Tag: Bode George

  • George begs Tinubu to reinstate Fubara

    George begs Tinubu to reinstate Fubara

    Former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Deputy National Chairman Chief Bode George has appealed to President Bola Tinubu to, in the spirit of the June 12 anniversary, reinstate suspended Gov. Siminalayi Fubara of Rivers.

    George made the appeal yesterday in an open letter to commemorate the 32nd anniversary of the June 12, 1993 election.

    The presidential election was won by late Chief M.K.O. Abiola, but was annulled on June 23, 1993 by Gen (rtd.) Ibrahim Babangida,

    Due to political tension in the oil-rich state, on March 18, Tinubu suspended Fubara alongside the state’s legislature. 

    Meanwhile, Fubara visited Tinubu in Lagos during Sallah celebration.

    George said: “If Tinubu could forgive Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State, then he should extend the same gesture to Fubara.

    “On June 12, we will be celebrating Democracy Day. This is a reminder of the true meaning of democracy – the will of the people.

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    “Since Tinubu has forgiven Sanwo-Olu, then it makes a lot of sense, spiritually, to also forgive Fubara and let him return to office. I am talking as an elder”, he said.

    George noted that, Tinubu was in the forefront of those who fought the military, seeking a return to civilian rule.

    The PDP chieftain said Tinubu was passionate about return to civil rule during the military era, aspiring for top political positions in Lagos.

    “He later joined NADECO to fight for democracy. Some of those who fought alongside him for democracy have died. It is not of his making that he is alive today.

    “So, he should thank God, honour the memory of those who fought alongside him for democracy and return Fubara to office immediately.

    “I also appeal to him, in the spirit of my maternal grand uncle who founded the first political party in Nigeria in 1922, Herbert Macaulay, to please reinstate Fubara.

    “Tinubu should listen to, and honour this appeal in memory of all those who died in the journey to our democracy,” George said.

  • June 12: Bode George urges Tinubu to reinstate Fubara

    June 12: Bode George urges Tinubu to reinstate Fubara

    Former PDP Deputy National Chairman Chief Bode George has appealed to President Bola Tinubu to, in the spirit of the June 12 anniversary, reinstate suspended Gov. Siminalayi Fubara of Rivers.

    George made the appeal on Wednesday in an open letter to commemorate the 32nd anniversary of the June 12, 1993 election.

    The News Agency of Nigeria(NAN)reports that the  presidential election  was won by  late Chief M.K.O. Abiola, but was  annulled on June 23, 1993 by Gen. Ibrahim Babangida,

    NAN  recalls that Fubara was suspended by Tinubu on March 18 due to political tensions in the oil-rich  state.

    Meanwhile, Fubara visited Tinubu in Lagos during Sallah celebration.

    George said: “If Tinubu could forgive Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State, then he should extend same gesture to Fubara.

    “On June 12, we will be celebrating Democracy Day. This is a reminder of the true meaning of democracy – the will of the people.

    “Since Tinubu has forgiven Sanwo-Olu, then it makes a lot of sense, spiritually, to also forgive Fubara and let him return to office. I am talking as an elder”,he said.

    George noted that  Tinubu was in the forefront of those who fought the military, seeking a return to civilian rule.

    The PDP chieftain said Tinubu was passionate about returning to civil rule during the military era, aspiring for top political positions in Lagos.

    Read Also: June 12: Tinubu a beacon of Nigeria’s democracy – Onuigbo

    “He later joined NADECO to fight for democracy. Some of those who fought alongside him for democracy have died. It is not of his making that he is alive today.

    “So, he should thank God, honour the memory of those who fought alongside him for democracy and return Fubara to office immediately.

    “I also appeal to him, in the spirit of my maternal grand uncle who founded the first political party in Nigeria in 1922, Herbert Macaulay, to please reinstate Fubara.

    “Tinubu should listen to, and honour this appeal in memory of all those who died in the journey to our democracy,” George said.

    (NAN)

  • Bode George: The last PDP man standing

    Bode George: The last PDP man standing

    Bode George has an abiding faith in PDP. And using the humongous amount of Rivers State funds frittered away on some ungrateful “chop and clean mouth” PDP politicians as index of measurement, the only other person close to Bode George in this regard is Nyesom Wike, his estranged godson, with whom he is currently engaged in brickbats over the soul of their beloved PDP.

    Not many of those who once swore by PDP’s name want to identify with it today. Many are in a mad rush to abandon a sinking PDP ship. The South-south geo-political zone once regarded as the bedrock of PDP, we now know, was because the now tattered PDP umbrella provided cover for massive mismanagement of state funds in a zone where leaders claim stealing state funds is not corruption but ‘misapplication of funds’. (Augustus Aikhomu and Goodluck Jonathan).

    While PDP stalwarts who once ate with their 10 fingers in the 16 years of the locust are today falling over each other to escape PDP sinking ship, what we hear from the likes of Olusegun Obasanjo, Atiku Abubakar, David Mark, Olagunsoye Oyinlola, etc., the oligarchy that changed PDP from its founding fathers’ dream to a garrison-commanded by self-serving leaders, is a foreboding silence.

    Bode George however remains not only passionate about PDP, but its very embodiment as conceived by its founding fathers. When Obasanjo asked him to choose a role he would like to play after being foisted on the Yoruba nation and Nigeria as PDP candidate in 1998 by the military and the interest they serve, Bode George’s choice without hesitation was a PDP apparatchik. And even when offered the position of Sole Administrator of NPA by Abiye Sekibo, after the government had been inaugurated, his response was “My Honourable, thank you for the honour. I have more important job to do in the party than go and be any sole administrator.”

    Even now as the oligarchy and other PDP stakeholders pretend not to hear the tolling of the death knell of their party, Bode George’s vociferous voice is the only one ‘jarring our earlobes’. Nigerians can still hear the ringing echo of his voice as he squared up with Arise TV’s Charles Aniagolu last week, insisting:

    “PDP is like Iroko tree. Or the Oak tree found in Saudi Arabia”; “PDP is the only party in Nigeria”; “Our party is not like APC owned by individual”; PDP party as packaged by our founding fathers has the capacity to solve Nigeria problems”, etc.

    More intriguing is that George is not exhibiting any evidence he is ready to give up on PDP despite his political son’s last week call on him to go and ‘read newspapers’  if he had nothing doing. And that was after challenging him to identify one politician PDP made from Lagos or one PDP elected politician he successfully supported despite his 25 years of misguided war against Tinubu. AD senators Wahab Dosumu, Adeseye Ogunlewe and Musiliu Obanikoro that he and Obasanjo lured into PDP in 2002 was regarded as ‘mandate theft’ while the 2003 governorship mandate theft in Edo, Ondo, Osun, George took credit for, were reversed by the courts.

    Long before Wike’s advice, one of his other disrupting political son, Ayo Fayose had, back in 2020, asked him to retire to give room to younger ones. In his words “it’s high time Bode George retires. Let him be a support stand for the younger ones in the party …all those stories of how we formed this party in 1998, eight of us sat in my sitting room to form the party, is no longer important because the young too must be allowed to grow. (African Examiner September 30, 2020).

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    Indeed, the joke was on George himself when in an attempt to admonish Wike who is insisting “he is Mr PDP’ resorted to his favourite Shakespeare quote “Life is like a walking shadow… It is like a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury and after that you are heard no more”.

    Consumed by his love for PDP, Bode George is yet to come to terms that there is indeed ‘time for everything’.

    But is Bode George’s passion enough to save PDP? I don’t think so. It will appear it is too late to change the tide. It is also of little relief that not many members of his embattled party share his optimism.

     For the PDP governors who are not ready to take chances, because they are seeking re-election: “if the taste of the wine changes, drinking habit must change” or “if you must fly to Abuja and your private jet is grounded, it will be foolhardy not to join another plane that guarantees a safe flight”. And to PDP former governors like Gabriel Suswan and PDP stalwarts like Segun Sowunmi, Atiku’s former spokesman, PDP is ‘in intensive care’. 

    And neither can anyone fault APC, the irresistible bride that “we are in a democracy and democracy allows freedom of association”.

    Unfortunately for Bode George, the pervading gloominess gives no assurance of light at the end of the tunnel. By the verdict of students of political party system including John Campbell, former US envoy to Nigeria, PDP, unlike parties that serve as recruitment centres for political office holders and as modernization agents, is in fact not a political party. It is an association of ‘wheelers and dealers he dismissed during a debate on Nigeria in British House of Commons as “an elite cartel at the centre of power in Nigeria that came together essentially as a club of elites for sharing of oil rents and political spoils”.

    Much as PDP card-carrying members in borrowed toga of journalists may want to change the narrative, not all Nigerians suffer from collective amnesia. Nigerians remember it was PDP stalwarts that created artificial fuel scarcity at the onset of Obasanjo’s government to stampede him to set up the Petroleum Pricing Product Regulatory Authority (PPPRA) under which PDP leaders and their siblings defrauded Nigeria of about N1.6trillion through fuel subsidy scam. Only last week, the son of retired Brigadier Ahmadu Ali, former PDP chairman and PPPRA chairman, was jailed for 13 years for the same offence.

    Nigerians remember Atiku Abubakar supervised the ill-implemented privatisation programme, through which Nigeria’s total investments of about $100billion acquired between 1957 and 1997 were sold to PDP stalwarts and their fronts for a paltry $1.5billion.

    We remember the monetization policy was another scam through which PDP stalwarts including ex-Senate President David Mark, ex- House speaker Dimeji Bankole and ex CBN governor Chukwuma Soludo bought their mansions at giveaway prices while other government officials and civil servants converted to personal use properties kept in their temporary care for our children at prices determined by them.

    Of course, there was the unbundling of PHCN during which government injected between $8billion and $16billion, taxpayers money only to have the electricity distribution companies sold to stalwarts of PDP some of whom shamelessly donated as much as N5b to President Jonathan’s 2015 re-election bid.

    Bode George’s passion for PDP will most likely not erase the memory of how Sambo Dasuki, President Jonathan’s National Security Adviser (NSA) became an ATM without password with leading PDP men and women sharing US$2.1billion loan meant for our fighting soldiers’ hardware and welfare.

    We remember very clearly the years of the locusts when for 16 years, PDP stalwarts without self-discipline, ate with their 10 fingers and boasted they would rule for an uninterrupted 60 years.

    Without excusing Buhari’s eight years of gross incompetence and Emefiele’s mismanagement of foreign exchange market through forex ‘round tripping’ or even the toll of current President Tinubu’s two years economic policies on Nigerians, we remember Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told Nigerians that Jonathan government was borrowing money to pay salaries. And more foreboding, both she and Chukwuma Soludo predicted that whoever or whatever party took over in 2015 would have an uphill task trying to reverse the damage of 16 years of economic recklessness.

    Unfortunately for George, Atiku Abubakar who presided over the sales of our budding industries and Peter Obi, the ‘container economist,’ who as importer of foreign labour, are jointly responsible for our nation’s current nightmare. Driven by greed for power, both have serially betrayed PDP, their party as they did Nigeria.

    The tragedy is that they are today jostling for power not on the basis of a new vision to redress the tragedy they brought on a nation where my total estacode as a young journalist going for holiday in London in 1982 was N500, an amount that cannot buy a loaf of bread today, but on the basis of current temporary hardship, the result of their repeated rape on Nigeria.

  • Bode George slams sealing of PDP secretariat

    Bode George slams sealing of PDP secretariat

    Chief Olabode George, a member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Board of Trustees and elder statesman, has condemned the sealing of the party’s national secretariat in Abuja by the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA).

    The FCTA shut down the building, known as Wadata House, over alleged failure to pay ground rent.

    Speaking on national television on Tuesday, George described the action as “sacrilegious, unacceptable, and culturally inadmissible.”

    He also accused FCT Minister Nyesom Wike of betraying the party that built his political career, warning that the move was both disrespectful and politically reckless.

    “In regards to the locking up of our party secretariat, it is absolutely sacrilegious, unacceptable and culturally inadmissible,” George said. “The minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Wike—this is the party that brought you to life.”

    He likened the situation to a man sealing off his own family house over an issue that could have been easily resolved.

    “It’s like going back to your village and your family house hasn’t paid some ground rent, and you, as the local government chairman, lock it up. How much were we owing? Seven million naira—which you could easily pay,” he added.

    George further outlined Wike’s political rise within the PDP, reminding the minister that the party had provided him the platform to become a local government chairman, chief of staff, two-term governor of Rivers State, and even Minister of State.

    Read Also: Alleged anti-party activities: leave PDP immediately, Bode George tells Atiku, Wike

    “I want to challenge him that they should go and check that the property being used by APC at their headquarters in Abuja, could probably be the same thing. People could be careless. It is not a monumental amount of money.”

    The sealing of the party office occurred just hours before the PDP was scheduled to hold a crucial National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting, a move George described as deliberate and malicious.

    “This public odium being put on PDP is enough for the party to look back and sit up,” he stated. “Wike has to be very careful because someday, there will be an end to this ministry and he will be somewhere else tomorrow. What will you be remembered for?”

    George reaffirmed the strength and structure of the PDP, warning against any attempt to hijack or personalise the party.

    “There is no political party in this country that is as solid and has a robust structure as PDP. Nobody can amass the party and assign it to himself or convert it to his private property. Never,” he declared.

  • Needless alarm on one party state

    Needless alarm on one party state

    As at June 30, 2007, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was in control of 31 of the 36 states in the country. The defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) produced the governors in Yobe, Kano, Bauchi and Borno states while the defunct Action Congress (AC) had Lagos State. Between them, the opposition was in power only in five states. In one of the worst ever elections in Nigeria’s history in 2003, the then ruling PDP rampaged to power in the Southwest with hurricane PDP sweeping five defunct Alliance for Democracy (AD) off their gubernatorial perch. Despite the 2003 general elections turning the country virtually into a one-party dominant state, with the PDP further consolidating its political dominance in the no less brazenly rigged 2007 elections, there were  no alarmist outcries of the ruling party turning Nigeria into a one-party state. PDP stalwarts at the time gleefully asked those who felt aggrieved by its undisguised electoral Banditry to “go to court”.

    As the only man standing as a governor on the platform of the AD in 2003, the Lagos State governor, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, did not whine and throw tantrums. PDP chieftains particularly in Lagos State boasted that the country’s Socio-economic nerve centre and commercial capital would be ‘captured’ in the next electoral cycle and that Tinubu would have no choice but to cross to the ruling party. But Tinubu stayed the course. He remained firm and steady in opposition. Working with the former AD governors, Aremo Olusegun Osoba, Otunba Niyi Adebayo, Chief Bisi Akande, the late Alhaji Lam Adeshina and the late Chief Adebayo Adefarati, the Jagaban Borgu led the way in wresting the Southwest back to the progressive fold.

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    In the North, former President Muhammadu Buhari stood strong in opposition first in the ANPP and later in the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC). Buhari and Tinubu ultimately led a merger of political forces that included part of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) and aggrieved faction of the ruling PDP to form the APC that dislodged the PDP from power in 2015. With the recent root and branch relocation of the entire PDP structure to the APC in Delta State,the alarm bells that President Tinubu is turning Nigeria to a single party dictatorship have reached a crescendo. It is needless and time wasting. Tinubu and his party are not expected to turn away those flocking to them. There is nothing new about opposition politicians rushing to join the ruling party. It is a key feature of our political culture which was manifest even during the PDP’s 16 years in power.

    The PDP still has scores of loyal, committed and credible members who have not abandoned the party. They include Bode George, Sule Lamido, Lyol Imoke, Tom Ikimi and so many others. They should rally to confront and transcend the party’s current paralysis in the interest of Nigeria’s democracy. The existence of a viable and vibrant opposition – not just temporary ramshackle contraptions to win elections – cannot be compromised.

  • PDP will collapse if Atiku secures 2027 ticket-Bode George

    PDP will collapse if Atiku secures 2027 ticket-Bode George

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Board of Trustees (BoT) member, Chief Bode George, has warned the party risks collapse if former Vice President Atiku Abubakar emerges as its presidential candidate for the 2027 general election.

    Speaking yesterday in an interview on National Television, monitored by our correspondent, George said: “If he (Atiku) picks it (PDP’s ticket), that is the end of this party. If he picks it by manipulation, which was what was done the last time, we will not accept it.”

    Atiku, who was the PDP’s flag bearer in the 2023 presidential election, lost to President Bola Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress (APC). 

    The former vice president has made six attempts at the presidency across different political platforms over the last three decades.

    Atiku spearheaded a major opposition coalition in March 2025, aligning with former Anambra Governor Peter Obi, ex-Kaduna Governor Nasir El-Rufai and other opposition figures. 

    The group was positioned as a united front to challenge Tinubu’s leadership, citing economic hardship, record-high inflation and a soaring cost of living as grounds for change.

    However, despite the initial enthusiasm, the coalition hit a roadblock on Monday, April 14, 2025 when PDP Governors publicly distanced the party from any merger or alliance efforts. 

    George lauded their stance, stating that it was a sign of responsible leadership.

    “I want to thank the governors. They are now thinking. That’s the way to go,” he remarked.

    George criticised Atiku for failing to show leadership within the PDP, particularly by not intervening in internal crises rocking the party.

    “No, if he is the leader of the party, he would have waded into it (the crisis),” he argued.

    Read Also: Bode George warns Rivers Sole Administrator against ‘unconstitutional’ appointments

    “The fact that he was the presidential candidate of the party at the last election doesn’t mean he is a bona fide leader of the party. If he’s running for his private interest, it’s different from the interest of the party.”

    When asked if Atiku could still clinch the PDP ticket in 2027, George was emphatic in his rejection: “He cannot be. This is what I am saying. There were eight years in the north, there should be eight years in the south. That is the dictate, that is the doctrine of the PDP. I can’t say he cannot contest; he can go to any party because it is his constitutional right but as far as we are concerned, he cannot be the candidate.”

    Citing the PDP constitution to back his claims, George added: “There are rules. Section 7, Sub-section 3C of our constitution. It states that once the presidential candidate has been in the south for eight years, it had to go to the north. And after another eight years, it would come to the south. Is Atiku from the South-West, South-South or South-East?”

    Although critical of Atiku’s ambitions, George made it clear he is not in support of another term for President Tinubu either. 

    Instead, he expressed hope that the PDP can regroup and reclaim power in 2027 with a southern candidate.

  • Bode George warns Rivers Sole Administrator against ‘unconstitutional’ appointments

    Bode George warns Rivers Sole Administrator against ‘unconstitutional’ appointments

    Former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Olabode George, has cautioned the Sole Administrator of Rivers State, Vice Admiral Ibok-Ete Ibas (retd.), against making appointments and restructuring state boards in defiance of existing court orders, describing such actions as illegal and potentially regrettable.

    In a statement released on Friday, George urged Ibas to respect the Constitution and adhere to the rule of law, following reports that he had appointed officials to oversee the 23 local government areas and reconstituted boards of state agencies despite a court order barring such actions.

    Justice Adamu Turaki Muhammed of the Federal High Court in Port Harcourt had earlier issued a ruling prohibiting Ibas from making such appointments.

    Reacting, George stated, “I want to warn Admiral Ibas: if you act against the spirit of the Constitution, you will be held responsible. Your appointment is for just six months. Even if the President extends it, you will still leave one day, because nobody elected you. Your position as Sole Administrator is not legally recognized.”

    He reaffirmed that Siminalayi Fubara remains the duly elected governor of Rivers State and questioned Ibas’ authority to take far-reaching political decisions.

    Read Also: Bode George blasts Jandor over anti-party allegation, calls it an ‘insult’

    “What happens to those appointments when you leave office on September 18? Why are you flouting a valid court order? Did you receive approval from the National Assembly to reconstitute the boards? Do you now wield both executive and legislative powers in Rivers State?” he queried.

    George further warned, “You have no legal right to appoint anyone. This is not a military regime. The Constitution is still in force. Those using you now will throw you under the bus once you leave office.”

    Appealing to Ibas’ legacy as a military veteran, George added, “You behaved honorably as a Naval officer. Don’t let unconstitutional actions stain your record. You did not drown in the Navy—don’t let politics drown you legally and politically. Now is the time to apply the brakes.”

  • Jandor won’t walk Lagos streets if I take him on, says Bode George

    Jandor won’t walk Lagos streets if I take him on, says Bode George

    A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Olabode George, has reacted to the accusation of anti-party activities levelled against him by the party’s standard-bearer in the 2023 Lagos State governorship election, Adediran Olajide, popularly called Jandor.

    The PDP chieftain, who described the allegation as “an insult”, said a mere attention from him would politically take away Jandor and his acclaimed popularity from the streets of Lagos.

    He spoke yesterday while featuring on Eagle 102.5 FM’s Current Affairs Programme, Frontline.

    Labelling Jandor as “insolent” and someone that had never worked in the party’s best interest, George said: “I am in my 80’s, he is a child, this little rat that you are talking about, what does he know about this party? Let me be frank, I consider it as an insult, a complete insolence. This boy, my children are much older than him and like I learnt in my Latin class in secondary school, it is an “infradig”, an attempt for me to respond to that clown, it is absolute rubbish.”

    George added that Jandor had no idea of how the party ran, yet he was allowed a chance to be the party’s candidate, prompting people like the Labour Party’s candidate, Gbadebo Vivour-Rhodes, to step down and defect to the opposition party despite he being a more credible candidate.

    “Somebody I have regard and respect for and cannot say no to, brought him (Jandor), recommended him and he competed with a highly experienced, brilliant, well educated, one who went to the best university in the world, got his degree from MIT, from a very resound family background, who had contested before in the West Senatorial District of Lagos, which contains 10 local governments, while the Central is five and the East is also five.

    “So, West Senatorial District is about 50 per cent of Lagos State and he contested and obviously won, but the manipulations of the electoral commission didn’t just start today.

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    “This candidate is outstanding, with a very well-respected family background. We asked them to step down for one another, while the other deputise, but immediately after that, he said eh sir, someone told him before that in case he wins, he should go and take one woman from Ikorodu (Actress, Funke Akindele).

    “During that primaries, we told the other boy to step down after getting the form for N21 million and of course, I was able to convince his own father, Wale Rhodes-Vivour, because we were classmates. I said his son, Gbadebo, should calm down and take the second slot, else he (GRV) would’ve beaten him (Jandor) blue black and yellow and green. He listened and accepted”, the octogenarian said.

    It will be recalled that on March 4, Jandor announced his resignation from the party, citing persistent anti-party activities, internal sabotage and lack of discipline within the party.

    Jandor during a media briefing in the state, said some party leaders saw his candidacy as a threat to their interest and worked against him, citing instances of attacks on his campaign and condemnation from party leaders.

    He accused the state Chairman of the party, Philip Aivoji, of allegedly issuing a false statement on all PDP platforms, claiming that he (Jandor) had withdrawn from the election.

    Jandor also accused Olabode George, a leader of the party in Lagos State, of openly declaring support for the governorship candidate of another party and advising Lagos residents not to vote for the PDP.

    However, reacting, George said Jandor’s statement needs no direct reply, citing an unforgivable sin Jandor has committed; a sin he promised not to disclose but forward to a certain Dr. Seye Dairo to reveal to the public.

  • Bode George blasts Jandor over anti-party allegation, calls it an ‘insult’

    Bode George blasts Jandor over anti-party allegation, calls it an ‘insult’

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain, Chief Olabode George, has dismissed allegations of anti-party activities leveled against him by the party’s 2023 Lagos gubernatorial candidate, Adediran Olajide (Jandor), describing the claim as an insult.

    Speaking on Eagle 102.5 FM’s Frontline program on Tuesday, a visibly angry George warned that even acknowledging Jandor’s accusation would erase his political relevance in Lagos.

    Labeling Jandor as “insolent” and lacking party loyalty, George said: “I am in my 80s, he is a child. This little rat you are talking about—what does he know about this party? It is an insult, absolute rubbish. My children are much older than him. In my Latin class, we called this ‘infradig’—beneath my dignity.”

    He further criticised Jandor’s candidacy, arguing that he had no understanding of the party’s structure, yet was allowed to contest, forcing Labour Party candidate Gbadebo Vivour-Rhodes (GVR) to step down and defect to the PDP, despite being a more credible option.

    “Somebody that I have regard and respect for and cannot say no to, brought him (Jandor), recommended him and he competed with a highly experienced, brilliant, well educated, one who went to the best university in the world, got his degree from MIT, from a very resound family background, who had contested before on the West Senatorial District of Lagos, which contains 10 LGAs while the Central is 5 and the East is also 5. 

    Read Also: 2027: Stop attacking Atiku, support group tells Bode George

    “So, West Senatorial district is about 50% of Lagos State and he contested and obviously won but the manipulations of the electoral commission didn’t just start today.

    “This candidate is outstanding, with a very well-respected family background. We asked them to step down for one another while the other deputize, but immediately after that, he said eh sir, someone told him before that in case he wins, he should go and take one woman from Ikorodu (Actress, Funke Akindele)”.

    “During that primaries, we told the other boy to step down after getting the form for N21 million and of course, I was able to convince his own father, Wale Rhodes-Vivour because we were classmates. I said his son, Gbadebo should calm down and take the second slot, else he (GRV) would’ve beaten him (Jandor) blue black and yellow and green. He listened and accepted”, the octogenarian said.

    It would be recalled that on March 4th 2025, Olajide Adediran, also known as Jandor, announced his resignation from the party, citing persistent anti-party activities, internal sabotage, and lack of discipline within the party.

    Jandor during a media briefing in the state, said that some party leaders saw his candidacy as a threat to their interest and worked against him, citing instances of attacks on his campaign and condemnation from party leaders. 

    He accused the State Chairman of the party, Philip Aivoji, of allegedly issuing a false statement on all PDP platforms, claiming that he (Jandor) had withdrawn from the election.

    Jandor also accused Olabode George, a leader of the party in Lagos State, of openly declaring support for the gubernatorial candidate of another party and advising Lagos residents not to vote for the PDP.

    However, reacting, George said Jandor’s statement needs no direct reply, citing an unforgivable sin Jandor has committed; a sin he promised not to disclose but forward to a certain Dr. Seye Dairo to reveal to the public.

    “This clown just came to the party and he hasn’t even conducted any election or seek a position even in the ward. He committed an unforgivable sin and what he got out of it is reward he deserved. He committed an unforgivable sin and got what he planted and what you sow you will reap”, he said.

    Refuting the claim that Jandor’s defection was a sabotage to the “Not too young to run” campaign, George said politics should not be mixed with “politricks” citing the tripod that any party and the nation itself should stand on is: Justice, fairness and equity, not favoritism and lack of political orientation.

  • 2027: Stop attacking Atiku, support group tells Bode George

    2027: Stop attacking Atiku, support group tells Bode George

    The Nigerian Youths for Atiku (NYFA) has urged former PDP Deputy National Chairman, Chief Olabode George, to stop opposing and criticising Atiku Abubakar’s presidential ambition.

    In a statement issued on Sunday in Lagos, NYFA’s Director of Communications (Nigeria and Diaspora), Dare Dada, dismissed George’s stance against the former vice president.

    “Bode George should open a campaign office in Lagos for the re-election of President Bola Tinubu, as his constant attacks on Atiku ahead of 2027 are becoming irritating,” Dada stated.

    He argued that George’s views do not reflect the broader sentiment within the PDP, adding that “Nigerians have moved past him.”

    Dada further urged George to focus on revitalizing the PDP in Lagos, alleging that his actions had contributed to the party’s decline in the state and the resignation of several key members.

    Dada said: “Chief George is one of those politicians who is responsible for the sorry state of the PDP today; his continued envy of Atiku Abubakar is well noted.

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    “As a result, we have decided to ignore a local champion who never delivered his polling unit for the party.

    “As an elder of the party who should have busied himself with how to save the soul of the party and its accelerated dwindling fortunes, he focuses on attacking Atiku.

    “We have noted with dismay how Bode George who has lost every political capital and relevance, embarks on attacking Atiku to get media mileage.

    “We ask him who among his preferred choices can defeat President Bola Tinubu in the circumstance if not Atiku Abubakar? Or, does he seem himself fit for the job in his delusional mind?”

    According to him, the constant outburst of George is not only pointless, but also suggests a dire frustration that he cannot stop an idea whose time has come.

    “We urge Chief Bode George to stop the pretences. Nigerians now know better,” Dada said.