another person in a haste.

    According to the party, the whole impeachment was a charade which will be thrown away by a court of competent jurisdiction.

    APC alleged that Governor Olusegun Mimiko has turned politics in the state to a desperate affair, saying nothing happened to Mimiko when he decamped and joined the PDP.

    The statement reads, “The impeachment of Alhaji Ali Olanusi as the deputy governor of Ondo State is temporary. The impeachment was a sham and charade. How on earth will a deputy governor be impeached within five days?

    “It shows that there were unholy alliance between the Governor Olusegun Mimiko, Chief Judge, Olasehinde Kumuyi and the governor stooges who called themselves state lawmakers for them to embark on illegal process to impeach the deputy governor.

    “It was clear to the people of the state that before the directive of the State Assembly Speaker to serve Olanusi the impeachment notice, the embattled deputy governor was not in the state. Without any court order, the Speaker directed them to paste the notice on the quarters of the deputy governor and this is unlawful.”

     

     

  • APC warns against last-minute looting

    APC warns against last-minute looting

    President Goodluck Jonathan has been urged to rein in government officials whose actions may cause problems for the incoming Muhammadu Buhari administration.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) alleged that there are reported allegations of:

    •last-minute looting of the nation’s resources, hurried recruitment into the public service and

    •rushed privatisation of key financial institutions.

    In a statement yesterday by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said apart from the instances of such cases that had been reported by the media, it has been inundated with calls and messages by concerned Nigerians, alerting it to the unscrupulous actions of some Jonathan Administration officials.

    It said while the Jonathan Administration remains in office till midnight of May 28th and governance in the country will not stop because a new President has been elected, it is incumbent upon the outgoing Administration not to create any more problems for the incoming government than it had already done, or to tie the new government’s hands through some suspicious actions.

    APC said while it is true that the incoming Buhari Administration will not get itself bogged down by an endless probe of the activities of the Jonathan Administration, all actions taken since the result of the May 28 presidential election was announced may come under the searchlight.

    ‘’For example, the National Council on Privatisation, which is headed by the Vice President, has just approved the financial bid opening for transaction advisers for the privatisation of the three Development Finance Institutions in the country – the Bank of Agriculture, Bank of Industry and Nigeria Commodity Exchange. The question is: What is the rationale for rushing this exercise with just weeks left for this administration?

    ‘’Also, there have been reports, yet unrefuted, of a planned hurried recruitment into the Nigeria Immigration Service, after a previous attempt ended in a national tragedy and the fleecing of innocent job seekers by mindless federal government officials. Apart from the fact that this last-minute recruitment is suspect, it is irregular.

    ‘’The Civil Defence, Fire, Immigration and Prisons Services Board (CDFIPSB) is only empowered to recruit, promote and discipline only senior officers (levels 8 and above). The power to recruit, promote and discipline junior officers is vested in the different services, in

    this case the Nigeria Immigration Service.

    ‘’Therefore, the recruitment exercise now being conducted by the Federal Civil Service under the auspices of the Presidential Committee to Assist on Immigration Recruitment usurps the functions of the Board as it relates to recruitment of Senior Officers (level 08) and that of

    the Immigration Service as it relates to Junior Officers (levels 07 and below),’’ the party said.

    It also called attention to a published report that the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Senator Bala Mohammed, plans to use the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA) to carry out a secret employment of no fewer than 500 workers before the end of  this month.

    ‘’We do not know if this report, as well as others, is true. But if indeed these rushed privatisations and hurried recruitment exercises – in the twilight of the Jonathan Administration – are true, they raise serious questions concerning the reasons behind such actions. We are therefore compelled to call on President Jonathan to call his Administration officials to order, lest they engage in actions that can later embarrass his Administration.

    ‘’This is against the backdrop of the precarious situation into which the Jonathan Administration has plunged the nation’s economy, no thanks to years of ceaseless and unprecedented profligacy by the outgoing Administration, as well as mind-boggling acts of corruption and looting of the public treasury by some Administration officials and their collaborators,’’ APC said.

  • You’re undemocratic, APC tells Ladoja

    You’re undemocratic, APC tells Ladoja

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Oyo State has described former Governor Rashidi Ladoja as a “non-democrat”.

    Ladoja has refused to accept the result of the April 11 governorship election, citing irregularities, which he promised to prove at the election petition tribunal.

    The party, in a statement by its Director of Publicity and Strategy, Olawale Sadare, said it was disturbing that the former governor would not accept the result of an election described as one of the freest and fairest in the state’s history.

    He said: “It is apparent that those witchdoctors, who fooled Ladoja that they saw him sitting on Ajimobi’s seat at the Agodi Government House are the ones making him arrogant and disdainful of the people and their wishes.

    “He should wake up from the world of the spirit and see the reality that Ajimobi has effectively retired him from the politics of Oyo State.

    “Describing the mood of the people as mournful after Ajimobi secured a vital victory for the continuity of good governance as against the impunity, reign of terror and nepotism, which marred his (Ladoja’s) administration, is the height of disrespect for the people of Oyo State.

    “It is also tantamount to declaring war against democracy and the society, having once benefited from same democratic system, although in a questionable circumstance.

    “Ladoja has again exhibited his disdain for the larger society due to his avaricious nature. For the avoidance of doubt, his Accord Party was roundly defeated in the six political zones, including Ibadan, where he enjoys the highest degree of sympathy from the people.

    “The likes of Ladoja would take the peaceful atmosphere, which heralded the governor’s re-election for mourning on the part of the people because if he had been the one elected, many innocent lives would have been lost to celebration while opposition members would have had a cause to leave the state.

    “In all of this, we sympathise with Ladoja, who has had to retire from politics in an inglorious manner since he didn’t appreciate the fact that one must leave the stage, while the ovation is loudest. “

  • After the war, APC struggles to manage the peace

    After the war, APC struggles to manage the peace

    Considering how difficult it has been for them to come up with a zoning formula to share the spoils of war, the still exulting All Progressives Congress (APC) is beginning to discover that the easiest part of what they achieved a few weeks ago is fighting the electoral war that castrated the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Their nightmare may have just begun, however. Even after surmounting the difficult task of sharing the legislative and top cabinet and presidency posts available, APC leaders, many of them set in their ways and defined by their rigid and unsparing outlook, will find themselves engaging in fresh supremacy battles. By Thursday, the party’s leaders were yet to agree on who gets what, particularly in the legislative branch. After failing to agree, they excused their tardiness on the fact that neither their National Executive Committee (NEC) nor their National Working Committee (NWC) had met over the sharing formula.

    The eminent gentlemen who met on Thursday in Abuja, however, constitute the real movers and shakers of the party, personalities behind whom no great decisions could be taken nor binding agreements reached. Yet they floundered in their very first post-war task. They probably see their failure to agree on the spoils as one of those political things; for after all, everyone predicted apocalypse in 2012 when the party was formed and teething, and more virulently again last year when the party’s juggernauts arrayed themselves in battle to elect party candidates. But they are still standing, not keeling, and are even winning battles and wars, and garnering trophies. Perhaps after testing themselves sorely to their elastic limits, they will surprise us with a stupefyingly easy agreement. If they do, their long-suffering supporters must hope that the injuries from the internecine battles will not aggravate the lacerations from past intra-party squabbles.

    There is a chance the party will get so complacent and feel so invincible that its leaders will stoically see every internal battle as indispensable for sharpening party philosophy and strengthening party cords. There is also a chance that they may even become so battle-hardened that they will intentionally furnish themselves wars in order to sustain excitement and purpose. However, it is also possible that the party’s elders are conscious of the fact that these struggles are necessary in the party’s early years to enable it define itself, its worldview, and its philosophy. But it is no use second-guessing them. What is important is that they must not overrate their strength or internal cohesion, nor pretend they do not know a bitter and defeated opposition waits threateningly and even treacherously on the sidelines to pounce on them.

    From experience, the victorious party must have understood during the poll war that other than two or three print media establishments, and one or two electronic media houses, the party is encompassed by very hostile media sworn to undermining and crippling it using the artifices of misinformation and disinformation. The party has few media friends. Their media enemies will seize upon every mistake by the party to emphasise and prolong its discomfort. President Goodluck Jonathan put that hostile media to good use in the Southwest to reduce the APC’s advantage and very nearly created an upset in Lagos. That same hostile media are still deeply upset by the Buhari victory and are willing to be deployed in battle against a party they deem sanctimonious, unbearable and meddlesome.

    The PDP fractured badly in the last months of the campaigns, so badly and unexpectedly that it never recovered. The APC must know that whatever unity it lays claim to now is tenuous and skin deep. If the PDP did not survive its divisions, despite having the resources and time to construct a party to its own taste, it would be presumptuous of the APC to imagine it can withstand a major early test when it has not demonstrated the kind of cohesiveness and ideological clarity capable of sustaining the new party through thick and thin. There are indeed already visible factional lines within the victorious party —factional lines engendered by powerful and sometimes resentful blocs — and a few other tendencies showing their disturbing and dangerous silhouettes.

    APC leaders must start to ask themselves whether their talents transcend, as they hope, fighting electoral wars, and whether truly they even understand themselves and the various tendencies and interest groups within the country it is now their privilege to govern. Surely they must appreciate that if five zones came together to deliver the presidency and a majority of state governorships to the APC, a few factors must have been responsible for that unity of purpose. The agreement is not eternal; it is tentative. Subtract, for instance, the North-Central or the Northeast from the victory equation, and the APC could not achieve the success it recorded in the last polls. Similarly, take either the Northwest or the Southwest from the equation, and the victory could have gone to the PDP.

    In the end, the APC will agree to a zoning arrangement. Whether that arrangement will satisfy every tendency within the party is a different thing. Whether that arrangement will not also create more troubles for the party than it can manage is another thing. So far, however, the ongoing disagreements show that the party is still evolving, perhaps just as the country itself is evolving. It is evident that the party, like the PDP it defeated, still does not have a centralising idea, something much bigger and ennobling than the mere acts of merging parties, winning electoral battles, and sharing war booty. Even if they manage to overcome the present squabbles, the APC must still develop an idea of itself and its mission, as well as an idea of the country. Then they will have to market these ideas to the rest of the country, and hope that the ideas would be bought and embraced.

    If the PDP, with all the resources it could muster to placate aggrieved party members and leaders, still unravelled months before the polls, the APC must not feel so sanguine. If the zoning arrangement is not properly managed, the victorious party could lose its leadership of either or both chambers of the National Assembly. The party’s enemies would help exacerbate the divisions, even as aggrieved zones dictate what directions their national lawmakers would go. The Northeast, for instance, is campaigning for either the Senate presidency or Speaker of the lower house. And it argues that the Southwest, which is also reportedly angling for the Speaker’s post, should be contented with the vice presidential position and Deputy Speaker. It is not impossible the Southwest probably reasons that it needs greater influence in the legislature to advance great constitutional changes and other ideas, but after championing the huge change the country is about to enjoy, the Southwest needs to calculate the cost of party disunity which regional disaffections are bound to make prohibitive.

    Rather than expend energy squabbling over positions, the APC should more appropriately prepare for the daunting task of ruling the country and extricating it from the tragic decay the outgoing government had consigned it. The outgoing government has laced the country with booby traps and other potentially destructive and divisive policies, cultures and practices. Countering these problems and dissipating them will not be easy for the APC, especially if the countermeasures are complicated by aggrieved zones mischievously seeking their pound of flesh. It is, therefore, important that the zoning arrangement must be fair and inclusive, not presumptuous, not insensitive. The party will not be helped by the incoming opposition, nor by a hostile media, nor yet by an impatient, oppressed and angry electorate. The APC will in fact again need the talisman that gave it great primaries, credible convention and a great and stupendous victory in the polls.

    Neither the electorate nor this column has great confidence in the party’s elders to manage the internal crisis unfolding in the party and on the nation. There is a certain rapacity for posts and influence going on in the party, and there are too many young hot heads who have overstated and overrated their contributions to the party, some of them governors accustomed to unquestioning loyalty and obedience in their states. Thrown into this mix is a potpourri of fanatical jobholders, ethnic champions, and ambitious persons with an eye on the future. It took extraordinary efforts to rein them in before and during the primaries and convention, and especially when the Buhari Campaign Organisation was being constituted. With the presidency safe in their pockets, and fearing that whatever happens early in the life of the new government would likely be sustained hereafter, the jostling for positions and influence may take a more deathly tenor.

    If squabbling APC leaders manage to overcome their divisions and take effective hold of the Senate and Reps leadership without serious consequences for party unity, then perhaps they have more mettle and wisdom than Nigerians are prepared to acknowledge. From experience elsewhere, conservatives do much better at sustaining party unity than progressives. But if gold rust, as the PDP showed in its fractiousness and loss of the presidency, what then will iron do in the case of squabbling APC? APC leaders must be told indeed that their supporters and Nigerians who have a favourable opinion of their party are embarrassed by their squabbles and manoeuvres. They must summon the maturity and wisdom required to rule, far in excess of the brawn and reckless daring with which they applied themselves to warring for the coveted presidency.

  • APC, PDP members-elect seek credible House leadership

    APC, PDP members-elect seek credible House leadership

    Some members-elect of House of Representatives from All Progressives Congress (APC) and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have vowed to work for the enthronement of credible leadership for the lower chamber.

    The coalition said it was crucial to elect House leaders that would build on the legacy of vibrancy for which the outgoing 7th House of Representatives was reputed.

    Towards achieving this objective, the members-elect from different political parties said they have collapsed their pressure groups to form “The 8th Assembly New Nigeria Agenda (ANNA)”.

    The conveners of ANNA, who spoke to reporters at a news conference in Abuja include member-elect for Agaie/Lapai Federal Constituency of Niger State Mohammed A. Mahmud (APC), Ibrahim Baba (APC, Katagum Federal Constituency of Bauchi State), Chukwuemeka Ujam (PDP, Nkwanu East/West Federal Constituency of Enugu State), and Director of Administration, Mr. Samuel Melaye.

    Mahmud spoke for the coalition.

    Also yesterday, the ongoing lobby for sharing of National Assembly positions took a twist, with the PDP Senate caucus holding a lengthy meeting with the Northeast caucus of the APC.

    An insider said that the talk may metamorphose into an alliance between the two blocs with the aim of gunning for the Senate President and the Deputy Senate President.

    It was gathered that some Northeast APC senators, who attended the meeting, were “dissatisfied with the plan to zone the slot of the Senate President to the Northcentral geo-political zone.”

    The APC senators were also said to have resolved to approach the President-elect, General Muhammadu Buhari and the National Executive Council of the party to lodge their case for a revisit of the zoning formula.

    A credible source at the National Assembly said that the Northeast senators and those in the fold of the PDP are negotiating a power sharing deal that may see a ranking PDP senator emerge as the Deputy Senate President while another ranking senator from the Northeast will clinch the slot of the Senate President.

    The source said that the calculation is part of their plan B incase their entreaties for the position of the Senate President to be zoned to the Northeast zone failed.

    The source said: “I can confirm to you that the PDP have approached us with a power-sharing deal that will cede the Senate Presidency to the Northeast while one of the PDP states will produce the Deputy Senate President.”

    He insisted that “Our position is if the APC fails to zone either the Senate President or the Speaker of the House of Representatives to the Northeast, then we will have no option than to form this alliance with the PDP to get what we want.”

    He noted that no calculative politician will toy with 49 PDP senators in chamber, although APC has majority members in the Senate.

    He said that it was obvious that the PDP with 49 senators can turn the table at any time.

    He said: “As things stand now, we only need seven senators to get the simple majority of 51 votes to produce the Senate President and there 18 senators from the Northeast, which gives us 66 votes.”