Tag: APC

  • Edo lawmakers unfold ambition for House of Reps, Senate

    No fewer than 24 members of the Edo State House of Assembly have unfolded their ambition to vie for  the House of Representatives and the Senate. Correspondent OSAGIE OTABOR takes a look at their partisan moves.  

    Politics is in the air in Edo State. Although the governorship election will not hold next year, politicians are warming up for the parliamentary elections.

    In the House of Assembly, no fewer than 15 legislators are warming up for the House of Representatives and the Senate. Fifteen of them are from the ruling the All Progressive Congress (APC) and nine are from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Of the nine PDP lawmakers, six are under suspension.  The seat of Hon. Abdulrazaq Momoh, who represents Estako West 11 Constituency, was declared vacant. The suspended lawmakers, sources said, may not return to lthe House before the next year’s elections.

    The lawmakers, who are eyeing the National Assembly, are the Speaker, Hon. Uyi Igbe (Oredo West), Hon. Patrick Aisowieren (Orhionmwon North), Hon. Johnson Oghuma (Estako Central), Hon. Jude Ise-Idehen (Ikpoba-Okha), Hon. Philip Shaibu (Estako West), Hon. Paul Ohonbamu (Egor), and Hon. Patrick Osayimwen(Oredo East).

    In the National Assembly, lawmakers who want to move to the Senate  are Hon. Jim Adun (Ikpoba-Okha/Egor), Hon. Samson Osagie (Orhiomwon/Uhunmwode) and Abubarkar Momoh (Estako).

    Igbe and Hon. Patrick Osayimwen are competing for the House of Representatives ticket in Oredo Constituency.  The incumbent legislator is Hon Razaq Bello-Osagie, who succeeded Hon. Patrick Obahiagbon in 2011. Bello-Osagie has alread begun his re-election campaigns.

    Party sources disclosed that the party leadership is favourably disposed to the ambition of the Spraker. During the House of Assembly crisis, he di not betray the APC. He was a pillar of support for the governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole. “Igbe may not want a return to the House of Assembly to be an ordinary member because the next Speaker would be picked from either Edo Central or Edo North because the governor would emerge from Edo South”, said a source.

    Osayimwen, who recently defected to the PDP, will slug it out with other aspirants, including  Victor Enoghama, the Esama of Benin, Chief Gabriel Igbinedion’s in-law. A PDP source said that Enoghama has been penciled down for the ticket because the Esama, who is a party financier, is his godfather.

    However, Bello-Osagie is a formidable contender. Many constituents said that it may be difficult to edge him out or defeat him at the primaries and general elections, owing to his pedigree, and achievements as a legislator.

    Aisowieren is scheming to displace Hon. Samson Osagie in the House of Representative. He was a member of the House of Assembly for eight years. When his colleagues defected to the PDP, he rejected the overtures from the PDP to defect. He is the only APC aspirant who has indicated interest in his constituency.

    In Estako Federal Constituency, the battle is between Hon. Johnson Oghuma and Hon. Philip Shaibu, the Majority Leader. Shaibu is perceived as the defacto speaker. In fact, many believe that he is the anointed candidate. But, Johnson’s supporters have been campaigning with vigour. Their message is that no politician from Edo Central where he hails from has occupied the seat. Those who had represented the constituency include  Hon. Abubarkar Momoh and Hon. Abbas Braimah. They hail from Estako East and Estako West respectively.

    Hon. Jude Ise-Idehen defected to the PDP because his hopes of getting  Ikpoba-Okha/Egor ticket was slim.  Partly leaders were not ready to endorse him. Other aspirants are  Hon. Osazuwa Ehiorobo and Hon. Paul Ohonbamu. During the recent crisis, PDP leaders alleged that APC lawmakers who defected were not promised automatic tickets.

    The posters and banners of Jim Adun and Samson Osagie draw attention to their senatorial ambition in Edo South, especially Benin City. Both are in the House of Representatives. Osagie has spent 16 years in the parliament; eight years in the House of Assembly and another eight years in the House of Representatives. But, the question is: can they defeat Hon. Patrick Obahiagbon at the primaries?

    Abubarkar Momoh defected to the PDP after his senatorial ambition in the APC was thwarted by Senator Domingo Obende and Prof. Julius Ihonvbere. At the APC congress, Momoh won in only two wards. In the PDP, he will face  Pascal Ugbome and Bobby Ikazaboh at the primaries.

  • Support for Buhari’s candidacy

    A group, the Buhari Youth Organisation (BYO), Ondo State Chapter, has expressed support for the candidacy of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, decrying what it termed as the nation’s “precarious situation,” which has put the masses in penury.

    BYO, at a meeting of its 18 local government coordinators in Akure, noted with dismay that those who worked against the enthronement of democracy and good governance had hijacked the hard-earned struggle of patriots.

    A communiqué by the group’s Coordinator, Fisayo Falarungbon, decried high level of corruption by those scheming to launch themselves into political offices.

    The group said Nigeria did not need to carry out weapons to achieve peaceful revolution as manifested in the August 9 governorship election in Osun State won by Governor Rauf Aregbesola.

    It said: “That is what bloodless revolution is all about and we have inspiration, commitment and integrity of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari and other leaders in the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    “The situation on ground goes beyond parochial sentiment; it is an issue that should catch the fancy of all patriots.”

    BYO said Buhari’s achievements in public office speak volume of discipline and principle as a leader, who did not place personal aggrandisement over national well being.

    It hoped that APC would win with Buhari’s emergence as its presidential candidate , noting that he has the capacity and electoral value to win the election in 2015 and give Nigeria a well-defined leadership.

  • Anambra Assembly approves N13.8b Supplementary Budget

    The Anambra State House of Assembly passed a supplementary budget of N13.8 billion yesterday.

    The government said it was meant to boost services across the state.

    The motion to pass the supplementary budget was moved by the Chairman of the Committee on Finance and Appropriation, Ms Nikky Ugochukwu (Orumba South) on August 29.

    She said the supplementary budget became necessary because the Executive needed to ensure that its programmes are not interrupted.

    Ugochukwu urged her colleagues to approve the budget as part of their responsibility to the people.

    Minority Leader Tony One Week Muonagor (APC, Idemili North) said there was need for the supplementary budget.

    According to him, it would enable the government to provide basic facilities the people needed urgently.

    Muonagor noted that any approval from the chambers to improve the lives of the people should not be politicised.

    Dr Emeka Anabonam (APC, Onitsha South 1), said the supplementary budget was timely because there were several things the state needed to do with the money.

  • Mogalu: APC ‘ll not impose candidates

    Mogalu: APC ‘ll not impose candidates

    Former National Secretary of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) Chief George Moghalu is the National Auditor of the All Progressives Congress (APC). In this interview, he speaks about the party’s preparations for next year’s elections. TONY AKOWE met him in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). 

    Could you shed light on the proposed composition of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Board of Trustees (BoT)?

    The formation of the BOT is a constitutional matter.  It is the responsibility of the BOT to choose its chairman, its secretary and its leadership. It is not for the party to do, but for members of the BOT to decide who will lead them. It is their internal affair and they have to vote among themselves to chose their leaders. We cannot influence them from outside or sit in the national secretariat and say that the Chairman must come from this place or that place. If you have an opinion, you can canvass it through the national chairman who is also a member of the BOT. It is not all of us in the NWC that are members of the BOT because there are people who are statutorily members of the BOT as provided for by our constitution. Issues of the BOT is strictly the affairs of the BOT.

     What is the position of the party on the zoning of elective positions?

    One thing I know for certain, which I can tell you, is that we are going to provide the enabling environment for everybody to express him or herself. As a party, we have agreed that there will not be any imposition. We want a situation where the best candidate will emerge. But when you are looking at zoning, you must not also lose sight of the fact that in our constitution, there is provision for federal character, there is provision for balance and for you to achieve this, you must out of political exigency be compelled to bring in zoning. So, the essence of it is that one thing we will do ,which I can tell you we will do is that the leadership of the party believes in fairness, equity and justice. We are going to create an enabling environment for anybody who desires to aspire to any office to go ahead, right from the counsellorship up to the president. We are not going to impose anybody because we want the best to emerge. We want the best for the country. We want whatever we do, let the people be the reason. Let the Nigerian people count first before anything. That is certainly going to guide us.

    What is your reaction to the defection of APC chieftains to the PDP?

    One thing about an individual politician is principally the consequence of the person’s feeling of what he want and what he intends to achieve. What you cannot do about people is that you cannot question their ambition or desire because politics is something that has to do with an individual and its all about expectations, ambition and what you want to achieve at the end of the day. So, I wouldn’t be surprise when we have issues that have to do with movement, because as some people are leaving the APC, others are moving into the APC. Some are also going to other parties, it has to do with the individual and how he or she expects to achieve his personal ambition. Now coming to the issue of Malam Nuhu Ribadu; yes Ribadu is a friend and was a leader in our party. When he decided to go over to the PDP, he made his case very clear. He talked about his ambition, he talked about ones assessment of  himself and what he intends to achieve at the end of the day. So, his movement, I want to believe is a consequence of his desire to contest the election on the platform of PDP and so, you can’t stop him. I don’t think there is any other reason.  From what I can read and understand, I believe that his decision is a consequence of his ambition which he is entitled to. For somebody like Chief Tom Ikimi, I feel sad no doubt about it having known him for quite a while and the fact that he played a very key role in the course of the merger of APC. He was like the coordinating chairman of the chairmen of the three parties  that came together to form APC and all the meetings we had about the formation were incidentally held in his house. So for me, it is a sad commentary. However, we will still not lose sight of the fact that he has his decisions to make. He is the person involved and knows his expectations and what he considers as his challenges. He knows where he feels injured. But if I had the privilege of being consulted by him, I would have advised that he should be a little patient and see how things unfold because some of us believe that whatever maybe the disagreement, there will still be room for reconciliation

    What is the implication of the defection for the party?

    I don’t think so. Why some of us feel sad that you lose people you have already built some level of affinity with, some other people are also coming in. its about individuals, its about ambition,  its about expectation. If you are not realizing your ambition, if you are not getting what you expect, that is enough reason for you to take a decision as to where, what to move at, but I don’t think there’s going to be any advance, I don’t agree with you.

    People are saying that there is no difference between the pDP and the APC. What is your position on the agitation for ideological politics?

    There is quite a word of difference between the PDP and APC. The APC is a progressive party and we look at progressivism from the standpoint of Nigerians. But, I will agree with you that probably, I don’t know whether it’s a case of im,maturity of our democratic process. But it’s a gradual process and I we are going to get to the point where the dividing line will be so clear that you can easily identify who is who and who is where at any given time. If you take our states for example, the states under the APC government, you will see a visible clear difference. Our approach to the issue of corruption, approach to the issue of poverty alleviation, approach to issue of education and health is entirely different from what we have in the system. And that will tell that there is a world of difference between us and them. You must also understand why we in this situation. One, because of the weakness of the private sector, government appears to be the only business. We are at the point where there is not much of party discipline because this anomaly of  the executive being the leader of the party. I have never subscribed to it because once the party structure is weak, people who selected this positions now see the party as vehicles for the actualization of their political power. But with the proposals being made for some levels of legislation that will curtail such movements, I think a little bit of discipline will come into it.

    How did your party resolve its post-convention crisis?

    I don’t think there is much. One thing you must understand is that we are talking about human being; we are talking about people’s ambition; we are talking about people’s expectations. So, there is no way you will finish it and not expect that some persons will be injured or some people may not actualize or get what they want at the end of the day. Then, there is the need for you to consult and talk to such people  and make sure everybody is carried along. So, the reactions after every congress or every convention is expected. But our position is that there must be justice in every given situation, because once there is no justice, the tendency for you to make peace is not there. Once there is justice, the route to making peace becomes wider and easier. When somebody is convinced through empirical evidence that this route you are following is not right, the tendency is there for the person to change route.  But when the person has not seen a reason for him or her to change route, it is always very difficult. So I agree with you that the few issues that came up where expected because we are dealing with human beings. But most of them have been resolved

    Is there plan by the APC to enlarge its coast, ahead of next year’s polls?

    Winning people to the party is a continuous process and we don’t intend to stop and we want you to join us too. So, anything we would do to get you to our side will be done. The important thing is that we have created a mega political platform that we have made available to Nigerians to express themselves. We have brought something that is different from the past, something that has never happened before. You know there have never been a successful merger in the history of Nigerian politics, talkless of a situation where parties with government at various levels collapsed their identities to come together. It is all because of the love for this nation and the desire that Nigeria has come to a point in our history where it is only the best that is good enough. We must create the enabling environment for the people to drive in and not until we do that, we have a problem and that is what makes the APC different from the other parties. First and foremost, you must have a pattern that others can build on by the time we finish our tenure.

    Does the likelihood exist that the APC presidential candidate can come from the Southeast?

    Yes. The possibility is there. There is no street in the Southeast that cannot generate a federal cabinet. I want to be challenged. Every street in the Southeast can generate a complete federal cabinet. We have presidential materials and so, you cannot shut out

  • Kwankwaso to join presidential race

    Kwankwaso to join presidential race

    Kano State Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso may soon declare his intention to contest the 2015 presidential election on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Kwankwaso is to declare his intention before month end.

    A source at the Government House said the governor went on a nation-wide tour and consulted with stakeholders.

    Posters of the governor have been pasted at strategic locations in some states .

    Some political observers said Kwankwaso must be ready to slug it out with General Muhammadu Buhari for the APC’s presidential ticket at the primary election scheduled to hold soon.

  • Oyo council chief accuses PDP aspirant of plotting crisis

    •It’s not true, says politician

    THE Caretaker Committee Chairman of Ibadan South West Local Government, Oyo State, Alhaji Taoreed Adeleke,has accused a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship aspirant, Seyin Makinde, of plotting to cause chaos.

    He alleged that the aspirant was inciting traders at Aleshinloye Market against the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led state government.

    Makinde was also accused of sponsoring false and malicious statement in the media, to disparage the Senator Abiola Ajimobi-led administration over the fire that gutted a section of the market.

    About 500 shops were said to have been affected and goods worth over N100 million lost in the inferno.

    Adeleke noted that the actions of Makinde were aimed at inciting the people.

    He said a media report that he led a team of suspected hoodlums to the market to destroy a borehole dug by Makinde was “a blatant lie.”

    The council chief, who spoke with reporters in his office yesterday on the borehole saga, said the policemen in the market stopped the contractors from digging the borehole after he had gone there to lodge a complaint.

    “We are not going to allow it because we are peace lovers and the people are enjoying the peaceful atmosphere in the state since the government of Ajimobi came into power”.

    The Chairman of the traders Association, Alhaji Abudulfatai Amubikan, its Youth Leader, Alhaji Basiru Aikore and the Chairman of the Fancy Section of the market, Mr. Ramon Olabamiji, said they were not informed by the PDP aspirant of his intention to donate a borehole.

    Makinde denied the allegation, saying that the council chief only misconstrued his philanthropy to the traders who needed assistance.

    A media aide to the PDP aspirant, Alhaji Afeez Akeem, said what Makinde did was in fulfillment of his promise to the traders when he visited them after the fire.

  • APC condemns Onyebuchi’s redeployment

    •PDP: Opposition’s criticism hasty

    The Enugu State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has urged Governor Sullivan Chime to stop his impunity against perceived foes.

    The party said this was evident in the redeployment of his former deputy, Sunday Onyebuchi, who left service as Permanent Secretary, now as a Deputy Director in the Civil Service.

    The former deputy governor was, on Monday, redeployed to the civil service as an Assistant Chief Administration Officer. Onyebuchi, in 2006, was promoted to the  Permanent Secretary by former Governor Chimaroke Nnamani.

    In a statement yesterday in Enugu, APC Southeast spokesman Osita Okechukwu said the civil service should not accommodate such a theatre of the absurd “where Chime, who owns a poultry farm with Chief Onyebuchi in the Government House and is equally culpable, will now wash his hands like Pontius Pilate”.

    He added: “Otherwise, the day before Governor Chime railroaded Enugu State House of Assembly, like a rubber-stamp, to impeach former Deputy Governor Sunday Onyebuchi on flimsy allegations and yesterday (Monday) he redeployed the same man to the civil service as a Deputy Director. What a huge joke!

    “We had thought, as a lawyer and former Attorney-General of Enugu State, that Governor Chime is knowledgeable enough to appreciate its trite law that impeachment in other words is conviction. Therefore, he cannot approbate and probate, hence arrogating himself the powers to clear Chief Onyebuchi from the undue conviction by this caricature appointment.

    “May we remind Governor Chime, lest he forgot, that the simple and honest path is for him to swallow his pride and apologise to Chief Onyebuchi, his co-beneficiary ex-governor, Dr Chimaroke Nnamani’s benevolence, who hand-picked both of them and imposed them on the people of Enugu State.

    “Governor Chime should stop the culture of impunity with Enugu State politics in his new road to dictatorship, especially on the eve of the crucial 2015 general elections.”

    But the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) described APC’s reaction to Onyebuchi’s redeployment as “typically and characteristically uninformed and full of mischief”.

    In a statement by its Secretary Dr. Okey Eze, the PDP said APC appeared not to know the difference between “appointment” and “redeployment”.

    It said: “In its usual haste to misinform the people, the party chose to forget or was ignorant of the fact that Mr Onyebuchi was a civil servant before his appointment to political offices and subsequent election as deputy governor.

    “If it (APC) had done its homework well, it would have known that Mr Onyebuchi never formally resigned from the civil service and that his appointment was not terminated while he occupied political offices. Having been relieved of his political office, is it not proper that he should return to his original service?

    “His redeployment should actually be seen as a great act of magnanimity by the state government.

    “It is strange that the party (APC) acted in such an indecent haste that it could not even wait to hear the views of Mr Onyebuchi on his redeployment before dabbling into it.”

  • APC screens Adamawa aspirants

    APC screens Adamawa aspirants

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday commenced the screening of its nine governorship aspirants for .

    The chairman of the Screening Committee, Mr. Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN), told reporters that the process was hitch-free.

    Akeredolu said the committee had interacted with three aspirants, Senator Ahmad Barata, Dr. Dahiru Bobbo and Senator Bindow Umaru Jibrilla.

    Barata who appeared first before the committee, refused to speak to the reporters. He headed straight for his car

    Bobbo, a close associate of Ex-Vice President Atiku Abubakar described the screening as interactive and lively.

     

  • Dangerous signal from Northwest?

    Dangerous signal from Northwest?

    The Northwest Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leaders have caught the bug of second term endorsement for second term. Although Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) stakeholders have endorsed President Goodluck Jonathan in the South, the lack of consensus in the most populous zone is a setback for the campaigns for his re-election by the Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) and other pro-Jonathan groups.

    Since last year, Northwest PDP has not fully cooperated with its national leadership over the President’s agenda. To whip the zonal leaders into line, the national leadership applied the big stick. But, it appeared the party shot its arrow in a wrong direction. Not only was the zone balkanised, following the defection of two governors —Alhaji Aliyu Wamakko of Sokoto State and Alhaji Musa Kwakwanso of Kano State — to the All progressives Congress (APC), those who have stayed on in the party still have an axe to grind with the PDP National Leader.

    One of them is Jigawa State Governor Sule Lamido, who is eyeing the Presidency. At a news conference in Dutse on the  PDP zonal meeting. Jigawa State Deputy Governor, Ahmad Mahamud, who obviously spoke Lamido’s mind, said the region had not agreed on Dr. Jonathan’s ambition.

    The dissension has reflected the lack of total reconciliation and ineffective resolution of the PDP crisis. It has implications for the unity of the party and its chances in next year’s election.  Analysts have raised some posers: Can the PDP joke with the Northwest? Can it damn the most populous region?

    The Northwest is the cradle of the formidable power brokers in the polity. If the zone takes an exception to this presidential agenda, conventional wisdom dictates the retracing of steps or the application of tact, if an electoral tragedy of monumental proportion is to be averted by the PDP.

    From Sokoto, the seat of the Caliphate, through Kano to Kaduna, the acclaimed political capital of the North, the Northwest is a vibrant zone. It is a pre-eminent geo-political zone occupying a strategic place in the country’s political history. In the hey day of the famed Kaduna Mafia, the cult of leaders and pride of the one-time monolithic North, the impetus came from the Northwest axis, which coordinated the real or imaginary battle for national dominance. Four zones-Northcentral, Northeast, Southwest and Southsouth-have six states each. The Southeast has five. But the Northwest has seven. Politically, this is an added advantage because, in the National Assembly, the zone has the largest number of lawmakers, and ultimately, the highest number of appointees in other critical areas.

    The Northwest has produced three military Heads of State – Gen. Muritala Mohammed (Kano) –  Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (Katsina) and Gen. Sani Abacha (Kano). The fourth, Gen. Yakubu Gowon from Plateau State, is more of a Kaduna man. The first civilian President, Alhaji Shehu Shagari, hails from Sokoto State.

    Politicians from the Northwest zone are no-pushovers. The voting population is sophisticated. It is huge. Therefore, it can sway the outcome of any election. It is natural that, at every periodic election, PDP presidential aspirants often target the zone because they perceive it as a critical factor.

    The analysis of the voters’ list from the zone also underscores its vibrancy, electoral asset and indispensability. The zone will always be in the national reckoning.  In the last voter registration, next to Lagos (6.2 million) were Kano (5.10), Kaduna (3.50) and Katsina (2.9). The figures speak volumes about the potency and electoral strength of the leading zone. This may continue to make it an electorally sought-after zone in any national contest.

    The onus is on the PDP to manage the “Lamido challenge”. Should the Jigawa governor be compelled to seek an allegiance with his colleagues in the APC, the chance of the PDP at the poll will further reduce. If the Northwest’s objection is not properly managed, the President will sweat at the general election, even if he escapes the hammer in the primaries.

  • APC seeks apology from PDP on alleged links with APGA

    APC seeks apology from PDP on alleged links with APGA

    The Anambra State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has given the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) seven days to retract its statement that it was planning to team up with the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

    APCF said if the PDP failed to make a retraction, it (APC) would take a legal action against the party.

    APC also said it never held any clandestine meetings with APGA as being peddled by the PDP.

    The party’s reaction followed a publication by Anambra State PDP Chairman Ken Emeakayi in some dallies that APGA had been romancing APC.

    In a statement yesterday in Awka, the state capital, by its state Publicity Secretary Okelo Madukaife, APC said it was not interested in whatever was between the PDP and APGA.

    The statement reads: “The name of our great party, the APC, cannot, and must not be drawn into the romance between the PDP and its trading outlet in the Southeast – the APGA.

    “APC will never disappoint the people of Anambra State by wining and dining with a clueless political party making false claims about representing our people, nor with those who, having lost face with the electorate, commit themselves to rigging elections in the name of other parties in Anambra and Ondo states to stay relevant.

    “It is also necessary to strongly say that APC will not be the cannon fodder for diverting the attention of the National Executive Committee (NEC) of the PDP from serious issues of anti-party, which have gone on in Anambra State continuously for close to two years.

    “In the circumstance, APC has no option but to request the PDP in Anambra State to withdraw the aspect of that publication that unwarrantedly libels our party and apologise for their excesses, within seven days, while returning to the rule of law, particularly as it affects observing electoral rules.

    “It is to be noted that our great party shall not hesitate to pursue any of the alternative causes of action open to it within the law, in reaction to the publication immediately or upon the expiration of the given time.”