Tag: Ondo governorship

  • Ondo governorship: Seven APC aspirants accept primary election results

    Ondo governorship: Seven APC aspirants accept primary election results

    • Call for genuine reconciliation

    Seven of the 17 governorship aspirants in Ondo State that participated in the All Progressives Congress (APC) primary election have accepted results of the ele ction.

    The aspirants – Morayo Lebi, Prof. Dayo Faduyile, Dr Soji Ehinlanwo, Prince Diran Iyantan, Mayowa Akinfolarin, Dr Funmilayo Waheed-Adekojo and Jimi Odimayo – declared support and allegiance to Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa as the party’s candidate in the November election.

    But Senator Jimoh Ibrahim vowed to challenge the primary’s outcome to the Supreme Court.

    In a statement yesterday, the aspirants affirmed their support for the party and Governor Aiyedatiwa. They vowed to disallow anything that could polarize the party.

    Read Also: FG denies alleged plans to access Pension Funds

    The statement reads: “The party position is that Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa is our governorship candidate, this position should be sacrosanct to us all even when some of us have expressed some reservations. We acknowledge that perfection is a moving target.

    “As party leaders who have contributed significantly to nurturing the party to impressive growth, we cannot allow anything that could polarise our party with the potential consequence of undermining unity

    “We therefore urge our supporters and stakeholders to put aside personal interests and allow the overriding interest of the party to take precedence. Victory for our party in the November governorship election is of paramount importance. We hereby appeal to other aggrieved aspirants and party members to put aside their grievances in the party’s interest. We need everyone on board in the collective march toward victory.”

  • Ondo governorship: Akeredolu, Abraham return to court

    Bearing in the suit by the All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship aspirant Dr. Segun Abraham against Governor Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN) will begin at the Federal High Court sitting in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), on April 18.

    Abraham is challenging the emergence of the governor as the APC flag bearer for the 2016 poll and urging the court to declare him winner of the primary.

    The notice was served on concerned parties by the court presided over by Justice Nnamidi Dimgba in Abuja.

    The commencement of the suit followed the verdict of the Supreme Court that Akeredolu’s appeal was without merit and could not stop the case from being heard at the High Court.

    Abraham had approached the court to be declared the winner of the APC primary and subsequently sworn in to replace Akeredolu.

     

  • Ondo governorship: Akeredolu loses at Appeal Court

    Ondo governorship: Akeredolu loses at Appeal Court

    •It’s democracy at work, says Abraham

    The Appeal Court, sitting in Abuja, yesterday dismissed an application for a stay of proceedings filed by Ondo State Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN) against his election.

    A governorship aspirant in the last election, Olusegun Abraham, is challenging the choice of Akeredolu as the flag bearer of the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the November 26, last year, poll.

    Abraham said the party’s primary, which upheld the selection of Akeredolu, was fraught with irregularities.

    The APC chieftain said APC’s investigative committee recommended a repeat of the primary.

    Shortly after the primary, Abraham sought an interim injunction restraining the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) from recognising Akeredolu as the party’s governorship candidate in the November 26 poll, pending the hearing and determination of the motion on notice filed on the matter.

    In October, last year, the Federal High Court in Abuja, presided over by Justice Nnamdi Dimgba, held that Abraham’s application for an interim injunction had merit.

    The court ordered Akeredolu to appear before it on October 28, last, but the governor appealed the ruling and filed a stay of proceedings.

    The appellate court ruled that the appeal and the application for a stay of proceedings lacked merit.

    The court also ordered the governor to put up a defence as one of the respondents in the suit at the Federal High Court in Abuja.

    Abraham hailed the ruling, saying it was democracy in action.

    A statement yesterday in Akure, the state capital, by the Director-General of Abraham Support Group (ASG), Kunle Eko-Davies, said: “The events leading to the 2015 Ondo State APC primary are still fresh in our memories. The unilateral act of our party’s National Chairman to submit the name of Akeredolu as the candidate of the party, contrary to the decision of the party’s Appeal Committee and National Working Committee (NWC), is also fresh in our memories.

    “This is a quit notice to Governor Akeredolu and his members to vacate the Government House, which was acquired illegally.”

    It urged members of the ruling party and supporters to remain calm and prayerful.

    The statement added that the dispute would be handled as a family matter and resolved by the courts.

     

  • Confusion, despondency cloud Ondo governorship

    Confusion, despondency cloud Ondo governorship

    The November 26 governorship election in Ondo State has been generating interest across the country. From the beginning, the All Progressives Congress (APC) got it wrong during its primary. At the last minute, the situation in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) worsened with the substitution of Mr. Eyitayo Jegede’s name with that of Chief Jimoh Ibrahim as the flag bearer. Correspondent DAMISI OJO looks at the chances of the candidates and how the crisis in the two major parties may tilt the pendulum in favour of the flag bearer of the Alliance of Democracy (AD), Chief Olusola Oke.

    WITH less than three weeks to the Ondo State governorship election, the gladiators are in a fierce battle for the Alagbaka Government House. For the first time, the people are witnessing serious campaigns by the political parties. The candidates have introduced house-to-house campaigns, radio-television jingles, fliers, imposing posters and billboards.

    Even in taxi cabs and commercial buses, contestants are using their foot soldiers to convince the electorate on the need to vote for them to make a difference.

    Twenty-eight parties are in the race for the November 26 poll. But, only four are considered serious contenders. They are: Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN) of the All Progressives Congress (APC); Olusola Oke of the Alliance for Democracy (AD); Jimoh Ibrahim of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP); and Olu Agunloye of the Social Democratic Party (SDP).

    Those considered as fringe candidates are: Mrs Oluyi Folasade Helen (the African Peoples Alliance (APA); Gbenga Arigbede (the Peoples Redemption Party (PRP); Stephen Adeuti (the Labour Party (LP); Oyeleye Fasua (the Citizen Popular Party (CPP); Mrs Olagbegi Orunmoluyi (the Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN); and Mrs Falana Julianah (the Democratic People Party (DPP).

    Others include: Adeeyo Matthew (the Democratic Peoples Congress (DPC); Oluwadare Bada (the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP); Odedeyi John (the Hope Democratic Party (HDP); Ayibiowu Ige (the National Unity Party (NUP); Mrs Funmilayo Jenyo (the Better Nigeria Progressive Party (BNPP); and Adeniran Adeniyi (the Young Democratic Party (YDP).

    The political temperature in Ondo State is getting to a feverish level, following the crisis rocking the two major parties. The intra-party crisis is a fall-out of their shadow polls.

    The crisis within the PDP is the deepest. Few days ago, it was the former Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Eyitayo Jegede (SAN) that was recognized by INEC as the authentic candidate of the party. But, with the recent Abuja Federal High Court judgment that insisted that Ibrahim is the party’s authentic candidate, INEC had to substitute Jegede’s name with that of Ibrahim.

    Jegede, an indigene of Akure, has the full backing of Mimiko who in spite of criticisms preferred Jegede to any other aspirant in the Markafi’s camp of the PDP. The duo is from the same Ondo Central District that has dominated the seat for almost eight years. The insistence of Mimiko had truncated the zoning arrangement that had been in place since the return to civil rule in 1999. The ‘Akure Agenda’, which threw up Jegede as the candidate of the Mimiko-led faction, is backed by the Akure traditional ruler, Oba Ogunlade Aladetoyinbo.

    Before his name was removed from the list of candidates, Jegede had embarked on a sophisticated and decentralised campaign, especially in the central district. His branded campaign vehicles were all over the state, putting up banners and posters distributing stickers and other souvenirs generously to prospective voters.

    Ironically, it was the same day the Akure High Court presided over by Justice Rotimi Olamide directed that Jegede’s name should not be replaced that Justice Okon Abang of the Federal High Court in Abuja ruled that INEC should substitute Jegede’s name with that of the business magnate, Ibrahim.

    There was initial jubilation in Akure over the Akure court judgment, as many of Jegede’s supporters defied the rain and trooped out to celebrate. But, it was short-lived, following counter directive from Abuja that Ibrahim is the authentic candidate.

    With the announcement, a pandemonium was let loose in Akure, the Ondo State capital. Protests broke out in the capital as early as 7.00 am the following morning. It was masterminded by members of the National Union of Road Transport Workers’ Union (NURTW); they burned tyres on major highways and disrupted the peace of the city.

    With the current state of affairs, who will carry the day? Is it Akeredolu, Ibrahim, Oke or Agunloye?

     

    Akeredolu

     

    The former Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) President was also the governorship candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in 2012. Thus, his political structure is still intact. Some of his supporters have however left the APC, following the crisis that rocked the party after the primary.

    The economic crunch in the country, which has inflicted a bad image on the APC as a party, may affect his chances; as many people are of the opinion that President Muhammadu Buhari has not done enough to alleviate the suffering of the masses who voted overwhelmingly for him last year.

    Akeredolu may not do well in Ondo Central, although some bigwigs are backing him in the zone. They include: the senator representing the district, Chief Tayo Alasoadura; former lawmaker, Ifedayo Abegunde (Abena); and the immediate past senator representing the district, Dr Ayo Akinyelure.

    The APC flag bearer is the candidate to beat in Owo because he hails from the town. In Owo/Ose federal constituency, he would sweep the polls. The two other federal constituencies are in Akokoland. They are: Akoko Northeast/Akoko Northwest and Akoko Southeast/Southwest. The Akokos, who are in majority in the North District, have long been clamouring for one of their sons or daughters to emerge as the governor.

    Unfortunately, notable politicians from the area are not happy over the emergence of Akeredolu as the flag bearer and therefore, they may not back him the November 26 contest. Otherwise, the whole Ondo North would have been a smooth sail for the APC. Two of the aggrieved APC governorship aspirants are from the area. They are: Segun Abraham, who was the first runner-up in the primary, and Senator Ajayi Boroffice who came fourth.

    While Akeredolu may garner more votes in Owo/Ose axis, the support for him in Akoko is not certain, due to the fact that the AD’s flag bearer, Olusola Oke picked his running mate from the area. The fact that Agunloye, the SDP candidate, is an indigene of Erusu-Akoko will elicit the sympathy of many of his kinsmen and women.

    The supporters of Abraham may gravitate towards AD during the election. It is believed that many supporters of Boroffice are also with Oke.

    Ondo South has six local government areas: Ile-Oluji/Oke-igbo, Odigbo, Irele, Okitipupa, Ilaje and Ese-Odo. In past elections, the votes from the area have always been in favour of the PDP. For instance, the only senator in the Red Chamber on the platform of the PDP, Senator Yele Omogunwa, is from the district, while all the House of Representatives members from the district are also on the PDP platform. So, the Akeredolu Campaign Organisation has more work to do in the zone.

    Oke, who is from the riverine Ilaje community of Ilowo, is widely expected to clear the votes in Ondo South District.

    Nevertheless, the fact that Akeredolu’s running mate, Agboola Ajayi, is from the area will be a boost for the APC flag bearer. Ajayi is a former member of the House of Representatives and he is not a push-over in the politics of the area. Akeredolu also enjoys the support of the late Agagu’s brother, Femi Agagu and other APC bigwigs in the area, including Princess Oladunni Odu, Ajose Kudehinbu, Olu Bajowa and lucky Aiyedatiwa.

    Observers believe the acrimony in the APC may affect the fortune of its candidate, but reconciliation and mass mobilisation of voters are on-going to facilitate victory. However, there is need for a truce. The defection of Oke with his supporters may have an adverse effect for the APC.

     

    Ibrahim

     

    The fate of the PDP still hangs in the balance because of the intractable crisis rocking the party over the choice of its flag bearer. If the appeal filed by Jegede is not determined before November 26 or if it goes against the Mimiko-led faction, chances are that PDP supporters may resolve to back another candidate and scuttle the ambition of Ibrahim to govern the state.

    Ondo Central has the largest number of registered voters in the state and Akure metropolis has a large chunk on the list. Indications are that, with the emergence of the business mogul as the PDP candidate, the zone may vote against the PDP candidate. Going by the latest slogan ‘no Jegede, no vote in Akure’, indigenes of the capital city may stand aloof and allow non-indigenes to vote for candidates of their choice. Thus, it might be harvest of votes for the APC and the AD candidates.

    Besides, Ibrahim has no political structure. If the PDP is compelled to field the business magnet, there is the possibility of protest votes against the candidate of the Sheriff’s camp of the party in Ondo.

    Irrespective of who is contesting the election, Ibrahim or Jegede, the APC may have an upper hand in Ondo North District, because its candidate hails from the zone. The district has always been a no-go area for the PDP and other parties. Its residents are purely progressives. This is based on the legacies of the likes of the late Pa Adekunle Ajasin and Adebayo Adefarati, also of blessed memory. They imbibed the spirit of progressivism and impacted it on their people in the up north.

    However, the influence of the Deputy Governor Lasisi Oluboyo, Saka Lawal, Bamiduro Dada, Fatai Adams and others will boost the overall result of the PDP candidate in the area.

    Ibrahim may garner some reasonable votes from Ondo South District, where he hails from. The businessman is from Igbotako, Okitipupa Local Government Area and his people will vote for him, though he has no political structure in the zone.

    Some key PDP stalwarts in the area will back him to ensure that their son wins the poll. People in the South District, particularly from Ilaje axis, are not happy with the Mimiko administration. They say their area is marginalised, despite the fact that it is “the hen that lays the golden eggs”.

     

    Oke

     

    Oke is a successful legal practitioner and a former governorship aspirant on the APC platform. But, he dumped the party after the emergence of Akeredolu as its candidate. Oke petitioned the primary election appeal which recommended fresh primary for the contestants, because of undeniable irregularities. The National Working Committee (NWC) was to effect the conduct of the re-run primary, but the APC National Chairman Chief John Odigie-Oyegun overruled it and this prompted the former National Legal Adviser of the PDP to leave the party and join AD, where was promptly offered the party’s governorship ticket.

    Oke was also the governorship candidate of the PDP in the 2012 poll; contesting against Mimiko who ran on the platform of Labour Party (LP) then and Akeredolu of the defunct ACN.

    The Ilowo-born politician has been described as a grassroots man and has been attracting many supporters from the APC and PDP, because of their disputed primaries.

    His strength in the Ondo Central District rests solely on the fact that the leader of the party in Ondo State, Dr. Olowookere, is an indigene of Akure. He has the structure to boost Oke’s chances in the six local government areas in the district.

    Besides, Oke is banking on some prominent politicians that were formerly in the APC, but moved with him to the AD. Many of them are still operating secretly, using their resources to support to ensure that the AD flag bearer gets good votes from the largest senatorial district where the bulk of the votes will come from.

    Among those from the Ondo Central working for Oke are the Director-General of his campaign organisation and former Special Adviser to Osun State governor, Mr. Bola Ilori; the former Chief Press Secretary (CPS) to Governor Mimiko), now a lawyer, Mr. Kolawole Olabisi, who is the chairman, Media and Publicity Committee for the AD; and the former Commissioner for Transport, Otunba Omoniyi Omodara.

    One of the strategies that may work for Oke in Ondo North is the fact that his running mate, Ganny Dauda, is from the zone. The people of Akoko, who constitute the majority in the district, are aggrieved and since the two strongest political parties have not favoured them in the choice of the governorship flag bearers, they may vote for Oke, because of his deputy, who is from the area.

    Dauda is a popular grassroots politician in Akokoland and the entire northern district. He was a former local government chairman and later a lawmaker representing Akoko Northeast/Northwest at the House of Representatives. Besides, many aggrieved supporters of Senator Ajayi Boroffice have thrown their weight behind Oke for the November 26 contest.

    The bulk of the votes for Oke will come from Ondo South District, where he hails from. The AD candidate will have the sympathy of his people at the polls, especially now that Jegede’s name has been dropped; the factional PDP candidate’s running mate, John Ola Mafo, is from the zone.  Mafo, a former Commissioner for Information, is from Ilaje axis.

    The perceived marginalisation of the zone under the current Mimiko administration will also spur many voters in the district to vote for Oke. The Muslim may also back him, because his running mate is of their faith.

     

    Agunloye

     

    The former Minister and Chief Executive of the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) is a former governorship aspirant under the defunct ACN. The Erusu-Akoko born politician has been oiling his campaign machineries for the race to Alagbaka House. Already, he has secured the support of his home base, especially the backing by the influential Akoko Consultative Forum (ACF), led by Prince Festus Obaude. The group has been running a campaign forum for Agunloye. It has also been meeting stakeholders, including traditional rulers from the area on the need to support Agunloye whose party has no crisis like the major parties.

    Agunloye’s undoing however is that he may not have much backing in the other two senatorial districts, Ondo Central and Ondo South. He has tried to boost his chances by making a popular woman politician, Erelu Modupe Akindele-Martins, his running mate.

    Akindele-Martins is a former ACN women leader in the state. Since her emergence as the SDP deputy governorship candidate, the Okitipupa-born politician and socialite has been attracting lots of women to the AD camp. Women have a considerable large voting strength in the state.

    The AD may also reap from the fact that the two major parties, the APC and the PDP, are in disarray over their disputed primaries may work in Agunloye’s favour. Before their September 3 primary election, the APC was fortified, strong and believed to be the party to beat in the November 26 Ondo governorship. Its secretariat, near the Catholic Cathedral in Akure, was always a beehive of activities.

    But, few days to the shadow election when it was rumoured that one of the aspirants had been adopted, a group of people under the aegis of Movement Against Imposition (MAI) marched on the streets to protest against the development. This later degenerated into the purported sack of the party state chairman, Mr. Isaac Kekemeke by the MAI, which forced the former Secretary to the State Government (SSG) to remove all his properties in the secretariat and started running the party from his personal residence.

    The factionalisation is even worse within the PDP. The unhealthy rivalry between the Senator Ahmed Markafi-led group and the one led by Senator Ali Modu Sheriff at the national level has deeply affected the chances of the ruling party in the state.

    The party conducted two primaries, one in Akure and the other in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital. At last, INEC recognized Ibrahim who emerged as the flag bearer of the Sheriff camp during the Ibadan primary as the authentic candidate of the PDP. This development has dimmed the chances of the party, which was hitherto running a robust campaign for Jegede, who is regarded as a political son of Mimiko. This has saddened many supporters of the party and will no doubt affect the PDP in the election; many aggrieved supporters have vowed to stay at home on election day, rather than give their votes to Ibrahim.

    The fall out of the acrimony within the two major political parties may be a blessing in disguise for AD.

  • Crises dog parties in Ondo governorship contest

    Crises dog parties in Ondo governorship contest

    The campaigns of three leading governorship contenders in Ondo State have faced some hitches, which may affect their chances in the November 26 election in varied degrees. Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI examines the crises facing the three parties and how they may affect their chances.

    ABOUT five weeks to the Ondo State governorship election, all is not well with some of the major contenders in the race. The campaign of Mr. Eyitayo Jegede of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and Mr. Olusola Oke, who is running on the platform of the Alliance for Democracy (AD), suffered a setback at the weekend. The three candidates are widely seen as the frontrunners in the November 26 election; they are all legal practitioners.  They are all legal practitioners.

     

    Oke’s bid

     

    The emergence of Oke as the flag bearer of the AD has started generating friction in the fold. The National Executive Committee (NEC) of the party rejected his candidature last Friday, saying it does not recognise him as the party’s flag bearer in the November 26 governorship election.

    In a communiqué released last Friday in Akure, the state capital, after a meeting, its National Organising Secretary, Ibrahim Abdollah, said the party’s NEC was not aware of Mr. Oke’s candidature. He said: “Chief Olusola Oke is hereby not adopted as the flag bearer of AD in the November 26 governorship election.’

    The communiqué said the party’s National Working Committee and Board of Trustees were also not carried along in arriving at the choice of Oke.

    Oke, 60, is a former National Legal Adviser of the PDP and the party’s candidate in the 2012 governorship election. His desperate bid to realise his governorship ambition led him to dump the PDP with his supporters, following the defeat of the former ruling party in last year’s presidential elections. He was one of the 24 aspirants that contested for the APC ticket.

    After failing in his bid to secure the APC ticket, Oke who hails from Ondo South Senatorial District left the fold on October 1 for the AD. This followed the disagreement that rocked the party’s primary. He practically picked the party’s ticket unchallenged.

    In addition to the internal crisis rocking the APC, the exit of Oke from the party has further fragmented the opposition against the ruling PDP in Ondo.

    Though the Ilaje-born politician is expected to make some impact in the election, he doesn’t appear to pose much threat to the ruling party. When he contested on the platform of the PDP in 2012, Oke trailed far behind incumbent Governor Olusegun Mimiko, who was still in the Labour Party (LP) then, in the second position, while Akeredolu, then of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), came third.

    Oke is without doubt the candidate to beat in his Ondo South District, but now that he is contesting on the platform of a party that has no grassroots structure, it may be a different ballgame.

     

    Confusion in Ondo APC 

     

    The governorship campaign of the APC suffered another setback last Friday, as an aspirant, Prof. Ajayi Boroffice, dissociated himself from the statement credited to him, declaring his support for the party’s flag bearer.

    The widely circulated statement purportedly signed by Boroffice had quoted him accepting the verdict of the party’s National Working Committee, which upheld Akeredolu’s election as the party’s candidate. He was also quoted in the statement to have declared his total support for the lawyer. He had also purportedly urged all his supporters to make themselves and their resources available to the candidate in the effort to win the next governorship election in the state.

    But, Boroffice, a senator who represents Ondo North Senatorial District, said the statement did not emanate from him. Speaking through his media aide, Kayode Fakuyi, Boroffice said he did not address any press conference as claimed by the statement.

    Fakuyi said: “The Media Office of Professor Ajayi Boroffice, has noted with utmost consternation a press statement that was purportedly issued by the senator representing Ondo North senatorial district, Prof. Ajayi Boroffice on Wednesday, 12th of October, 2016.

    “The said press statement, which appeared to have been circulated on the social media by its originators, did not emanate from Prof. Boroffice. It should also be noted that the senator did not address any press conference on Wednesday.

    “By this statement, I wish to draw a line and detach Prof. Boroffice from the views and admonitions expressed in the said press statement. It bears repeating that Prof. Boroffice remains one of the founding fathers of the All Progressives Congress in Nigeria and a loyal leader of the party in Ondo State.

    “However, that does not confer any modicum of privilege to any person or group to write whatever press statement they like and falsely present it to the public as views of Prof. Boroffice.”

    The APC has been embroiled in crisis, following the emergence of Akeredolu as its candidate for the election. The main opposition party needed a consistent and well-articulated formation within its ranks to wrest power from the ruling PDP.

    With the turn of events, there are reasons to believe that the dream to drive the PDP out of the Alagbaka Government House may eventually not come to pass. Indications first emerged that the APC was going into the contest as a divided house when over 24 of its members indicated interest to contest for the party’s ticket.

    At the time, the understanding was that whosoever picks APC ticket was on his way to Alagbaka Government House. Given the desperation of Nigerian politicians, many observers warned before the primary that the development may spell doom for the party. Efforts in the wake of the primary to get the aspirants to realign and forge a united front against the ruling party failed, as most of the aspirants wanted to test their popularity.

    The APC Chairman, Isaac Kekemeke, had defended the huge number of aspirants. While analysts say the unwieldy number of aspirants that joined the race could work against the party, the chairman said it would make it more interesting, as the delegates would simply vote for their choices. He ruled out the imposition of any aspirant on the party.

    After weeks of postponements, the Ondo APC eventually held the governorship primary that threw up Akeredolu as its candidate on Saturday, September 3, 2016. Akeredolu, who was the candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in the 2012 governorship election, scored 669 votes. He defeated the anointed candidate of the APC National Leader, Dr. Segun Abraham who polled 635, while Oke came third, scoring 583. Boroffice came forth with 471 votes.

    Disagreement over the recommendations of the appeal committee was all that was needed to confirm that the centre could no longer hold. The committee recommended the cancellation of the primary and a repeat of the process. Power wielders within the NWC threw out the entire report, and upheld Akeredolu’s election, amidst protests from some of the aggrieved parties.

    Already, the face-off between the party’s National Leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and the National Chairman Chief John Odigie-Oyegun is taking a toll on the party’s preparation for the November 26 outing. Observers say it would be foolhardy to dismiss the complaints Tinubu, a known political strategist, with a wave of hand, because it is capable of affecting the party’s chances. Oke’s exit from the APC is also a major setback for the party, given his popularity in Ondo South District. This is in spite of the fact that Kekemeke also hails from the district.

    The APC had enjoyed an improved image and goodwill among Ondo people. This is arguably attributable to the failure of the state government to meet the yearnings of the people. Unpaid salaries, perceived maltreatment of citizens, increased taxation and alleged insensitivity of the PDP government to the sufferings of the people, all worked to form a new opinion in favour of the APC.

     

    Jegede’s camp rattled 

     

    Until last Friday’s judgment by a Federal High Court in Abuja, the campaign of Jegede  was going hunky-dory. Although the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) recognises Jegede as the party’s flag bearer, the Abuja court has ordered the electoral body to accept businessman, Mr. Jimoh Ibrahim, who emerged at the primary conducted by the Sheriff faction, as the party’s authentic candidate. This is an indication that the proxy battle between Senator Ahmed Makarfi and Senator Modu Sheriff is still reverberating in Ondo.

    It remains to be seen how the development would affect Jegede’s chances. The PDP has already asked its members and supporters to disregard the judgment, saying the party’s governorship candidate can only emerge through a primary conducted in consonance with its constitution.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Mr Banji Okunomo, said: “The party believes that its governorship candidate can never be produced through the back door or some unconstitutional procedures. The Supreme Court of Nigeria has made it clear that only the National Executive Committee (NEC) of a party could nominate the governorship candidate.

    “This was done in the nomination of Mr Eyitayo Jegede (SAN). As such, no High Court can invalidate or alter this position which is clearly defined by the highest ruling court in Nigeria.”

    No doubt, the November 26 election would be a keenly-contested one. But, the incumbency factor is certain to play a role in the election. Mimiko is believed to be running in the election by proxy. The situation is comparable to that of the recent election in Edo State, where Governor Adams Oshiomhole played a significant role in the campaign and election of Godwin Obaseki of the APC.  As a man extensively knowledgeable in Ondo politics, Mimoko is sure to deploy his political machinery and goodwill to help Jegede garner votes.

    The state is one of the two states still under the control of the PDP, out of the six in the region. As one of the states lost by the progressives since 2003, they have not relented in their efforts to regain control of Ondo.