Tag: APC

  • Adamawa APC adopts Atiku as presidential candidate

    Adamawa APC adopts Atiku as presidential candidate

    •‘Door still open to others’

    The Adamawa State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has adopted former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as the party’s presidential candidate ahead of the primaries.

    But the chapter said its doors were open to other aspirants interested in campaigning in the state.

    Chairman of the Party in the state, Hon. Binta Garba said at a news conference in Abuja that even though the party in the state has decided to adopt the former Vice President as its Presidential candidate, it is not closing the door to other aspirants.

    She dismiss the consensus option in the selection of the party’s Presidential candidate saying it was not democratic too do so, stressing however that if the candidates who have collected the party’s nomination form agree on consensus, there is nothing the party can do about that.

    According to her the idea of allowing the candidates to go for primaries is to allow for a level playing ground for all, stressing that “anyone that lost out at the primaries will not say that he was not given a chance by the party. Even the laws setting up INEC stipulate that if you have more than one candidate, you must go for an election”.

    Justifying their choice of Atiku as the Presidential candidate of the party, Garba said: “Atiku Abubakar is not just a son of Adamawa State. The Turaki Adamawa is well known and well respected across the six geopolitical zones of our great country, Nigeria. His marriage and business ties cut across tribe and tongue, as do his philanthropy and social obligations. Sadly, in the deeply-divided Nigeria we have today, few politicians can make such a claim.

    “We are proud of the outstanding leadership role Atiku Abubakar has played in this country over the past 15 years of democracy, both within and outside government. He has shone as a bridge-builder, stepping in during times of discord to mediate for peace within and outside the APC.

    “Without antagonism or malice, he has consistently lent his voice to pressing national issues, offering counsel to the Federal Government at times when those at the top were clueless about what steps to take.  Atiku Abubakar is a leader with a difference. Atiku Abubakar is a man of the people.

    “Without the least meaning to diminish his national and global stature, it is on the records that Atiku as an individual has done more to develop Adamawa State than any indigene of the state that is living or dead. His university, the American University of Nigeria has put our state and the whole country on the world’s map of quality education.

    “Next to the state government, he ranks as the highest employer of labour through his many businesses and industrial establishments. We are equally thrilled by his commitment to job creation, improving the economy, education, infrastructure, transparency in government and the overall welfare of Nigerians.

    “It is on this note that the entire members of the State Executive Committee who are all here, supported by the party chairmen in all the local government areas representing the APC in Adamawa State hereby endorses the Turaki Adamawa for the 2015 Presidential elections. Following a meeting of the party executives yesterday evening, we unanimously resolved that we will give him our full backing towards realizing his ambitions to create a Nigeria for all.

    “The party, therefore, urges all APC faithful in the state to support this gesture and also give Atiku Abubakar their full backing. The people of Adamawa must unite to ensure that the 2015 elections bring about the CHANGE that we all seek.”

  • 10,000 PDP, others join APC in Kwara

    10,000 PDP, others join APC in Kwara

    Over 10,000 members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP),the  Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN) and Mega Progressive Peoples Party (MPPP) defected yesterday to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kwara State.

    Former governor and a chieftain of the APC, Senator Bukola Saraki said PDP had lost relevance in the state.

    The breakdown of the numbers of the defectors showed that over 5,000 PDP members, led by their leader Alhaji Baa Jimoh, joined the APC and over 3,200 members of the MPPP, led by their chairman, Abdullahi Shuaib. Others included over 2,000 members of MDB Solidarity Team, led by Comrade Abdulsalam Moshood; members ACPN and other youth groups and associations joined APC in the state.

    Saraki received the defectors into APC.

    The defectors promised their allegiance to the APC, adding that they would ensure the party’s victory in the 2015 elections.

    Saraki said: “Our progress in APC is not hidden. The defection of these people from various factions of the PDP in Kwara shows that PDP has lost its relevance in Kwara beyond recovery. Come 2015, PDP will not only lose in Kwara but nationwide.

    “Once again, I welcome you to APC and assure you that the party’s tenets of fairness, equity, transparency and progress cover you as you join us to fight for the change we crave. Our party is big enough to accommodate all Kwarans and Nigerians with equal participation.”

  • Okotie-Eboh: Why Delta APC is in court

    Okotie-Eboh: Why Delta APC is in court

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Delta State, Chief Adolo Okotie-Eboh,  has said that the decision of the chapter to resolve its  leadership in court  is in the interest of the party.

    Okotie-Eboh and Frank Egbomien, who sued for themselves and on behalf of the Executive Committee  are challenging the purported recognition of Jones Erue and Chidi Okonji, who allegedly emerged from an illegal congress, as Chairman and Secretary of Delta APC by the party’s national leadership.

    The suit  before Justice Sylvanus Oriji, has APC, its Nationa Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, the party’s National Secretary, Alhaji Mal Mala Buni, Elue and Okonji (sued also on behalf of the purported Exco members elected at the Hope Christian Centre, Asaba on April 26, 2014.

    Okotie-Eboh said they intend to show by the suit, the the congress which produced Elue and Okonji was illegal because it was held in Elue’s church, a private property, which contravened the party’s published guidlines.

    The guidelines published in the Vanguard newspaper of March 31, 2014 stated that “the election shall take place at the party’s state headquarters of the APC. If for any reason, such a place becomes unsuitable, the State Congress Committee (SCC) shall identify a convenient venue for the state congress (provided it is not a private residence or office.”

    He argued,  that the decision of the State Convention Committee (SCC) to agree to conduct the congress in Elue’s Hope Christian Centre was in violation of the party’s guideline that congresses should not be held in a private residence or office.

    The plaintiffs are praying for among others, an order restraining the 4th and 5th defendants  (Elue and Okonji)  from parading themselves as the duly elected Chairman and Secretary of the APC in Delta and  an order restraining the 1st, 2ndand 3rd  defendants  (APC, Odigie-Oyegun and Buni) from recognizing Elue and Oknji as the duly elected Chairman and Secretary of APC in Delta.

    They also seek a declaration that the state congress of the APC purportedly held on April 26, 2014 at the Hope Christian Centre, which returned Elue and Okonji  as Chairman and Secretary of the Delta APC is illegal, null and void having been conducted in clear breach of the approved guidelines for the conduct of the state congresses.

    The plaintiffs want the court to declare that they are the duly elected Chairman and Secretary of the Delta chapter of the APC having been elected on April 26, 2014 at the party’s state secretariat located at 32 Summit Road, Asaba, Delta State.

    The plaintiff  equally seek an order restraining all the members of the Executive Committee of the Delta Chapter of the APC as represented by the fourth and fifth defendants, who were purportedly elected on April 26, 2014 at Hope Christian Centre, from parading or holding out themselves as the validly elected executive committee of the Delta APC

    Alternatively, they prayed for an order directing the 2nd and 3rd defendants (Odigie-Oyegun and Buni)  to conduct  a fresh congress in Delta State for the purpose of electing the Executive Committee of the Delta APC.

    In their joint statement of defence, the defendants justified the conduct of the congress in a church, arguing that the venue was selected by the SCC with the support of members of the party, who preferred that the congress be conducted in the state capital.

    They have also challenged the jurisdiction of the court to hear the suit, on the grounds that the suit is premature and that not only are Elue and Okonji resident in Delta, the alleged illegal congress was also held in Delta State. They urged the court to dismiss the suit.

  • Why Buhari should be APC candidate, by Shagaya

    Why Buhari should be APC candidate, by Shagaya

    Former Minister of Internal Affair General John Shagaya has said in Abuja that the time has come for Nigerians  to elect a leader, who is capable of bringing back the nation’s lost glory.

    Speaking at a news conference organised by the Buhari Friends Organisation,  Shagaya said that Nigeria is lagging behind its counterparts because of corruption and insecurity in the land.

    He said it is unfortunate that Nigeria, which was a recognised as a continental power a few years ago because of her exploit in peace keeping in other African countries is not able to deal with pocket of insurgents who are occupying cities  with impunity.

    He said: “Nigeria was two years ago recognised as a continental power and a great contributor to world peace, hence, we were elected a non- voting member of the security council. I said in the last two years because the world has began to frown against some of the happenings in this country. There is a high level of insecurity and corruption.

    “The western world is saying this is the Nigeria that saved Tangayyika, now Tanzania. We were in Rwanda and Angola and other parts of Agrica. How come that we cannot cure ourselves of minor misdemeanor? The solution can be found in the statement of the America Secretary of State in Europe  that we have corrupt and porous leadership. These two factors have contributed to insecurity”.

    Speaking on why Buhari should be given the mandate to lead the country, he said: “This man we are hoping that Nigerians will give the opportunity to rule is incorruptible and fearless.

    “He is one man who in 1984, when the World Bank decided that we must swallow line, hook and sinker heavy conditionalities in Nigeriia, he stood up and said, I must consult my country because Nigeria must not be judged on western values because we are a developing nation. You know what happened when we began to bite the conditionalities of the World Bank. When he made this speech in 1984, the naira was equivalent to 2.2 dollars.

    “Today, you need a basket of naira to buy one dollar. Those are the qualities he has. He is a man that most Nigerians who are not hungry would want to rule this country. Of course, democracy is a game of numbers and I know that all of us from different background who love this country will say that we have someone we respect and will be respected by the continental bodies. Since Nigeria cannot operate in a vacuum, we need someone that the world can accept for us to develop and progress together.

    “There is, no doubt, that our leaders have done the best from the beginning in 1960 and even the struggle for, independence through the civil war until the last few years. All I believe that the Friends of Buhari are saying today is that we are declining, instead of climbing to the top of the ladder. This is were the entire world did not expect us to be.

    “Whether as Christians or Muslims or non-believers, we must realise that we must govern this country with a high sense of responsibility through incorruptible citizens as well as men and women that the world and our various communities will respect.

    “I want to say that, if other Nigerians listen to you, they should vote one man, General Muhammadu Buhari, and by so doing, we will be back to the great nation that we were a few years back and we will not be losing 16 local governments to Boko Haram. In some states like mine, we have 17 local governments and, if they occupy 16 local governments, it means that an entire state has been lost”.

    The National Coordinator of Buhari Friends Organisation, Saint Athanasius Okon, appealled to the leadership of the APC to look inward and give the party’s presidential ticket to the former  leader.

    He also appeal to other aspirants on the platform of the party to reconsider their position and adopt the retired  General. He added. “They should do justice to the man who has been fighting for us so that we should have a better society. They should give him a consensus ticket.

    “Other aspirants should give the ticket to the man they were using to consult. Let him carry the flag so that it will be easy for the younger ones to follow. He stands for equity. Allow merit to thrive over mediocrity. Plead, that we do more work by going to mobilise potential delegates.”

  • Ogun APC and burden of reconciliation

    Ogun APC and burden of reconciliation

    All is not well with the Ogun State  All Progressives Congress (APC). The Olusegun Osoba group has dumped the party for rival platform. Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN examines the implication of the group’s exit for the progressive bloc in the Gateway State.

    The fervent wish of party faithful that the warring parties in the Ogun State All Progressives Congress (APC) would reconcile their differences is fast becoming a mirage. The dumping of the APC by the three senators elected on the party’s platform for the Social Democratic Party (SDP) suggests that the attempt to reconcile the two groups have failed. The senators are: Akin Odunsi (Ogun West), Gbenga Kaka (Ogun East) and Gbenga Obadara (Ogun Central).

    The aggrieved group has defected to the Social Democratic Party (SDP).

    The Ogun State APC has been embroiled in crisis due to power struggle between Governor Ibikunle Amosun and Chief Olusegun Osoba. The emergence of two parallel executives from the parallel congresses held on April 26 was the climax of the frosty relationship between the two leaders. The recognition accorded the executives committee produced by the governor’s faction by the national headquarters of the party was the last straw that broke the back of the carmel.

    After the congress, some chieftains defected to the PDP. They included Mrs. Abimbola Lanre-Balogun, special adviser on environment, Mrs. Adijatu Adeleye-Oladapo and Mr Samson Onademuren, who are members of the House of Assembly, representing Ifo II and Ijebu Northeast constituencies respectively.

    The APC National Executive Committee made efforts to reconcile the warring factions, but nothing came out of it. A committee headed by former Vice President Atiku Abubakar prevailed on Osoba and his group to have a rethink on their plan to dump the party. The committee had proposed a 60:40 power-sharing formula. But, it was rejected by the former governor.

    The recent letter written by the deputy governor, Prince Segun Adesegun, to the governor has not helped matters. Analysts describe it as a spanner thrown into the reconciliation process. Adesegun  alleged injustice saying he had not been enjoying the rights and privileges of a deputy governor since the administration came on board in 2011. One of the allegations leveled by Adesegun against his principal was that he deliberately starved his office of funds and he also allocated old vehicles to him. He also alleged that his September and October feeding and out- of -pocket and sundry allowances were yet to be paid.

    The governor’s silence on the allegations did not help matters. It gave opposition parties something to rave about in their quest to unseat the governor. For instance, the Ogun State  Labour Party (LP) accused  Amosun of running a government of vendetta. The party said: “If the governor can treat his deputy with disdain and outright contempt like this, then it shows that an ordinary citizen of the state is of no value to him. We want to say categorically that he has no human face and the electorate should vote him out at the poll.”

    The PDP said: “While we empathise with the deputy governor on his ordeal, we pray that the Almighty God will touch the heart of Governor Amosun to give him (his deputy) what is due to him. We can only hope this intractable fight will not hamper governance and further impoverish the people of our dear state. We appeal to the good people of Ogun State to keep hope alive, knowing that there is light at the end of the tunnel. Their tears will soon be wiped by a government with a human face. That is the PDP promise and deliverable”.

    The supporters of Osoba had been holding meetings with the opposition parties, particularly the PDP. Indeed, chieftain of the APC, Alhaji Azzees Ajetunmobi, said the Osoba group has entered into an agreement with the PDP to defeat Amosun in next year’s  election. The sympathy displayed by the PDP and the LP on the deputy governor’s ordeal, he said, is a proof that they belong to the same political family.

    Ajetunmobi said: “It beats my imagination how such a simple and mundane matter could become a public matter. Well, we are in the era of stomach infrastructure. There is no one in this country who does not know that Amosun is the most frugal governor. When he came on board in 2011, he made it clear that he and his team had come to make sacrifice. He said things were so bad in the state that they could not afford to live big. So, we were not surprised when he slashed the salaries of political office holders.

    “The good thing is that the deputy governor has not accused Amosun of living in luxury while asking others to tighten their belts. He has not accused the governor of constitutional breaches. He has not complained of paying for his official residence because the governor’s aides pay some money monthly from their salaries for the government quarters in which they reside.”

    A lawyer, Mr. Kunle Ademoroti, described the deputy governor’s decision to go public, instead of treating it as an internal matter, as cheap blackmail. He said it was a deliberate act to portray the governor in bad light and curry undue public sympathy for himself and his group. Ademoroti said the allegations contained in the letter are too elementary for a holder of the office of the deputy governor to present.

    Ademoroti said the complaints are all about prerequisites of office. He said: “His salary was not affected. He is not complaining about the government policies or programmes as they affect the people of Ogun State. It sounds ridiculous that a deputy governor is blowing hot and cold because of the unpaid two months allowances. To me, the deputy governor is selfish.

    “If he can’t endure, he should quit. In fact, the governor had tolerated him for long. His loyalty to his benefactor is undermining the government. His commitment to the business of governance is questionable,” he said.

    The relationship between the governor and his deputy has turned into a cat and mouse affair. A source disclosed that, since the governor started his local government tour to assess the performance of the government programmes, the deputy governor accompanied him only on two occasions.

    The source said the deputy governor is pre-occupied with the mobilisation for his new party, holding senatorial meetings  in Ogun East and Ogun Central. The deputy governor is believed to be using the opportunity provided by the governor’s assessment tour to the 20 local governments to meet factional members on the umbrella of Matagbamole Group, as the Osoba-led faction is known, in different locations, telling the members of the group to remain steadfast and be committed to their objectives.

    On the prospect of the SDP as a platform, Obadara said there is no problem. “We have been mobilising and creating awareness among the people. The response has been very encouraging. We have our own structure. Our leader, Chief Osoba, had contested governorship election in the state twice and won. We have the people behind us. The party is an alternative to tyranny. The election is four months ahead. We are going places and the acceptability of the party is not in doubt.”

    But, Ajetunmobi disagreed with Obadara. He said the SDP, the platform the late Chief Abiola used for the presidential election in 1993, is quite different from the present SDP put in place by the Afenifere to undermine the political influence of the APC in the Southwest. “It is wishful thinking for any group to expect that the party’s name would the magic wand to win election in this dispensation,” he added.

    The lawyer recalled that the SDP fielded a candidate in the last governorship election in Osun State and failed woefully. “Why didn’t they win the election, if the old fame is capable of doing the magic? I think the Osoba group is not interested in winning election, but they are out to play the role of a spoiler. Their motto is: If you can’t get it, waste it.

    “They should learn from history. In 2003, the late Alhaji Ganiyu Dawodu regarded as the leader of the Alliance for Democracy (AD) in Lagos State had political differences with Asiwaju Bola Tinubu who was the state governor then. In order to stop the re-election of Tinubu in 2003, Dawodu had pulled out of the AD and contested the governorship election on the platform of Progressives Action Congress (PAC) to stop Tinubu. But, Dawodu lost his deposit in that election. That was how Dawodu lost relevance in Lagos politics.

    “The Osoba group has the right to contest on the platform of any party, including the SDP. But, they should not take people for granted. Name dropping has no role to play in this dispensation, your antecedent is what matters most,”  he added.

  • APC governorship aspirant seeks special status for Lagos

    APC governorship aspirant seeks special status for Lagos

    A chieftain of the All progressives Congress APC), Hon. Lanre Ope, has  said that Lagos State has been shortchanged by the Federal Government. adding that it deserves a special status.

    Ope, who spoke when he  declared his intention to contest next year’s governorship, said the state deserves recognition for catering for people from all over Nigeria and  its contribution to the economic prosperity of the country.

    He said facilities in the state have been overstretched because everyday people are coming to Lagos in search of greener pastures.

    The governorship aspirant said he would consolidate on the achievements of Governor Babatunde Fashola, if given the opportunity to govern the state.

    Ope, a former member of the Lagos State House of Assembly, addressed a mammoth crowd at the historic Eleganza Sports Complex, Epetedo, Lagos. The broom revolution resonated at the complex, as indigenes and residents of Epetedo community on Lagos Island trooped out  to support one of their own.

    The aspirant said the people of Lagos deserved a better, deal because they have been robbed of their joy and happiness over the years, particularly by the central government. He said his campaign tagline, #LeapLagos, has become a buzzword on the social media space because it simply talks about springing to a great height.

    “It’s about raising the consciousness among Lagosians that we can soar and leap in bounds in all facets. My campaign is premised on this as I want a Lagos that will continue to set the standards as with the present administration in the state, so that we can collectively take that giant leap,” he told the gathering.

    He said Lagos State is blessed because it was governed after the return to civil rule in 1999 by Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, who laid the foundation for its future development and later by Fashola, who built on the foundation of his predecessor.

    Ope is a seasoned politician and consensus builder, who has served in various public service roles at the federal and state levels, including being elected as one of Lagos State delegates to the 1994 National Constitutional Conference.

    While in the Lagos State House of Assembly, he sponsored some motions, including the Child Rights Bill and the bill that led to the establishment of the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA). During the period, he was appointed into various House committees, where he made valuable contributions to the development of Lagos State.

  • Boroffice gets nod for second term

    Boroffice gets nod for second term

    THE coast is now clear for the second term bid of Senator Ajayi Boroffice as he received the endorsement of the national leadership of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the leaders of the party in the Ondo North Senatorial District.

    National Chairman of the party, Chief John Odigie Oyegun, and the National Leader of the party, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, said the endorsement is well deserved, while describing Boroffice for his commitment to the party ever since he defected to the party from the Labour Party (LP).

    The leaders of the APC in Ondo North Senatorial District have also endorsed the lawmaker, who is the Asiwaju of Akokoland, for providing the needed support at the teething stage of the party.

    “Senator Boroffice’s relentless efforts at seeing that the benefits of democracy gets to the very poor is unparalleled; you can see this in his diverse life-enriching schemes and other commitments to the senatorial district,” says Akinwunmi Adedotun, a beneficiary of the senator’s many empowerment programs.

     

  • Banire, Bamidele and  APC’s Young Turks

    Banire, Bamidele and APC’s Young Turks

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has an uphill, but not insurmountable, task of keeping its states safe from predators and winning the 2015 presidential election. The party probably recognises the enormity of the task ahead, and may be planning an onslaught against it. But beyond recognising the obstacles, it will have to devise virtuoso ways of tackling the challenges that seem set to doom its efforts. As indicated in this place last week, some APC states are in turmoil, destabilised by internal dissension and plagued by powerful external enemies and neighbours. To retain its hold on its states, sustain unity within its ranks, and expand its suzerainty over hostile states and Aso Villa, the party will have to do almost the impossible, including wishing for a miracle, and looking for means of calming the tempest triggered by some of its radical and younger elements. Some of these younger elements camouflage self-promotion in altruistic, ideological and philosophical colours. And a few others have axes to grind with their party leaders, state and national. But even if the quarrels cannot be resolved outrightly, the overall success of the party in 2015 will depend somewhat on how successfully party leaders manage the rage within.

    A few months before the June governorship poll in Ekiti, Opeyemi Bamidele (ACN/Labour, Ado-Ekiti/ Irepodun-Ifelodun), publicised his war with the APC and looked on imperturbably as the party drowned in the wake that followed the storm he unleashed. His grouse, analysts suggested, was not just the senatorial ticket that was coaxed from him, a loss some said he had reconciled himself to, but the rather uncomplimentary and disrespectful way he believed he was ostracised from the decision-making organ of the party and state government. He and his supporters believed party leaders and government officials played politics of exclusion. What was intriguing about the misunderstanding in pre-election Ekiti was the implacability of the combatants: Dr Fayemi  gave no quarter; and Hon Bamidele, anticipating APC would come a cropper, eventually defected to the Labour Party.

    Hon Bamidele signposted the coming of the Young Turks in the APC, a group of irreverent, sometimes irascible, but iconoclastic politicians unafraid of rocking the party’s boat or provoking its mercurial leaders. While the embers of the revolt triggered by Hon Bamidele was yet to die, Muiz Banire, the National Legal Adviser of the APC and many times commissioner in the Lagos government of former governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Governor Babatunde Fashola, stirred up a hornet’s nest, pockmarking the Lagos skyline with incendiary comments on his party leaders and, in particular, Asiwaju Tinubu. Where Hon Bamidele, the activist, had contrastingly restrained himself from dragging Asiwaju Tinubu into the Ekiti imbroglio, not even in snide remarks and insinuations, Dr Banire has shown less ruefulness, though as a legal practitioner he was expected to possess more conservative and diplomatic skills in polemics and discourse.

    It should not matter to a party loyalist whether a candidate wins on his own merit or is helped by his party’s reputation and organisation, but Dr Banire, perhaps pursuing covert agenda against his party, surprisingly suggested that Governor Rauf Aregbesola won the August governorship election in Osun in spite of the APC. The August 9 win must be delinked from the party, he asserted. Why a party leader should gloat that his party had no significant input in helping candidate Aregbesola to win is hard to understand. It is a needless argument to make. But Dr Banire is a Young Turk, and from his imprecates against his leaders and sweeping dismissal of their relevance and proclivities, some of whom he deprecatingly described as a cabal, he creates the impression of a tough politician, one who can call his soul his own. Though his legal and political arguments fail to persuade completely, and his lexis a little rough-hewn in some aspects, he cuts the image of an intellectual deserving of respect.

    The APC needs internal opposition in order to enable it hammer out better platforms and establish a solid, robust and cohesive party. The likes of Hon Bamidele and Dr Banire are in my opinion invaluable to the APC or any other party for that matter. Hon Bamidele cannot flourish in a somnolent party like Labour, and his organisational skills, not to say his ambition, would be wasted or diminished. And in the PDP, which his inexplicable and indescribable support for Governor Ayo Fayose of Ekiti makes him gravitate towards, his radical posture would both be repressed and absolutely misapplied. Dr Banire, on the other hand, is the perfect proponent of one eating his cake and having it. His intrepidity may not seem potent enough to lure him into defection, though I could be second-guessing him wrongly, and he seems precisely the sort of man to stay, fight and profit in his party, the APC. He even spent the better part of his stay in the party — a party he now casually lampoons — helped on every step of the way by mentors, some of them mentors of his own choosing. But now he is repudiating the methods by which he himself rose into prominence and by which he came to some comfort. His iconoclasm, sans his bad temper, obduracy and uncivil language, is not misplaced in a party desirous of sustaining its relevance and presenting itself as a change agent.

    However, just like Hon Bamidele proved by his consequential defection from the APC to LP, Dr Banire’s beloved party can ill afford the ossification many party apparatchiks seem to be comfortable with, but which he and his fellow iconoclast have challenged and denounced. They want imposition to end, though they seemed to have profited from variants of its application before now, and are quite unable to appreciate and interpret its complex and adaptable nature and multiple nuances. While their ambition to end imposition and other undemocratic practices within their party is not misplaced, assuming their diagnoses are right, their unpolished style of fighting good causes within their party leaves much to be desired. Dr Banire, from his recent lecture and interviews, is predicting doom for his party if it failed to conduct itself in a manner he believes is unimpeachable. He leaves no room for any error on his part. In fact, he has unguardedly threatened worse consequences for even his party leaders, sparing no one.

    There will be many more Young Turks like Hon Bamidele and Dr Banire, a few of them outrightly impertinent. The APC must learn how to deal with them and manage disaffection within the party. The party must also accept that its leaders are not infallible and can indeed be criticised or castigated by younger and radical elements in the party. But it is also imperative to understand that while they fought legitimately, Hon Bamidele and Dr Banire unfortunately fought blindly and unwisely.  The logic behind their grievances may be right, but the methods of their fight, not to talk of the intended and unintended consequences of their battles, expose them as short on character and lacking in conceptual depth of what their party represents and envisions.

    Judging from the actions and arguments of the two dissenters and perhaps other Young Turks within the party, I am afraid that even in the APC, whether among the leaders or followers, few really understand the visionary and aesthetic import of the party’s foundation and legacy. Many see the party as a vehicle for winning elections and self-promotion, which attributes easily become ends in themselves. But if my reading of the party is right, especially given its lofty promotion of Southwest integration when the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) held the reins, I think the party is an idea grander, loftier, and more sublime than its current methods, organisation and policies exhibit or match. Consumed by their sense of self-importance and distracted by their loathing for certain party practices that seemed targeted against their interests, neither Hon Bamidele nor Dr Banire apparently possesses the rich understanding of what the party is or stands for — an identity far greater and nobler than what is set down in the party’s constitution and manifesto. Had they understood this fact, both gentlemen would have fought differently, with reverence for the party’s grand ideas and great future, and with cultured civility towards party leaders who, though their methods may be shaky and even contradictory, best approximate the party’s spiritual essence.

    Many of the causes fought for by Hon Bamidele and Dr Banire are sensible. Their resolve and courage should be admired and channeled, for their party needs men like them to midwife a greater, bigger, stronger and more relevant political organisation. However,  their methods are unusually strident, and their manners suspiciously discordant, if not entirely objectionable. But party leaders, at least the few who can see beyond today and the chaotic manifestation of what the party represents, must find ways to reconcile the old and the new generation, and forge all of them into an exceeding strong army committed to truly transforming and renewing Nigeria. The party leaders’ vision must make them endure insults, be indifferent to mentee insolence, and enable them handle with perfect equanimity and fortitude the fractious tendency so common among the young and footloose radicals in the party, whether it be Hon Bamidele or Dr Banire, or any other Young Turk flushed with both the anger and unpredictable messianism that so often hobbles the young.

  • ‘APC will embrace defectors’

    ‘APC will embrace defectors’

    ALL Progressives Congress (APC) aspirant for the House of Representatives in Ondo State, Hon. Lucky Ayedatiwa has assured that politicians who recently defected to the party would not hijack it from the existing members.

    Ayedatiwa who is gunning for the Ilaje/Ese-Odo constituency seat spoke while submitting his nomination form at the party secretariat in Akure yesterday. He said the party has given open arms to defectors who are ready to abide with its rules and regulations.

    It would be recalled that since the defection of Governor Olusegun Mimiko from Labour Party (LP) to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), two State House of Assembly members, a member of the House of Representatives and prominent politicians in the state have decamped to the APC.

    He stated that what makes the APC different from other parties is that the party always gives defectors the opportunity to fulfill their political ambition. His words: “Looking at the federation at large, we have two parties; PDP and APC. We all know that PDP has been in government for so many years and the people are tired. APC is an option for the people so we are not surprised that we are seeing a lot of people decamping to the party.

    “There is nothing to worry about because we have opened our arms to receive everybody. Politics is a game of numbers, the higher the number of people that are coming, the better for us. “We are not afraid of the people coming into the party and are convinced that they can’t hijack the party. They are just coming to join forces with us in the party. What we will do is to provide the enabling environment and give equal opportunity to everybody.”

    He expressed optimism that the party would enjoy massive vote from the electorate in the state due to the failure of the present government and the unending crisis rocking PDP.

  • APC rattled by Jonathan’s declaration, says PDP

    APC rattled by Jonathan’s declaration, says PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party has said that Tuesday’s declaration by President Goodluck Jonathan rattled the All Progressives Congress (APC), with the “overwhelming support” shown by Nigerians.

    A statement yesterday by PDP’s National Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh, said instead of accepting the successes already acknowledged by Nigerians, APC leaders went into shadowboxing and mischievous propaganda in a failed attempt to score a cheap political point.

    The ruling party said such a lurid epithet on the APC defied the logic of an alternative while exposing it as hypocritical and opportunistic. It called for objectivity and forthrightness from the political class, especially the opposition as the campaigns for the 2015 general elections begin in earnest.

    It berated the APC for always seeking to gain political capital from the insecurity challenges in the nation, adding that Nigerians, by their massive support on Tuesday, showed that they know the truth and are solidly behind the President.

    The statement said notwithstanding that he defied the expectations of the terrorists and their sponsors to go ahead with the declaration a day after the Potiskum bombing, the President and the PDP stand by the mourning families as his disposition, speech and mobilising of over 100,000 Nigerians in prayers at the event clearly showed.

    It added that for the APC to cry wolf over this declaration, which was scheduled almost a month before the bombing, meant the opposition party was either lacking in institutional memory or suffering from a deliberate amnesia.

    The statement continued: “Nigerians may recall that on the 20th of May, 2014, there was a twin bomb blasts in the city of Jos, killing 118 people and wounding at least 56 others. However, this tragedy on the nation did not restrain the APC from holding its so called “Mega Rally” in Ekiti the very next day, May 21 in promotion of the gubernatorial campaigns of the then Governor Kayode Fayemi. The entire top hierarchy of the APC, its national leaders, governors and the Interim National Executive were in attendance. At the rally, the APC scarcely observed a minute silence in honour of fellow Nigerians mowed down in cold blood before charging the atmosphere with usual insults and loathing acts of insensitivity, speaker after speaker.

    “It will be recalled also that while Nigerians and the International Community applauded President Jonathan for proscribing the terrorist sect, Boko Haram, the APC released a statement on the 10th of June 2013, alleging that such an act was unconstitutional. This is the APC pretending away from the heinous crimes of the same terrorist organisation it once sought protection for.

    “On the other hand, it is on record that President Jonathan and the PDP cancelled all scheduled activities on June 3, 2012 when the Dana Air crashed and declared a week national mourning. Unfortunately, the APC desecrated this as all its leaders converged on Kano the same week to celebrate a turbanning event, meaning that 163 souls that perished as a result of that crash were not important to the party.

    “All over the world, it is known that terrorists plan their evil activities to manipulate political events and policies and that the more you allow them space, the more dastardly and frequent they turn. If terrorists must be denied the publicity they crave so much for, it becomes the responsibility of all patriots in moments like this to work hard to prevent them from hijacking events or taking control of our destiny. Clearly, the APC lacks the political capacity to understand this matter of statecraft.”