Tag: LP

  • BREAKING: LP, PDP vs Sanwo-Olu: Our decision is unanimous, says Appeal Court

    BREAKING: LP, PDP vs Sanwo-Olu: Our decision is unanimous, says Appeal Court

    The State and National Assembly Appeal Court sitting in Lagos has begun hearing the appeals filed by the candidates of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Olajide Adediran, and the Labour Party (LP), Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour against the victory of Babajide Sanwo-Olu as the validly elected winner of the March 18 election for the office of the governor of Lagos state.

    Read Also: Senate takes steps to address NLC strike

    The three-man panel told the court before reading their judgment that their decision was unanimous.

    The judges began the proceedings at 3:06 pm.

    Judgment is ongoing.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Saturday, March 18, 2023, conducted an election for the Office of the Governor of Lagos State.

    Dissatisfied, the LP and PDP challenged the decision.

    In a unanimous decision, the three-man panel of justices on the Lagos State Governorship Election Petitions Tribunal on September 25 affirmed the victory of Babajide Sanwo-Olu of the All Progressives Congress (APC) as the winner, following which the petitioners approached the Appeal Court.

  • LP, PDP call for cancellation of Imo gov election

    LP, PDP call for cancellation of Imo gov election

    By Chris Njoku and Damian Duruiheoma Owerri

    Labour Party and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have called for an outright cancellation of the Imo State governorship election held on Saturday, November 12.

    The Deputy Governorship candidate of the LP, Tony Nwulu, in a press conference on Saturday night, said that the security agents allegedly provided security to the staff of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the members of the All Progressives Congress to subvert the will of the people of the state.

    Nwulu said: “As I speak to you all the electoral materials had been diverted to all the local government Areas secretariats in the state where rewriting of the election results was allegedly ongoing.”

    He said that the APC members engaged in vote buying, intimidation of voters, snatching of electoral materials, and the diversion of the poll materials to the homes of individuals and the LGA council headquarters for manipulations.

    Read Also; UPDATED: INEC declares Imo Gov Uzodimma re-elected

    He said that the LP won in the actual votes cast in the election, saying that “democracy is under threat in this state.”

    Nwulu said: “There was no election in Imo state on Saturday. What happened was the diversion of the electoral materials to the homes of the people and the LGA council headquarters. In all this, the police, army, and DSS provided security to the actors.

    “They came with huge sums of money to the polling units for votes buying but the Imo people rejected them. They now resorted to snatching of electoral materials, and diversion of the electoral materials to the homes of individuals and to the LGA headquarters where they are currently rewriting the results.

    “In all these things, the police, army, and DSS are providing security to the APC members and staff of INEC in these disgraceful acts. We have all the records. We are putting Nigerians on notice that there was no election in Imo state on Saturday.

    “The position of our party and my principal, Athan Achonu, who is the governorship candidate of the party in Imo state is that this sham called election to be cancelled, out rightly.”

    Addressing journalists in a separate press conference, the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Samuel Anyanwu, also called for the cancellation of the election.

    He said that INEC and the security agents failed in their constitutional responsibility to deliver credible elections to the people of the state.

    He said that instead, the security agents protected INEC staff as the APC members rewrote results.

    Anyanwu said that he and his party, the PDP, would not accept anything other than a total cancellation of the poll.

  • PDP’s Diri inducing voters with money, says LP candidate

    PDP’s Diri inducing voters with money, says LP candidate

    Labour Party governorship candidate, Udengs Eradiri has alleged that his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) counterpart and incumbent governor, Douye Diri is inducing voters with money.

    Eradiri spoke after casting his vote in Ward 10, Unit 5, Ekpetiama, Yenagoa, Bayelsa state on Saturday, November 11.

    The former president of the Ijaw Youths Council (IYC), Worldwide, said it was unfortunate that the government was buying votes with state resources that should be used to improve the lives of the people of Bayelsa State.

    He said: “Some of us have decided that we will embrace the non-violent approach. But behind the scenes, state resources are everywhere, money is being exchanged for votes, ten, fifteen, twenty thousand, and so on.

    “Money that would have been used in building good schools, standard hospitals and improving the lots of the people they are buying peoples votes.”

    He also accused the ruling party of entrenching poverty in the state despite the huge resources coming into the state.

    Read Also: Bayelsa citizens don’t deserve Sylva, says Diri

    He said: “The government in power, the ruling party in the state has entrenched poverty in a state that produced oil. Today Bayelsa is the second poorest state in the country

    “And they are inducing voters with money. That is not the way to go. The people deserve better and we must change what is going on in the interest of the state.

    “I will never buy votes, even if I have the money. I will never use the money to induce voters because it is not my nature. We must do things differently l-Hasan to Change our state and our society. “

    He, however, expressed delight the election was going on smoothly in his area, saying Ekpetiama had remained a peaceful community.

  • Imo Decides: LP accuses APC of hijacking electoral materials

    Imo Decides: LP accuses APC of hijacking electoral materials

    By Damian Duruiheoma, Owerri

    The Labour Party in Imo state has accused members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) of hijacking the electoral materials meant for four wards in the Ideato North Local Government Area of the state.

    The state chairman of the party, Calistus Ihejiagwa, who made the allegations in a statement he issued on Saturday afternoon, said that the security agents were aiding the APC members to hijack and divert the materials.

    He said: “Rigging is ongoing now by APC at Akokwa in Ideato North LGA at the house of an indigene of the area.

    Read Also; INEC denies withdrawing password for upload of result to IREV

    “They highjacked all the voting materials from the four wards in Arondizuogu clan and are voting with it there.

    “They have about 10 Hilux vehicles with police, army, and NSDC. They blocked the roads and are giving APC cover as they rig the election

    “Secondly Governor Hope Uzodimma is moving around here in Ideato North LGA with heavy security men. Right now, he is at the INEC office in Urualla inside the council headquarters manipulating INEC people.”

    But the spokesperson for the APC in the state, Cajetan Duke, said there was no truth in the allegation.

    He insisted that the APC members are conducting them well in the election.

  • NLC’s planned nationwide strike an economic sabotage of Tinubu’s govt – LP faction

    NLC’s planned nationwide strike an economic sabotage of Tinubu’s govt – LP faction

    A faction of the Labour Party (LP) led by Lamidi Apapa has knocked the organised labour for threatening to shut down the economy because of the assault on the president of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero in Imo state.

    The party accused the NLC of hiding under the assault on its president to sabotage President Bola Tinubu’s government.

    It also accused Ajaero of using the NLC to prosecute a personal agenda of both political and economic against the Imo state government.

    The national publicity secretary of the Labour Party (LP) faction, Abayomi Arabambi said this in a statement on Saturday, November 11, in Abuja.

    The party also carpeted organised labour for blocking the roads leading to the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport as part of a protest against the brutalisation of Ajaero by alleged thugs.

    The NLC president led a protest to Owerri, Imo state capital against the state government where he was assaulted.

    This has led the NLC and Trade Union Congress to threaten to embark on a nationwide strike on November 14 unless its demands are met.

    The statement by the Labour Party (LP) said: “Joe Ajaero’s indiscriminate use of NLC to prosecute his personal agenda of attempted political and economic conquest of his home state of Imo is an affirmation of his desire to overthrow democracy

    “Just yesterday, he was quoted to have said that nothing is wrong if INEC postpones the scheduled Saturday election and further affirmed their decision to go ahead with the strike by midnight of Monday despite the restraining order granted to the Federal Government of Nigeria by the National Industrial court.

    “What manner of institutionalised manifest executive rascality on display, the first of its kind by a labour union leader with a posture that he is a government on his own? Joe Ajaero’s disregard for the rule of law is very alarming and such an action has definitely overstretched the limit of law permissible thus constituting a treasonable felony act.

    “Here was a man whose instincts tell him that the people of Nigeria must be made to suffer because his ego was bruised by Imo state workers who were protesting his dictatorial tendencies of attempting to install his cousin as the chairman of Imo state council of NLC.

    “The Minister of Aviation and AeroSpace Development would recollect that some weeks ago, the Federal Executive Council, chaired by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu approved and adopted wholesale the MOU, and some of the agreements in the MOU have been implemented. The wage award of N35,000 to Federal workers is being paid. The N25,000 to be paid over 6 months to 15 million households is also being executed.

    “President Bola Ahmed Tinubu GCFR administration has also demonstrated his commitments to the MOU by the removal of the 7.5% VAT on diesel as demanded by the Labour Movement and last week launched the Compressed Natural Gas vehicles, which it promised to provide countrywide.

    “But despite all this laudable commitment, the Joe Ajaero-led Military wing supporters of the Labour party are hell-bent on going on strike and shutting down the economy with the sole aim of political and economic conquest of Nigeria simply because one container loads economist bland petition was dismissed under two minutes by the Supreme Court.”

    The party urged the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development not to blame it for the actions of some persons.

    Read Also: LP protests as INEC allegedly changes PU officers on Election Day

    The statement further read: “We advise the Hon Minister to wake up some of the lame duck APC leaderships who out of fear for those toothless PObidient have abandoned the APC ruling party responsibilities to voice their opinions against Joe Ajaero and his military wing of Peter Obi Labour party support group attempted insurrection through violent overthrow of the administration of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu GCFR.

    “The President’s many appointees are also culpable in the current shenanigans been orchestrated by Joe Ajaero military junta because they have suddenly become voiceless, unconcerned about the legitimacy and safety of the President of Nigeria Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu GCFR which has since been confirmed by the Supreme Court.

    “All Nigerians have a duty to protect the Nigeria territory and democratic institutions which is currently under the Leadership of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu GCFR administration and thus it’s not an excuse for any appointee of the President and Members of APC National Working Committee to constitute themselves as benchwarmers, voiceless leaders and uninterested bystanders.”

  • PDP, LP express disappointment

    PDP, LP express disappointment

    • Wait till 2031, Ganduje tells opposition parties
    • Atiku, Obi courageous, say Adebayo

    It was different strokes yesterday for the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Labour Party (LP) on the judgment of the Supreme Court.

    The parties were reacting to the apex court verdict which dismissed the appeals filed by the candidates of the PDP – Atiku Abubakar and that of the LP – Peter Obi.

    The PDP and the LP expressed their disappointment with the dismissal of their appeals against the ruling of the Presidential Election Petitions Court (PEPC), which affirmed President Bola Ahmed Tinubu as the winner of the election.

    But the APC National Chairman, Abdullahi Gaduje, told the opposition parties that there would be no vacancy at the Presidential Villa until 2031.

    He described the affirmation of President Tinubu by the apex court as victory for democracy.

    Wait till 2031 for your ambition

    Dr. Ganduje advised former vice president Atiku and one-time Anambra governor Obi to wait till 2031 to actualise their presidential ambition.

    He gave the advice shortly after the Supreme Court upheld Tinubu’s victory in Abuja.

    In a statement by his spokesman, Edwin Olofu, the APC chair told the two presidential candidates that there is no vacancy in the Villa until 2031.

    He, however, admonished the two leaders that hope is not lost for them as they can still actualise their aspiration after eight years.

    The statement reads: “This is democracy. Tinubu’s victory is another victory for democratic rule in the country. There is still room for both Obi and Atiku to actualise their presidential aspiration after the second term tenure of President Tinubu in 2031.”

    Ganduje commended both Atiku and Obi for their dogged fight to extend the frontiers of our democracy and law, by taking their case to the apex court.

    SDP: ruling couldn’t have been different

    The candidate of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) at the February 25 poll, Prince Adewole Adebayo, said yesterday’s verdict came as he had predicted

    Adebayo’s party came sixth in the election contested by 18 parties.

    Read Also: Imo elders’ council urges PDP, LP, APGA candidates, others to step down for Uzodimma

    Congratulating the president on his victory at the at the apex court, the lawyer-turned politician, said he and other politicians should look forward to 2027 for another elections.

    Writing on his official X handle, @Pres_Adebayo, he said: “Once again, as I did when @inecnigeria declared @officialABAT duly elected as President of Nigeria, I warmly congratulate @officialABAT on his Supreme Court victory upholding the Court of Appeal judgment. I pray that neither Mr. President, nor Nigerians will regret this day. God bless Nigeria.”

    He insisted that the court should not be blamed because the Supreme Court had just upheld its well-established precedent and done justice according to the laws of Nigeria.

    Commending Atiku and Obi for fighting their battle up to the apex court, Adebayo however urged them to take another shot at the presidency in 2027. He said: “The courts are not to blame. Exactly as I had predicted to the letter, the Supreme Court has upheld its well established precedents and done justice according to the laws of Nigeria. Kudos to @atiku and @PeterObi. @officialABAT won. We shall vie again in 2027.”

    LP dismayed

    LP National Chairman Julius Abure said his party’s was disappointed and dismayed by the outcome of the Supreme Court judgment.

    Urged its supporters to be vigilant and brace for the challenges ahead, Abure said: “The leadership of LP watched as the sacred fabric of justice and good conscience was shredded today at the Supreme Court as it delivered its verdict in the case between our party’s Presidential candidate and the APC Presidential candidate.

    “We are indeed very shocked and surprised that even the apex Court will toe the line of an earlier judgment in spite of all the flaws associated with the judgment delivered by the Presidential Election Appeal Tribunal.

    “Having conclusively exercised our fundamental rights as gifted to us by the laws of the land, we have no other choice but to move on. We may be disappointed and dismayed by the outcome of the exercise but we have chosen to trudge on and to remain optimistic of what the future holds for the nation.

    “We weep for our Institutions that cannot rise to the occasion and courageously defend democracy and the voices of our people.

    “However, there are great lessons to be learnt. What transpired in Nigeria since the February 25 presidential election is a clear testament that our institutions are not working and that we may be sliding towards dictatorship.

    “It is very clear that the executive has hijacked both the judiciary and the legislature. This is so unfortunate for our democracy and it is even more for the people of Nigeria.

    “All what our forbearers taught us has been destroyed within a short space of time because of the unbridled ambition of a few. The founding fathers fought with their lives to achieve independence for the country.

    “People lost their lives for the struggle to keep our democracy and all these years people have been struggling to achieve electoral and constitutional reforms. Regrettably, all of these efforts and struggles have been destroyed today.”

    He expressed the fear that opposition parties and their members might be vilified for their actions.

    He said that “persecution, intimidation, suppression and harassment of our leaders using security agencies and all other government institutions will be definitely defended.

    “We are therefore calling on all our members, and the Obidient family to be vigilant and brace up for the challenges ahead. The struggle for a new Nigeria will certainly be tortuous and hard.

    “Finally, we urge Nigerians not to lose hope in our Country. Though we are paying a huge price to achieve a Nigeria of our desire, we are hopeful that we will get to our destination someday because where there is a will, certainly, there will be a way. A new Nigeria is still possible.”

    Verdict disappointing, concerning, PDP laments

    The PDP lamented the loss of its former presidential candidate at the apex court in a statement signed by its National Publicity Secretary, Debo Ologunagba.

    Ologunagba described the judgment as “disappointing” and “concerning”. According to him, “the apex court has failed Nigerians”.

    The PDP spokesman said the party was alarmed and gravely concerned with the decision of the highest court, saying the opposition party believed the judgment was against the express provisions of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Electoral Act 2022, the Guideline and Regulation, issued by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    The statement reads: “The PDP is appalled by the judgment of the Supreme Court in the petition filed by the PDP and presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar against the declaration of the APC and Bola Ahmed Tinubu as winners of the February 25, presidential election by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    “The PDP, and indeed majority of Nigerians, are alarmed, disappointed and gravely concerned with the reasoning of the Supreme Court which the PDP believes is against the express provisions of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), the Electoral Act, 2022, the Guideline and Regulation issued by INEC under which the election was conducted.

    “The PDP asserts that it is indeed a sad commentary for our democracy that the Supreme Court failed to uphold the provisions of the law. Instead, it trashed the expectation of majority of Nigerians who looked up to it as a Temple of Impartiality to deliver substantial justice in the matter having regards to the laws and facts of the case.”

    He claimed that some Nigerians expected the court to uphold and defend the clear provisions of the 1999 Constitution in terms of qualification and minimum requirement for a winner to be declared in a presidential election in Nigeria.

    Ologunagba was referring to the required statutory 25% of votes in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), which the apex court clarified yesterday.

    The PDP statement further reads: “This judgment by the Supreme Court has evidently shaken the confidence of Nigerians in the judiciary, especially the Supreme Court as the last hope of the common man.”

    The party said it however remained undeterred and charged Nigerians not to be discouraged or allow the judgment to detract from their collective quest for the entrenchment of a credible electoral system that can guarantee a government that truly derives its legitimacy from the people.

  • Onyejeocha plotting to destabilise our party, says LP

    Onyejeocha plotting to destabilise our party, says LP

    • Leave me out of your crisis, minister replies

    The Labour Party (LP) has accused Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Nkeiruka Onyejeocha, of plotting to destabilise the party by sponsoring the Lamidi Apapa-led faction.

    National Youth Leader, Kennedy Ahanotu, made the allegations at a news conference on Wednesday in Abuja. 

    The party accused the former House of Representatives member of “fighting a personal and proxy war against the party.”

    But, Onyejeocha asked the party to leave her out of its crisis, saying she was not involved.

    The Tribunal sitting in Umuahia the Abia State Capital had nullified the election of Amobi Ogah of the Labour Party, representing Isiukwuato Umunneochi Federal Constituency on grounds of non-compliance to the Electoral Act.

    LP accused Onyejeocha of trying to use her connections to overturn the election of Ogah who was declared winner by the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC.

    In a statement, the minister urged the party to leave her alone and settle its self-inflicted internal crisis. 

    In the statement signed by her Media Aide, Gabriel Emameh, the minister said she believed in the rule of law and in the sanctity of the courtroom as well as the judiciary as the citadel of justice.

    Read Also: Tinubu appoints nine new REC for INEC

    She added that she was “optimistic that a Daniel will also come to judgment at the Appeal Tribunal.”

    The statement added: “As a strong believer in the rule of law and in the sanctity of the courtroom as well as the judiciary as the citadel of justice, she is optimistic that a Daniel will also come to judgment at the Appeal Tribunal.

    “That is not to say that she is not supremely happy and proud of her new national assignment. 

    “As a matter of fact, she wishes with all devotion that the idlers in LP and their sponsors should get meaningfully busy and lay off her back with their irritations. 

    “She has a sacred National assignment to deliver governance outcomes to the people. And she is devoted to it.

    “My honest and sincere counsel is that the LP should face up to the pervasive leadership crises in the party, look inwards and reinvent itself and allow the Honourable Minister to focus on her assistant as she is too busy to be distracted.”

    The LP said: “The leadership of the Labour Party wishes to intimate Nigerians on yet an unholy alliance between the Honourable Minister of State for Labour, Nkiruka Onyejeocha and some expelled members of our party led by Chief Lamidi Apapa, and whose purpose is to ensure that crisis is sustained perpetually in our party. 

    “One may begin to wonder what connects Hon. Onyejeocha and the Labour Party that she will go to length to instigate and fund crisis within the party. 

    “We are however aware that the former lawmaker is fighting a personal and proxy war against the party.” 

  • LP, NLC, Catholic bishops now official opposition

    LP, NLC, Catholic bishops now official opposition

    Despite having about 13 governors, 36 senators and 118 House of Representatives members in the National Assembly, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is playing second fiddle as the main opposition party after the 2023 general election. Increasingly, the Labour Party (LP), with one governor, eight senators and 35 House of Representatives members, assisted by others, is talking, acting and behaving as the official opposition. The trend will worsen in the months ahead if the PDP does not shake off its lethargy and incompetent politicking. However, the game is not yet over for the PDP. It has a far bigger and better structure than the LP, more active and experienced politicians and vote herders, and far more pugnacious governors and local government administrators. While it is indeed hard imagining the party dead anytime soon, at least not in the next four years, its morbidity has become unsettlingly obvious, particularly in the face of the aggressive and anarchic politics of the LP.

    Last April, when Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka crossed swords with LP presidential running mate Datti Baba-Ahmed over the latter’s unbridled vituperations against the judiciary, and again last Wednesday as he snorted at LP presidential candidate Peter Obi’s insistence that he won the February 25 election, many analysts accused the laureate and other commentators of been obsessed with the LP. There is, however, little to suggest any obsession. Mr Obi may speak and gesture more often and more wildly than the PDP presidential candidate in that election, Atiku Abubakar, and continues to weave many far-fetched conspiracies around his purported victory, but whatever fixations are noticeable around him have little to do with him as a person or his politics. He may appeal to a cross-section of Nigerians, some of them young and too angry to rationalise their pains and goals, but he remains essentially insular and his politics annoyingly predictable. For the perceptive, both Mr Obi and the LP have become objects of derision much more than they have become objects of fascination or obsession.

    Read Also: APC, PDP, LP and unending firefights

    The reason is not far to seek. By some incredible conjunction of events and personalities, a different kind of opposition appears to be budding through a coalition of angry ethnic and sectarian diehards. It may not last, for the coalition energising that unusual opposition is incapable of enduring for long, but while it lasts it will shake the leadership rafters, upset the political applecart, and attempt to dismantle the cultural and bureaucratic ramparts upon which Nigeria rested. On its own, and regardless of the ferocity and population of the politically alienated in the country, the LP could not achieve the heights it has reached in the past one year. Mr Obi lacks the unifying and ideological depth required to vivify even his own indeterminate brand of politics. And for someone so parsimonious as to be offensive, he needed funds and a certain gregariousness to concretise and amplify his amorphous message. It is true he had been a two-term governor, an unprincipled party defector, and a one-time running mate to former vice president Atiku. But he needed much more than himself and his political peregrinations to win national recognition visible enough to upset the regnant power structure that has held the country in thrall for decades. By no special and gifted deeds of his making, and certainly not by dint of education or extraordinary grasp of the fundamentals of development, he achieved that renown through a coalition that thrust him awkwardly and apocalyptically upon Nigeria beginning from 2022. Yes, just one dizzying and incredible year.

    Mr Obi did not deliberately put that coalition together. Nor did any other arm of that coalition consciously worm its way into the group. The Book of Proverbs talks about time and chance happening to people and predisposing them to the vagaries of human existence. Something closely resembling that happenstance foisted the Obi-led coalition upon Nigeria. The All Progressives Congress (APC), which eventually won the February poll, had presented a Muslim-Muslim presidential ticket to a country driven to insane rage by religious divisions. The Christians were, therefore, not going to have such insult, and were determined to put down the Muslim dervishes. They needed a champion, and they found one in the unconscionable Mr Obi who in any other circumstance could be taken for an atheist despite his fulsome show of religiosity. The Pentecostal bishops lined up behind Mr Obi, and backed him with thunderous and unremitting prophecies. The Catholic bishops also breathed undiluted anger against the APC same-faith ticket. Onward into battle they all marched with Mr Obi, unperturbed by his follies and foibles. Indeed they couldn’t care less if he were the very devil himself, or Lucifer’s lieutenant.

    But the dissembling Mr Obi and the presumptuous bishops were not sufficient to form the Axis powers against the APC. They easily found a second leg in the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), which claimed the LP as its baby. Maternal instincts, the NLC claims, not the ethnic instincts alleged against the NLC president Joe Ajaero from Abia State, explained the filial bond with Mr Obi. The coalition, however, needed one more leg to form a tripod. They found one in the Igbo ethnic group of the Southeast pained by the audacity of the Southwest to want to take the presidency soon after ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo occupied the throne for eight years and his Ogun State kinsman Yemi Osinbajo assumed the vice presidency a little later for another eight years. The Southeast would have none of that provocation. Irate and full of righteous ethnic rage and pride, they saw Mr Obi as their infallible and immutable champion. If the former Anambra State governor had remained in the PDP, they might have won the 2023 poll, but they would not have the untrammelled joy of having one of their own in Aso Villa. Had Mr Obi stayed put in the PDP, he could not of course attract as many votes as he did in the LP, not to say across many states as he managed, but the contest would have been settled before the first ballot was cast. To the Southeast, therefore, Mr Obi became a folk hero, and his native region was determined to swim or sink with him, through crocodile infested waters and through a Niagara of lies and utter fabrications.

    With that troika of support, the Obi coalition became ironclad and was ready to steamroll the enemy. They would still have achieved the same results that have today warmed the cockles of their hearts, but nature gifted them an extra brigade by adding a section of disaffected southern youths riled by incompetent policing. The EndSARS generation, indulgent, entitled, hyperactive and immoderate also saw in Mr Obi a champion, not an ethnic or religious champion, but an authentic leader forever and delectably cooing about Asian Tigers and utopias. The youths were themselves not questioning or discriminating, and the facile logic of the LP candidate could not be subjected to any validity tests, so it was easy for Mr Obi to pull wool over their faces and bamboozle them with highfalutin economic jargons and dainty phrases. With this icing on the cake, but with no substantial grounding whatsoever or coherent logic of any kind, Mr Obi took the political arena by storm and has since then waved his sorcery under the noses of his supporters, helped no doubt by a few Southwest dissenters and political titans.

    But after repeatedly coming to grief on their prophetic Golgotha, the Pentecostal bishops have seen the light and have largely and shamefacedly retreated into their cocoons, sometimes giving the Tinubu administration grudging respect, support and admiration. A few hardy bishops are still in the trenches or in the mountains calling down fire, but on the whole the Pentecostals appeared convinced that the arms of God were not shortened that they could not save last February. Had the Almighty wanted a different outcome, it would not have taken him a second to throw the Tinubu candidacy out of kilter. If the Pentecostals are chastened by inaccurate prophecies and mortified by defeat, the same is not true of the Catholic bishops, one leg of the Obi-led formidable opposition. Staid, less given to prophecy, and Catholic like Mr Obi himself, these other bishops seem determined to perish with their champion who has gone down in defeat. Dissatisfied with the results they got from opposing the APC before and immediately after the elections, they have happily joined the LP candidate in opposing the administrations’ economic, social and political policies at every whim. All they need is to sense which way Mr Obi is turning or which direction the APC is going in order to adjust their compass.

    Sadly, the Catholic Church in Nigeria is now fully a political machine, no longer an instrument for peace, righteousness and salvation. At every turn, and together with the NLC and the Southeast, they have belittled the APC, refused to acknowledge the victory of President Tinubu, and have sneered at the courts and inveighed against their juridical competence. Mr Obi could not have asked for better comrades-in-arms. For the foreseeable future, the APC will have to come to grips with the new and unorthodox opposition. They will require far more exquisite skills and technology to battle an opposition that is inconversant with logic and contemptuous of ideas, for an opposition propelled by sentiments and self-righteous zeal is not easy to persuade and is far more difficult to defeat.

  • Mixed fortunes for APC, PDP, Labour at tribunals

    Mixed fortunes for APC, PDP, Labour at tribunals

    • Lalong wins senatorial seat
    • LP Reps sacked in Abia
    • APC, PDP Reps   axed in Delta
    • Plateau governor triumphs

    All Progressives Congress (APC), Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Labour Party (LP) are counting their gains and loses at the governorship and legislative tribunals in states.

    The National Assembly Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Jos yesterday declared Simon Lalong as the duly elected Senator to represent Plateau South Senatorial District.

    Lalong, former governor of Plateau and Minister of Labour and Employment, ran on the platform of the APC.

    In Abia State, the tribunal sitting in Umuahia, the state capital, declared the election of Labour Party’s Munachim Alozie invalid. He was declared winner of Obingwa/Osisioma/Ugwunagbo Federal Constituency.

    Also, the tribunal  in Asaba, capital of Delta State, nullified the election of the member representing Ughelli/Udu Federal Constituency at the House of Representatives, Rev. Francis Waive. He ran on APC ticket.

    In Plateau State, the tribunal sitting in Jos, the state capital,  dismissed the petition filed by Alfred Dabwan of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) against Governor Caleb Mutfwang of the PDP.

    LP candidates victory upheld in Abia

    The National Assembly Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Umuahia, Abia State capital, upheld the  victory of LP candidate in Isiala Ngwa North and South Constituency, Ginger Onwusibe.

    The panel also dismissed the petition filed by the PDP candidate, Chief Anthony Agbazuere, his APC counterpart, Chijoke Ikpo, against Onwusibe.

    The INEC had declared Onwusibe winner after polling 20,411 votes to defeat Agbazuere, who scored 13,508 votes and the APC candidate who polled 2976 votes.

    Agbazuere had prayed the tribunal to disqualify the respondent for not resigning officially from the PDP before joining the LP.

    He also told the court that INEC was not given any notice, 30 days before the party congress, where the respondent was picked as the LP candidate.

    The respondent, through his counsel, Mr Okite  Okite, argued that what the petitioners brought to the tribunal were pre-election matters that had already been decided in the favour of his client at the Supreme Court.

    In a unanimous judgment, the panel, led by Justice Hajaratu Hajjo Lawal, ruled that the tribunal lacked the jurisdiction to entertain the matter.

    The campaign director of the respondent, Mr Onwere Nmesirionye, hailed the judgment, saying it was the true reflection of the will of his constituents.

    Tribunal orders rerun in Abia

    The National Assembly Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Umuahia, the Abia State capital, declared the election in Obingwa/Osisioma/Ugwunagbo Federal Constituency null and void.

    The court also ordered for a rerun within the next 90 days according to the constitution.

    The tribunal, led by Justice Lawal, noted in a judgment delivered by a panel member, Prof. Muhammad Mahmud, that the LP candidate was declared in error and therefore, his victory cannot stand.

    The candidate of the Young Progressives Party (YPP), Ibe Michael Nwoke, had prayed the court to  nullify the election of LP’s Alozie as he was not duly elected and his election invalid based on the margin of lead.

    Also, the tribunal sitting in Umuahia North Local Government Area sacked three LP House of Representatives members.

    A panel of the tribunal led by Justice Adeyinka Aderegbe, sacked the member representing Arochukwu/Ohafia Constituency, Mr. Ibe Okwara Osunwa, for non-compliance with the Electoral Act.

    The tribunal ordered the INEC to withdraw the certificate of return issued to Osunwa and issue a new one to Okeke.

    Lalong wins:

    The tribunal held that the votes scored by Lalong’s opponent,  Napoleon Bali of PDP were wasted votes because  he was invalidly nominated.

    The Plateau APC congratulated Lalong for his triumph at the tribunal presided over by Justice B. M .Tukur.

    The chapter, in a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Sylvanus Namang,  agreed with the tribunal that PDP   ought not to have participated in the last Plateau South senatorial poll because it lacked a validly recognised legal structure.

     It added: “We also want to applaud justices O. Elekwa and O. A. Adetujoye, who also concurred with the lead judgment. The  judgment, we believe, is a clear  roadmap to better days ahead for the APC in the state in the remaining Plateau Tribunal  judgments.”

    Mutfwang triumphs:

    The tribunal dismissed the petition by Dabwan of NNPP against Mutfwang. The NNPP candidate had complained against unlawful exclusion of his party’s logo by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the ballot.

    Mutfwang hailed the verdict in his favour, saying that the Justice A. Y. Joh-led tribunal judgment validated the will of the people.

    He said: “We give thanks to God Almighty, the ultimate judge. We were confident in the outcome of this election, which was clearly in our favour. We commend the judiciary for upholding the voters’ choice.”

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    Mutfwang said  the ruling was a victory for democracy and the people of Plateau State.

    He said: “We are approaching the conclusion of these cases, and while one more governorship petition remains, we remain hopeful and confident it will also be resolved in our favour. We look forward to closing this chapter and focusing on the task of governance.”

    The tribunal also declared Fom Dalyop Chollom of the (LP), an engineer, winner of the National Assembly election for Barkin Ladi Riyom Federal Constituency.

    Fom had challenged the victory of Peter Gyenden of the PDP on the ground that he was not validly nominated.

    Wombo’s victory affirmed:

    The National/State Assembly Election Petition Tribunal in Makurdi, Benue State, has upheld the election of Solomon Wombo of AD in the KatSina-Ala/Ukum/Logo Federal Constituency.

    The Chairman of the panel, Justice Ory’zik Ikeorha, said the petitioners, Richard Gbande, and the PDP, failed to prove their case.

    Justice Ikeorha said 17 of the 19 witnesses called by the petitioner filed their written addresses out of time.

    She said while some of the paragraphs of the petition were complaints on polling units, many others were generic and without basis.

    Justice Ikeorha said: “The reliefs sought are hereby refused, the petition stands dismissed in entirety, no order of cost.”

    INEC had declared Wombo as winner of the election with 59,939 votes while Gbande came second with 39,414 votes.

    Akpatason, Iyawe survive:

    The National/House of Assembly Election Petitions Tribunal in Benin, Edo State affirmed the re-election of the House of Representatives member from Akoko-Edo Constituency, Peter Akpatason, of the APC.

    The petition by LP’s Omobayo Marvellous Godwin, was dismissed by Justice Yusuf Mohammed.

    The tribunal also dismissed the petition of APC’s Osaro Osazee against the election of LP’s Esosa Iyawe, the representative of Oredo Constituency in the House of Representatives, for lacking merit.

    Delivering the unanimous judgment, Justice K.A. Leweanya held that the tribunal lacked jurisdiction to entertain the petition because it was a pre-election matter.

    He said the qualification of Iyawe ought to have  been challenged at the Federal High Court

    APC, PDP candidates sacked in Delta

    In Asaba, the tribunal  nullified the election of the member representing Ughelli/Udu Constituency in the House of Representatives, Rev. Francis Waive.

    The PDP candidate, Chief Solomon Awhinawhi, had challenged the declaration of Waive of the APC as winner.

    Waive’s election was nullified on grounds of improper documentation and declared Awhinawhi winner.

    The tribunal ordered a re-run at Enwhe Ward 09, Isoko South Local Government Area in Isoko Federal Constituency,

    The candidate of the Social Democratic Party (SDP), Mr Dickson Ebegbare, had challenged the declaration of Jonathan Ukodhiko of the PDP as winner.

    Ebegbare argued that Ukodhiko was not duly elected by lawful votes, insisting that elections did not hold in Enhwe.

    The tribunal held that INEC ought to have conducted a rerun in Enhwe .

    Justice R O Odogo, who delivered the judgment in Kano, declared that APC’s  petition  was incompetent,  adding that the burden of proof was not discharged.

    He said: “We find no merit in this petition and accordingly, it is hereby dismissed. We affirmed the declaration of Abdulrahman Kawu Sumaila of New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) as the winner of the Kano South Senatorial District election, held on 25th Feb. 2023.”

    The tribunal awarded N200,000 cost against respondent.

    The election of another Kano NNPP House of Representatives member, Idris Dankawu, was voided.

    Dankawu, according to the tribunal  forged his West African School Certificate, (WAEC) when he  contested the election in Kumbotso Constituency.

    The petitioner, Munir Babba Danagudi, had alleged that the respondent forged the Secondary School Certificate to secure admission into Nuhu Bamalli Polytechnic, Zaria, Kaduna State.

    Justice I.P Chima, who delivered the judgment, agreed with the petitioner and voided the respondent’s victory while directing INEC to set aside the Certificate of Return issued to him and declare Danagudi the winner.

    Oborevwori goes to Supreme Court

    Delta State Governor  Sheriff Oborevwori has filed a Notice of Appeal at the Supreme Court against the judgment of the Court of Appeal, Abuja, which ordered the Delta State Governorship Election Petition Tribunal to hear on merit, the petition filed by the LP candidate, Ken Pela, challenging his election.

    Oborevwori, in the Notice of Appeal filed by his lead counsel, Mr. Damian Dodo (SAN), stated that the appellate court erred in making an order for a retrial in the LP’s petition.

    A three-man panel of the Court of Appeal, led by Justice M L Shuaibu, had in a judgment delivered on August 31, faulted the decision of the tribunal to dismiss the case of the petitioners on claims that the petition was abandoned because the petitioners’ application for pre-hearing session was not properly filed.

    The appellate court ordered that the petition be taken back to the tribunal for hearing within the time stipulated in the Electoral Act.

    Dissatisfied with the decision of the Court of Appeal, the governor filed a Notice of Appeal at the Supreme Court where he is seeking an order of the court allowing the appeal.

    He also asked the court to set aside the judgment of the Appeal Court and affirmed the decision of the tribunal delivered on July 6.

  • Appeal Court orders tribunal to hear LP’s petition in Delta governorship dispute

    Appeal Court orders tribunal to hear LP’s petition in Delta governorship dispute

    The Court of Appeal in Abuja has ordered the Delta State Governorship Election Petition Tribunal to hear, on merit, a petition filed by the Labour Party (LP) and its candidate in the last election, Ken Pela, challenging the election of Sheriff Oborevwori of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    A three-member panel of the appellate court held, in a judgment on Thursday, August 31, that as against the finding of the tribunal, Pela and his party did not abandon their petition, marked: EPT/DL/GOV/01/2023.

    The court then ordered the petition back to the tribunal for hearing within the time stipulated in the Electoral Act.

    The judgment was on the appeal marked: CA/AS/EP/GOV/DL/04/2023, filed by Pela and his party against the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and six others.

    LP’s Pela, who came third behind Oborevwori and Senator Ovie Omo-Agege of the All Progressives Congress (APC), had challenged the outcome of the election and prayed the tribunal to among others, void Oborevwori’s return as the winner.

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    In a judgment on July 6, the tribunal, with Justice C. H. Achuchaogu as chairman, held that the petition was deemed abandoned on the grounds that the petitioners’ application for pre-hearing session was not properly filed.

    The tribunal proceeded to dismiss it l, holding among others, that “the petition was incompetent and a flagrant violation of Paragraph 18(1) of the 4th Schedule to the Electoral Act 2023.”