Tag: APC’s victory

  • Ogun pensioners to work for APC’s victory

    •Union decries neglect by Amosun govt

    Thousands of pensioners in Ogun State have said despite their neglect by Governor Ibikunle Amosun, they will still mobilise their members and families for the victory of the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the March 9 governorship election.

    The senior citizens alleged that the Amosun administration had not paid their gratuities since 2013 while the payment of the pensions and entitlements had also remained largely irregular.

    But they declared their commitment to work for the triumph of APC and its governorship candidate, Prince Dapo Abiodun, at the poll.

    The pensioners, who spoke under the aegis of the state chapter of the Nigeria Union of Pensioners (NUP), expressed their resolve when they hosted Abiodun at their monthly general meeting at the union’s secretariat in Abeokuta, the state capital.

    The APC governorship hopeful was accompanied to by former Governor Olusegun Osoba.

    The State NUP Chairman Kessington Oduwole said he knew Abiodun from childhood and that his father, a pensioner, was also well known to them.

    Oduwole expressed the confidence that the APC candidate would address their demands, adding: “Dapo Abiodun is someone we have known from childhood. His parents are also pensioners and are well known to us. I want to assure you that all our wants and needs will be met when he becomes the governor.

    Read also: Igbo digging its political grave, says Oye

    “I hereby implore you all to rally round him and mobilise for him during the poll. I am promising you that he will not let us down. By the special grace of God, we shall accompany him to Oke Mosan on May 29 for his swearing-in as the governor.”

    The union’s Secretary Bola Lawal said the failure of the Amosun administration to pay their gratuities since 2013, irregular payment of pensions and entitlements, lack of input in the current government and many more were among the challenges facing them.

    He accused the governor of making promises to pensioners without fulfilling them.

    Osoba expressed shock that the pensioners could be owed for so many months but assured them that he had brought to them a man God would use to bring succour to them.

    He assured them that his candidate would run a responsible and responsive government when he becomes the governor.

    Abiodun, an entrepreneur-turned-politician, hailed the pensioners for their rare show of love and support.

    He said: “I want to appreciate our fathers and mothers who have worked tirelessly for the service of this state.

    “My parents, who were both teachers, are also pensioners. The pensioners are informed electorate who have influence within their communities. I want to express gratitude for their support.

    “As someone from the private sector, my aspiration was borne out of my desire to see our people being provided with quality governance they deserved.

    “I am assuring you that all your demands will be addressed when I become governor and I also promise to run a listening and inclusive government.”

     

  • ‘I’m optimistic of APC’s victory in Ogun’

    Chief Tolu Odebiyi, the immediate past Chief of Staff to Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun, has expressed the confidence that the All Progressives Congress (APC) will win next year’s governorship election in the state.

    Odebiyi, is who the senatorial candidate of the party for Ogun West, noted that despite the seeming challenges the party is grappling with, it stands on a better position to win at the polls, compared to other parties.

    The son of the late Awoist, Chief Jonathan Odebiyi, spoke with The Nation at his country home in Iboro, Yewa North Local Government Area.

    He also expressed the confidence that he would win the National Assembly election.

    The politician said the confidence was derived from his support base, among other things.

    According to him, he was optimistic of victory and declined to leave APC for the Allied People’s Movement (APM) when Amosun told him to do so.

    Odebiyi added that he was emboldened the more to remain in APC when Amosun, who was prodding him to change party, was unwilling to drop APC yet maintaining his loyalty to President Muhammadu Buhari, just like himself.

    He said: “He himself was not leaving the party. He maintains his loyalty and friendship with President Buhari. He wants to ensure he succeeds, the same way I want to ensure the party succeeds.

    “I felt a sense of responsibility and obligation to my followers who have supported me since 2014. They sacrificed their time, money and everything to support me. I had to step down for governorship again. They did the same thing though disappointed. They were steadfast in their support.

    “Finally, we got the Senate ticket and now I’m being asked to drop it and go to another party while my leader is not going with me. To me, I don’t get it.

    “I felt: what kind of leader would I be for my followers if I’m now given another ticket in an unknown party and I’m expecting them to follow me? I mean, it would seem as if one is indecisive. And what is the assurance that when you get to APM, you’ll not move to another?”

  • ‘APC’s victory in by-election was daylight robbbery’

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chairman, Kola Shittu, in this interview with ADEKUNLE JIMOH, says the declaration of the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate, Abdulraheem Olawuyi, as winner of the House of Representatives by-election was a daylight robbery.

    What efforts are you making at reconciling aggrieved  aspirants as a fallout of the PDP primaries in the state?

    We are making efforts to ensure that all party members are one. After the primaries, the party leadership is already calling on all the aspirants to make them understand that the consensus that we used is acceptable and nobody will be left behind in the party’s decisions and scheme of things.

    The party leadership has already talked to all the House of Representatives aspirants and all the governorship aspirants. Effort is on now to talk to all the House of Assembly aspirants.

    That process is a continuous one is one. And we are happy that we are having good response now.

    Can you retain power in 2019?

    Honestly, as the chairman of the party, I have no doubt in my mind that PDP will win all the elections in February. I have no doubt because we have the populace behind us. We have the support of the electorate.

    But, PDP lost the recent by-election in the state…

    It is very clear to everybody that we contested against security agents. In fact, let me tell you PDP won that very election. The APC, with the help of the security people, thum-printed ballot papers at the collation centre. You also know that they were arresting all the influential stakeholders in the area before and during the election.

    One of them is the special adviser to Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed on Agriculture, Anu Ibiwoye. This is not good for democracy. If we had lost fairly, we would congratulate the winner. But, they have stolen our mandate. They know it themselves. That is why I don’t feel bad at all. But, in February next year, they will not be able to do this. All the 36 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) will be engaged with elections. They won’t have the time to bring about 150 DSS personnel to Kwara State. All the thugs they imported from Osun and Lagos states will also be busy in their states at that time. So, what are we talking about? Their jubilation will be short-lived in another 87 days time when we will be having another election. I am telling you.

    You described the election as a daylight robbery. How?

    Look at what happened in Ajase-Ipo and Oro. The APC was using police helicopter hovering round the sky while they were arresting people on the ground. That scared away our supporters and voters. That is why there was low voting because those who were on ground were not even sure they would not be dropping bombs. Our community members, some are illiterate. The sound of helicophter in the air is very scary. So, is that not daylight robbery?’ That is daylight robbery.

    Read also: Insecurity: Kwara APC shelves campaign

    The Minister of Information and Culture Lai Mohammed knows this. All of them know this. They know that INEC thump-printed for them at the collation centres. That conscience will follow them to their failure in February next year.

    Some people alleged general disenchantment among voters as a result of Governor Ahmed’s awful performance?

    There may be complaints here and there as nobody is perfect. It is not only in Kwara State that local government staff are not paid. It is because of the economic situation of the country. Yes, some people may not be happy. But, that is not enough to say that we lost the election. The major cause of our losing the election is one, thump-printing of ballot papers, two, use of un-seralised ballot papers. By the time we get to the tribunal all these will be exposed. By the special grace of God we are planning to go to the tribunal to challenge the outcome of the election. The party leadership is yet to sit and decide on that but we are preparing for it.

    It was also gathered that your ‘fronts’ did not ‘mobilise’ the electorate well. What is your response to that?

    That is not true. If we did not mobilise the electorate well, why did we win? I am telling you that we won. People did not come out enough to vote because of intimidation by the security agents. That is what happened.

    What is your advice to PDP candidates ahead of next year’s elections?

    My pieces of advice to the candidates and ourselves is that we should work hard and continue to give the electorate the confidence they have in us. The by-election is not a true reflection of what the people want. We want to continue to talk to them not to be discouraged. I am telling you we are going to win the 2019 elections in the state.

     

  • 2019: Lagos women ready for APC’s victory, says Okoya-Thomas

    The Women Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State, Mrs Jmoke Okoya-Thomas, has assured the womenfolk of support for the party’s landslide victory in next year’s general elections.

    She said the women’s wing had started mobilising support to ensure the victory of all APC candidates at the polls.

    Speaking alongside a thanksgiving service organised by the women’s wing to mark the successful completion of the party’s congresses and national convention, Mrs Okoya-Thomas urged the women to co-operate with one another and ensure peace and unity in the party.

    The women leader urged the women to show more interest in Lagos politics and encourage their children to join politics.

    Also, Lagos State Deputy Governor Mrs. Oluranti Adebule urged those who had not collected their Permanent Voter’s Cards (PVCs) to collect them to enable them vote in the 2019 general elections.

    Mrs Adebule implored party members to support the state government by voting for the continuity of good governance in the state.

    APC State Chairman Tunde Balogun advised women to work hard to ensure victory for the party in all elections in 2019.

    He said: “I want to appeal to all the women to be actively involved in the 2019 elections. Please, go out and talk to people to go and collect their PVCs so that they can participate in next year’s general elections.”

    The State Publicity Secretary, Mr Joe Igbokwe, noted that APC “is fully on ground in Lagos State”.

    He urged party members to work for APC’s victory in next year’s general elections.

    The programme was attended by serving and former Lagos State government officials as well as APC stalwarts.

    Christian and Muslim prayers were offered for the party and Lagos State.

  • Bamidele: Oni, others won’t sabotage APC’s victory

    The Director General of the Kayode Fayemi Campaign Organisation, Hon. Opeyemi Bamidele, has said the All Progressives Congress (APC) entertains no fear about the victory of its candidate in the July 14 governorship poll, Dr. Kayode Fayemi.

    Bamidele said he has implicit confidence in the leadership of the party in Ekiti State, including former Governor Segun Oni and his group working for Fayemi to make the victory a resounding and collective one.

    The Director General made the remarks yesterday in a statement from his Media Aide, Ahmed Salami in Ado Ekiti.

    Recently, Oni was linked to a litigation purportedly filed in Abuja seeking the nullification of Fayemi’s victory in the party’s primary on account of his failure to resign as a minister in line with the party’s constitution and guidelines.

    Commenting on the event that has been causing ripples in the APC, Bamidele said he has no reason to doubt Oni and his commitment to Fayemi’s victory in this election.

    Bamidele said: “We are not ruling out the possibility of people having some ill-feelings about certain issues in our party, but that should not degenerate to the level where people can act as fifth columnists in their own party.”

     

     

     

     

  • ‘APC’s victory confirms Buhari’s rating’

    ‘APC’s victory confirms Buhari’s rating’

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Edo State, Comrade Peter Esele, is happy over the party’s victory in the governorship election. He spoke with LEKE SALAUDEEN about its implications, the peoples’ expectation from the governor-elect, Mr. Godwin Obaseki, and other partisan issues.

    What is your reaction to the APC victory at the poll?

    I feel happy that our party won the governorship election. It is our hope and expectation that the governor-elect, Mr Godwin Obaseki will build and consolidate on what Governor Adams Oshiomhole has achieved in the last eight years and also take us to a new direction in consonance with signs of the time.

    What would you attribute to the party’s victory?

    I will attribute the APC’s victory to what the governor has done in the last eight years. He’s living the state better than he met it. The election was a referendum on Oshiomhole’s performance and the result is the election of Obaseki. In appreciation of the governor’s performance, the Edo people voted APC candidate to succeed him in office. The victory of APC is an expression of support for  President Muhammau Buhari ‘s administration, and his efforts  in tackling the economic problems in the country. In spite of the economic hardship which is not APC making, people still belive in Buhari’s leadership; that he will take us out of the economic recession soon.

    Are you satisfied with the vote margin between the APC and the PDP?

    I am satisfied with the vote difference because the election was competitive. When you have a political party in power for eight years, some will say let’s try another party. That is what democracy is all about; freedom of choice and freedom to make decision to make the choice. The election poll results show how much love the Edo people have for APC. I like it; it was highly competitive.  It also tells you our democracy is growing. People ask questions, cross check from available data before they arrive at their decision.

    You should remember that PDP has two senators in Edo and more members in the House of Representatives. APC has done a good job in the state and that is why the people like the party and elected APC candidate to rule the state for another four years.

    Would the APC have won, if the election was held on September 3 as earlier scheduled by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)?

    Yes, the APC would still have won may be with wider margin. The postponement became necessary in view of the fact that the election coincided with the West African Examination Council (WAEC) time table for Mathematics. WAEC had drawn its time table months ahead. It was expected that INEC should have taken into consideration the WAEC exam time table before fixing the election date. For students to miss writing WAEC exam is one year loss because the exam holds once in a year while election could be held any time in the year.  I had expected political leaders in the state to call for the postponement like Governor Oshiomhole did when he said Edo people valued education and the election must be postponed. The fact that it coincided with WAEC exam is enough justification for the postponement.

    What is your reaction to the PDP allegation that INEC connived with the APC to rig the election?

    The burden is with PDP to prove the connivance. I voted in my unit which was won by APC; it also won in my ward. Nobody has ever lost election in this country and accept defeat except former President Goodluck Jonathan and former Ekiti State governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi. However, I commend the PDP governorship candidate Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu for directing his supporters not to take to violence in protesting the results; that he would explore judicial process in seeking redress. To me that is commendable. Why should people go out and destroy public or private property to express their anger when the court is there to seek justice?

    Do you think Obaseki will sustain the tempo of Oshiomhole’s achievements in Edo State?

    Yes he will. He has the capacity and skill to sustain the developmental agenda of Oshiomhole’s administration. There is no doubt in my mind that with the support of the party members and the people of Edo State, Obaseki will take the state to next level.

    How would you advise the governor-elect, if he must make an impact on the people of Edo?

    He should hit the ground running. He should concentrate on the programmes he promised the electorate during the campaign. He should not be distracted by proposals from friends, classmates, and family friends suggesting programmes for him; rather, he should implement his own programmes.

    I have friends who were governors across the country. When they got to office, they jettisoned their own programme for the proposals put forward by their cronies. They regretted after leaving office because they failed to implement their programmes. Obaseki should start implementing his programmes right from day one in office. He should not allow himself to be driven by power mongers. His dream for the state must be the pillar on which his developmental programmes will rest on. The buck stop on his table as governor of Edo State; he would be held responsible and accountable for whatever happened during his tenure in the state.

    Observers say the governor-elect may not have a free hand to rule the state. What is  your reaction?

    Let the observers continue to observe. They should wait until he starts governing before we know if his hands are free or tied to his back. We should not speculate; it is too early.

    What is your advice to the PDP supporters protesting the governorship election results?

    They should accept the results. If they have any misgiving over the result, they should go to court and prove their case. Once INEC has declared results only the court can do otherwise. Edo state is peaceful. We should not kill ourselves or destroy properties over election results. Those who are not satisfied with the results should go to the tribunal to seek justice.

    Obaseki has ruled out the opposition in his cabinet. Do you think it’s a right decision?

    He is the person elected by Edo people. He has the right to constitute his cabinet. It is his prerogative to include opposition and if he decides to exclude them in his government there is nothing wrong in that. He should be allowed to take decision on whatever he believes will make governance easy and smooth for him.

    What’s your advice for the Edo people, ahead of the new regime?

    The Edo people should be patient, pray for governor-elect and his deputy. They should play their role as members of the civil society. Whatever they feel about his government, they should not hesitate to express themselves.

  • Edo poll: APC’s victory testimony of good governance, says Okorocha

    Edo poll: APC’s victory testimony of good governance, says Okorocha

    Imo State Governor and Chairman of the Progressive Governors’ Forum (PGF), Rochas Okorocha, yesterday saluted the “doggedness and courage” of the Edo State people for choosing progressive governance, which he said the All Progressives Congress (APC) represents.

    The governor, who was reacting to the victory of the APC candidate, Godwin Obaseki, in the just concluded Edo State governorship  election,  noted that the landslide victory recorded by the APC was a testimony of the performance of the party in the state.

    He also congratulated the outgoing governor, Adams Oshiomole, for laying a solid foundation that gave the party victory at the poll

    According to him, “ the margin with which the APC candidate won the election was an obvious indication that Edo people had refused to go back to Egypt and decided that the progressive light lit by the Adam Oshimole administration in the state should remain aglow.”

    He further commended the people of the state for “endorsing progressive governance and also aligning with a progressive party,”  urging other Nigerians still believing the propaganda of the opposition to follow the Edo example.

    The Governor  also commended the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for doing a good job in the Edo governorship election.

  • INEC must not toy with APC’s victory, says Olafemi

    INEC must not toy with APC’s victory, says Olafemi

    Former acting governor of Kogi State and member of the All Progressives Congress Board of Trustees (BoT) Chief Clarence Olafemi, has warned the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) not to create a crisis in Kogi State.

    He said INEC has not told the truth on why it declared last Saturday’s governorship election inconclusive despite the “clear victory” secured by the APC and the fulfilment of 95 percent compliance with the provisions of the Electoral Act (as amended) in the process leading to the party’s “victory” at the governorship poll.

    Olafemi said it was strange that INEC would declare the election inconclusive when the number of persons adjudged not to have voted, if added to the figures polled by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, cannot overturn his party’s victory.

    According to him, the INEC chairman has been misinformed by the 49,000 registered voters in the said 91 affected voting units instead of the actual PVC collection of 25,000, which represents the number of eligible voters in those areas.

    Said Olafemi: “The INEC position of having 49,000 inconclusive or cancelled election in about 91 units in 19 local government areas as basis for declaring the election inconclusive was at best done in error, because in all the 21 local governments mentioned and the units afftected, the total number of collected permanent voters card is 25,000, which, assuming it is added to the number of votes polled by the PDP, still makes them a loser.

    “And, this figure of 25,000 represents about five per cent of the total votes cast in the election, thereby leaving 95 per cent compliance with those already declared, and in the spirit of the Electoral Act (as amended), it is sufficient to declare a winner.”

    He urged INEC to immediately declare the APC winner of the election, saying the sad incident of party’s flag bearer’s demise must not be used as an excuse to deny it of its “hard earned victory”.

    Olafemi said: “It is a settled matter at the Supreme Court in the case of Rotimi Amaechi, that it is the party that contests election and not an individual and that is why the names and photographs of individual the candidates are not on the ballot papers.

    “And, since the APC still has a candidate in that election as the deputy, the party must not be made to forfeit the benefit of its success at the poll. Rather, the living running mate who participated in the election should be made to inherit the success, while the party shops for the deputy for him.”

     

  • Oshiomhole holds ‘thank you’ road show on APC’s victory

    Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole yesterday led thousands of All Progressives Congress (APC) faithful on a 10-kilometre road show round major streets of Benin, the state capital.

    The occasion was the celebration of the party’s victory in the April 11 House of Assembly elections.

    The “Thank You” road show, which started at the Ramat Park on Auchi-Abuja Road, took the governor and the party faithful through Ikpoba slope to Ewah Street, Gani Fawehimi Layout, Guobadia Street, the New Lagos Road, to New Benin through Mission Road.

    It ended at the Oba Ovoramwem Square in the heart of the state capital.

    Addressing a huge crowd of party faithful, who sang and danced with him throughout the road show, Oshiomhole noted that last Saturday’s victory of the APC was the final nail on political coffin of those he called expired godfathers in the state.

    He said: “Everybody here, all Edo men and women, have again spoken. You have reaffirmed your confidence and trust in my stewardship. You have renewed the vigour, your commitment to change. Last Saturday, you completed the first chapter in this journey.

    “You recall I told you few years back that we terminated ‘godfatherism’ when we voted again and again to bury the ‘godfather’. But as we bury them, Abuja put them on oxygen mask. They have been on oxygen for so many years. I told my friend and brother, President Goodluck Jonathan, why are you putting these godfathers on oxygen?

    Oshiomhole added: “You remember the President came to Edo and said the state would fall in 2015 and 2016. I said in the name of God, our Creator, He will not abandon us. I said Jonathan would fall. Has he not fallen? And I said the ‘godfather’ would fall. Has he not also fallen? Where are they today? From Edo Central to Edo South, all the ‘godfathers’ have finally perished.

    “We now have a completely new energetic, imaginative, rugged and dogged political leadership. I am proud of Edo people. I want to thank you very much for being there for me. I promise that I will be there for all of you. I will give my all for Edo people, because if you imagine the plans of the enemies while we were campaigning for change, for progress and development, they were plotting to use acid to bath my political life. They did advertorials, they did all kinds of abusive campaigns, but God said the devil is a liar.

    “Today, like I told you at Samuel Ogbemudia Stadium, people like us conquered fear many years ago. We will stand on our feet and fight on the basis of our convictions. We will not go down on our knees to beg those who themselves are living on the quicksand of time.”

    The elated governor also said: “I am very happy for the referendum that took place on Saturday. The election was a referendum between the godfathers and the great people of this great state. We know who the godfathers are. Of course, one or two escaped the first day but by Saturday, we finished them.

    “I salute the fighting spirit of our people in Esan land. We took the fight to the doorstep of the godfather and his young godson; we dealt with them and we have now formally restricted them to Uromi. We caged him from Ubiaja, then we nailed him from Irrua and finished him at Igueben. So, it is complete. I thank God that at the end, God used me to nail their political coffin, and I thank you for being a part of it.

    “To the Edo woman, we will do our best to support your commercial life. We will do for you much more than we have done before. To our youths, this struggle was about you. You have all come out in large numbers; you bore the risk, you sweated, you did not sleep. By the grace of God, we are now in a position to reposition you and to empower you.”

    Oshiomhole added: “…We will revisit some programmes that are specifically targeted at our elders because the elders have prayed, they have had sleepless nights praying against the devil. As you can see, God answered the prayers.

    “To all the great people of Edo State, to the great Oba of Benin Kingdom, to all the members of the royal family, to all the Enigies of Benin Kingdom, to all the chiefs, to all the leaders of thoughts, the Benin Forum, the Benin Leaders of Thought, the great Benin Women, the Odionweres, to everybody, I cannot thank you enough. God will bless your children as a reward for your sacrifice.”

     

  • APC’s victory and the Buhari/Tinubu alliance

    APC’s victory and the Buhari/Tinubu alliance

    ROM his redoubt on Bourdillon Road in upmarket Lagos, a man popularly known as the Jagaban cemented his reputation this week (last week) as a political Svengali with the role he played helping to orchestrate the Fdownfall of Nigeria’s sitting President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Bola Ahmed Tinubu, whose name (Jagaban) comes from a chieftaincy title bestowed on him by the town of Borgu, in Nigeria’s North (Niger State), was from 1999 to 2007 the provincial governor of the country’s economic engine, the coastal state and megacity of Lagos.

    The political godfather of Nigeria’s Southwest, Mr Tinubu’s unlikely alliance with the austere former military ruler, now President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari, made possible the first opposition victory in Nigeria’s electoral history.

    “There needed to be an alignment for us to be able to stare down the government in power. There needed to be a catalyst for that alignment. He was the most prepared for that,” says one of Mr Tinubu’s lieutenants.

    The manner in which that alignment evolves, is now among the big questions Nigerians are asking when considering the likely character of the incoming administration.

    Described as “deeply Machiavellian” and a “master strategist” by one of his party peers, the Jagaban has cannily built a political empire among ethnic Yorubas in Lagos and the Southwest, as formidable, according to allied politicians, as that of the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, who led Nigeria’s second largest ethnic block at Independence.

    He did so over the past decade and a half, having survived a string of bruising turf wars with the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP), which was forged from political networks across Nigeria during the 1998 transition from military rule.

    PDP barons had become so adept since at oiling the electoral machine, that they sometimes boasted the party would still be in power in 100 years.

    It was the merger of the Action Congress oF Nigeria (ACN) last year, with the party of the president-elect (Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) – strong in the North but weak elsewhere – that made it possible for the opposition to challenge and ultimately defeat the PDP. The two parties between them controlled block support in both of Nigeria’s most populous regions; Mr Tinubu’s in the Southwest and Gen Buhari’s in the Northwest. Leading opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate Mohammadu Buhari speaks during an interview on February 6 in Abuja. Nigeria’s main opposition candidate Muhammadu Buhari told the AFP he was expecting to win the presidential election by a wide margin, despite talk of a close race. The February 14 poll, in which he is challenging incumbent Goodluck Jonathan, has been seen as too close to call, leading to a possible run-off if neither man secured a first-round majority.

    “I am in the same union as Buhari to salvage a Nigeria that is drifting and that has faced a storm of economic deterioration,” Mr Tinubu said at a celebration party at his house this (last) week. Outside the formidable gates, a mob of hundreds of young men ecstatic at the success of their city patron, were shouting “Jagaban”.

    Yet the Jagaban is a controversial figure, resented by some for the dominating machine politics he has brought to the Southwest, but adored by others, especially in Lagos, who see his hand behind the remarkable renaissance of the city in the past 15 years.

    Once a byword for urban decay, Lagos has begun to thrive under Babatunde Fashola, who Mr Tinubu promoted as his successor as governor, and then sometimes shielded from the rough and tumble of politics as he went about reviving the city with technocratic verve.

    Mr Tinubu attributes the success of the campaign, the most disciplined by an opposition group in Nigeria’s history and sophisticated in terms of the data monitoring it used to keep on top of events, to compromise.

    “Our defined objective is on the plank of a progressive social welfare programme. Once we agreed to that then we consolidated the merger,” he says, of last year’s deal, which superseded a less formal alliance that came unstuck in 2011 polls.

    Supporters of opposition candidate Muhammadu Buhari celebrate an anticipated win for their candidate, in Kano, Nigeria Tuesday, March 31. Nigeria’s aviation minister says President Goodluck Jonathan has called challenger Muhammadu Buhari to concede and congratulate him on his electoral victory, paving the way for a peaceful transfer of power in Africa’s richest and most populous nation.

    Gen Buhari faces daunting task of tackling slowing economic growth and controlling inflation.

    Against expectations, the party survived a tough contest for the leadership, which saw Mr Tinubu’s candidate, a Christian pastor and Lagos lawyer, Yemi Osinbajo (a professor of Law), win the vice-presidential slot.

    The future of the union could now determine how effective Nigeria’s incoming government is in office.

    Some leading members of the victorious opposition worry about the compatibility of Mr Tinubu and Gen Buhari and about the influence the former might wield, without any formal position in the party, in the forthcoming battle over federal government appointments.

    In the immediate future, Mr Tinubu is likely to be distracted by his battle to maintain influence in Lagos, where his preferred candidate for governor is facing a tough challenge in the polls on April 11. “There is no need for a power struggle. We are concentrating our efforts in reversing the decay,” Mr Tinubu says.

    He is not a politician who is insecure. According to both detractors and fans, one of his attributes, rare among older politicians in Nigeria, has been to spot talent and nurture it. He absorbed this lesson according to one ally, when working at ExxonMobil.

    “We bring talent to governance. We don’t want Lilliputians. We want people who can think and act,” he said. Among the bright, young crowd in his small, home office in attendance, were perhaps some of Nigeria’s future leaders.

    •Culled from The Financial Times.