Tag: PDP

  • PDP ‘ll bounce back In Ekiti, says Olujimi

    Senate Minority leader, Biodun Olujimi has expressed optimism that the Peoples’ Democratic Party in Ekiti State will re-establish its dominance in the State’s political horizon.

    Olujimi said the party has put behind the defeat it suffered in the just concluded general election and determined to take over Ekiti State through democratic means in 2022.

    According to INEC results, the All Progressives Congress won all the three Senate, six House of Representatives and 26 Assembly seats in the 2019 general election.

    She stated that the present APC-led administration in the State has failed to meet the expectation of the people, saying the quick resurgence of the party was a child of necessity in order to take over.

    Olujimi who spoke with journalists in Ado-Ekiti on Tuesday explained that Fayemi lost some years back and relaunch itself into saddle, saying PDP is cocksure of springing itself back to the corridor of power.

    “Whether you like it or not, PDP will bounce back. When a new government came in they swept everything and the next thing you find is that other comes and sweeps everything. And We are going to sweep everything next time around.

    “I believe PDP also will bounce back if swords are sheathed and we reconsolidate our party.

    “What was required of the party is to put its house in order and we have begun moves to reconcile aggrieved individuals within the party.

    “And those that have left the party for greener pastures will soon return home because they were disenchanted.

    “And the Internal crisis will soon be resolved very soon and efforts will be geared towards liberating Ekiti people from shackles of penury, unemployment among others”.

    She, however, urged party members not be dismayed by the outcome of the polls but remain steadfast and committed, saying PDP will be back to its formidable political base.

    Speaking on the poor performance of the PDP in Ekiti during the general election, Olujimi said the party’s lingering internal crisis contributed partially to the woeful performance coupled with electoral malpractices.

    She added that the election was fraught with electoral irregularities, saying “the exercise was not free, fair, credible but characterised with electoral fraud.

    “It was a daylight robbery as the electorate were driven away from Polling booths. If it has been free, fair and devoid of rancour, I would have garnered more than the 54,000 votes”, she said.

    The minority Leader, however, stressed the need for electoral reform, saying Nigerian electoral process does not encourage democratic consolidation but rather cast a pall on the country’s democratic status.

    “We need to look at the electoral process and make sure it is improved better because West Africa and Africa are looking on us”, Olujimi said.

  • Obasanjo to PDP: purge yourselves of bad eggs ahead of 2023

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has urged the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to purge itself of “bad eggs and hypocrites” who “lack the commitment” to return the opposition party to its lost glory.

    Obasanjo rued that many of the PDP leaders still preoccupy themselves with what ministers to “their pockets and stomach”.

    He wondered why some of them left the party and others lost hope as soon as the results of the 2019 presidential election were announced.

    The former president spoke on Sunday evening when Southwest PDP leaders, led by the party’s National Vice Chairman (Southwest), Dr. Eddy Olafeso, visited him at his Pent-House Residence within the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library (OOPL), Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    At the meeting were: Senate Minority Leader Mrs. Biodun Olujimi; senators-elect Kola Balogun (Oyo South); Ayo Akinyelure (Ondo Central); House of Representatives member-elect Ajibola Muraina (Ibarapa North and Central); former Osun State Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola; former Minister for State for Defence Erelu Olusola Obada and the PDP candidate in Ekiti State during the 2018 governorship election, Prof Olusola Eleka.

    Obasanjo told his guests that Nigeria’s situation demands a vibrant voice and opposition in PDP to engender a virile democracy.

    The former leader also bemoaned the failure of leadership in the country, saying Nigeria “can’t move forward if we continue the way we are”.

    Obasanjo, whose Coalition for Nigerian Movement (CNM) failed to dislodge President Muhammadu Buhari and his All Progressives Congress (APC) at the centre, urged the opposition PDP to purge itself of “hypocrites and bad eggs”

    He noted that the purge would put the party on a higher pedestal to scout for those he called “critical mass of committed people,”  who “would be ready to stand with the party come rain, come shine”.

    Obasanjo said:  ”I knew PDP would lose election in 2015 because it was clear. And I knew PDP will need to be rebuilt after losing the election.

    “You need what I call critical mass of committed people and come rain, come shine, they are committed. With that, you can make Nigeria better.

    “You see peoples’ faces beautiful but you don’t know what each person harbours inside of him. If you discover a bad egg, remove such a person. And if such person has learnt his or her lessons, there can still be room to accommodate the person.

    “Politically speaking, you can’t be my friend if you don’t buy into the Nigeria project. For me, till death, I will continue to push for a better Nigeria.

    “I said if you compare the two of them (referring to Atiku and Buhari); with what I know and all I have written about the incumbent, which they have decided to cover up, Atiku is better than the incumbent by far. That’s the point I am making. And nobody is perfect.

    “I am not a perfect person. I have my shortcomings. If I deny my shortcomings, it means I am not being truthful to myself. But, my shortcomings have nothing to do with my love for Nigeria. It has nothing to do with being greedy or selfishness.”

    Earlier, Olafeso had explained that the visit was to celebrate Obasanjo on his 82nd birthday, which he marked recently, and thank him for his support for the PDP presidential candidate (Atiku) in this year’s election.

    He described the former president as a loyal, upright and committed leader who is “ready to speak the truth to power” fearlessly.

    “We could not have done well in the last elections in the Southwest without your support. Your voice resonates above all the lies told in the country and you told the world what is actually happening in your country. You decided that you are going to stand up and fight. There is nothing we can say here that would compensate the role you have played.

    “You supported our presidential candidate and I know for sure that he won that election even if the powers-that-be decided to write results for themselves in the North. It is certainly sure that it is the corner you asked all of us to go that won that election and I know full well that God will take this thing back to our party,” Olafeso said.

    Former Lagos State Deputy Governor Mrs. Kofoworola Bucknor-Akerele, former PDP Deputy National Chairman Shuaibu Oyedoku, and Ondo PDP governorship candidate in 2017 Eyitayo Jegede SAN, among others, also attended the meeting.

  • Anambra polls: Court orders investigation, prosecution of senator-elect, returning officer

    A FEDERAL High Court sitting in Anambra has ordered the investigation and prosecution of senator-elect, Ifeanyi Ubah of the Young Progressives party (YPP) and the Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC’s) Returning Officer.

    The order followed the application of an order of Mandamus brought by Chris Uba of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), in suit No, FHC /AWK /CS/29/2019 before Hon Justice I B Gafai, yesterday in Awka, Anambra State.

    The court also ordered INEC to, within 14 days, conduct or cause investigation into the criminal allegations of the applicant.

    Again, “where it considers it inexpedient to prosecute through its legal officers, consider at its liberty, the appointment of the applicant’s solicitors in this suit for the purpose of such prosecution.”

    Other reliefs being sought by Uba, include:

    Order of Mandamus compelling the 1st  Respondent (INEC) to prosecute the 2nd  Respondent (Prof M N Umenweke -Returning Officer) for the offence of delivering or causing to be delivered to the 3rd Respondent a false declaration of result/return to the effect that he won the election to the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to represent Anambra South senatorial District in the senate even as he knew that the said election was still inconclusive.

    A further Order of Mandamus compelling the Respondents to prosecute the 2nd  and 3rd  Respondents for announcing or publishing a false result to the effect that the 3rd  Respondent had won the election held on the said 23/2/2019 even when they both knew that the said election was inconclusive and from which no genuine result had thereby been generated.

    Alternatively, and where it be in expedient or impossible for the 1st Respondent to undertake the prosecution, an Order of Mandamus compelling her to issue out an authority to any Counsel in the law firm of the Applicant to undertake the prosecution on the 1st Respondent’s behalf.

  • The return of PDP

    Sir: The performances of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the just concluded presidential and gubernatorial polls must have surprised many Nigerians. With the defeat and the attendant shock or confusion that trailed the party after its defeat in 2015, many Nigerians had thought the party would cease to exist. These assumptions were proved wrong as the party which was gasping for oxygen finally breathed a fresh air in the 2019 general electiona.

    In the build-up to the 2015 general elections, the party was enmeshed in zoning crises. The position of president which was supposed to be zoned or rotated to the North was denied by the incumbent president, Goodluck Jonathan. This action led to the mass exodus of the party’s members to the new APC. Other factors that contributed to the party’s defeat were corruption and insecurity. Nigerians were fed up with worsening insecurity in the Northeast states and other parts of the country. The menace of Boko Haram and the escalation of bombings across the country indicated total leadership failures. These negative indices shaped the 2015 election and aided APC to power.

    The PDP also suffered post -election crises. The former acting chairman, Ahmed Makarfi, fought a fiece battle with his arch-rival, Modu Sheriff over the control of the party. At last, through the court, Makarfi was recognized as legitimate acting chairman of the party. The party later succeeded in conducting a rancour-free convention where new leaders emerged. Now, that is history.

    The questions begging for answers are how the party which was silently dying got a new life? What magic wands did the party employ to put its house in order?

    The APC since the time it came on board has been making political blunders. Firstly, the corruption it accused PDP of entrenching has also been perpetuated under its watch. The Babachir Lawal’s grass-cutting saga, the reinstatement of former chairman of the President Task Force on Pension Reforms, Abdulrashid Maina etc. remains fresh in the mind of Nigerians.

    The APC-led government was also accused of selective war against corruption. The general insecurity bedevilling the country has refused to go. Boko Haram challenges which were limited to Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states have spread to middle belt and Northwest states. The herdsmen versus farmers skirmishes has become the order of the day. In Zamfara State, cattle rustlers have been having a field day. Hardly a day passes without reported cases of killings. Many villages have been sacked by these bandists.

    Under APC, many states civil servants are owed salaries for months. The states governors have failed to effect the necessary changes they were voted for. No wonder, APC lost Bauchi, Sokoto and Adamawa states. The gradual return of PDP has shown that political culture has changed.

    Nigerians are now politically wise. They are ready to vote out any non-performing government at any time.

     

    • Ibrahim Mustapha,

    Pambegua, Kaduna State.

  • Our grounds of appeal, by Oyetola, APC

    Osun State Governor Adegboyega Oyetola and the All Progressives Congress (APC) have appealed the Tribunal’s judgment which nullified their victory. ERIC IKHILAE examines the grounds.

    It was a divided house on March 22 when the three-man panel of the Osun State Governorship Election Tribunal disagreed on how to resolve the dispute over the September 22, 2018 inconclusive election. The poll was concluded with a rerun on September 27, 2018 by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Two members upheld the petition filed against the election; its chairman dismissed it for being unmeritorious.

    The majority upheld the petition of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its candidate Senator Ademola Adeleke.

    Justices Peter Obiorah and Adegboye Gbolagunte gave the majority decision, which replaced Oyetola and APC with Adeleke and PDP as winners of the election, on two main grounds.

    The first, according to Justices Obiorah and Gbolagunte, was that the petitioners established irregularities to prove substantial non-compliance with Electoral Act in 17 out of the 3010 polling units in which election was conducted in the state.

    They proceeded to cancel the results from the 17 polling units, deducted the cancelled results from the scores of the APC and PDP and declared Adeleke the eventual winner.

    Read also: UPDATED Osun gov, Oyetola asks Appeal Court to reverse tribunal’s decision

    The second reason for upholding the petition, both judges said, was that the petitioners proved that the Returning Officer, who cancelled the election in seven polling units (in four Local Governments where the rerun election held on September 27, 2018), lacked such powers to cancel election and order a rerun.

    They proceeded to void the rerun election, deducted votes from the 17 polling units, which they had cancelled from both parties’ scores and declared Adeleke and PDP winners.

    But in his dissenting judgment/minority decision, tribunal Chairman, Justice Muhammad Sirajo held otherwise.

    He dismissed the petition by Adeleke and PDP on the grounds that the petitioners failed to prove their claims.

    Oyetola and the APC, on March 26 and 27, lodged separate notices of appeal before the Court of Appeal in Abuja.

    On March 26, Wole Olanipekun (SAN) led a team of lawyers to file Oyetola’s 39-ground notice of appeal, while Akin Olujinmi (SAN), on March 27, led the legal team of the APC to file the party’s notice of appeal of 25 grounds.

    The appeal grounds

    The appellants, in their notices of appeal, ripped the majority judgment apart, insisting that “it is perverse, replete with contradictions and against the weight of evidence.”

    They are praying the Court of Appeal to uphold their appeals, set aside the majority judgment and dismiss the October 16, 2018 petition by Adeleke and the PDP.

    Oyetola and the APC said they were contesting the entire majority judgment, except where it held that it lacked jurisdiction to set aside the INEC Guidelines used for the election; that the allegation of over voting was not proved; that the petitioners did not prove voided votes, and other parts of the judgment where it agreed with their arguments.

    They queried the validity of the judgment, which was authored and delivered by Justice Obiorah, who they noted, did not participate in all the sittings of the tribunal during trial.

    The appellants are of the view that the entire of the majority judgment is a nullity, because it was written and delivered by Justice Obiorah “who did not participate in all the proceedings of the tribunal and who was not present when all the witnesses gave evidence.”

    They noted that Justice Obiorah was absent on February 6, 2019  when the respondents witnesses (RWs) 12 and 13 – Ayoola Soji and Oladejo Kazeem – testified and tendered exhibits, which the tribunal admitted in evidence.

    The appellants are contending that, having not attended the tribunal’s siting on February 6, 2019, Justice Obiorah did not see the two witnesses and was unable to examine their demeanour, as required, and therefore, it was unlawful for the judge to have authored a judgment in which he reviewed the evidence given by the witnesses.

    In the notice of appeal filed by Olanipekun, it was contended that: “The writing of and or the participation of the Honourable Justice P. C. Obiorah in the writing of the judgment of the lower tribunal of 22nd March 2019 and delivery of same, vitiates the entire judgment.”

    Oyetola and the APC faulted the decision of the tribunal, in the majority judgment, to declare the rerun election unlawful and proceeded to set it aside.

    They also faulted the tribunal’s finding that the respondents did not deny the claim by the petitions, through PW74, that the Returning Officer cancelled election in the seven polling units and ordered a rerun.

    The appellants said: “The first and third respondents (INEC and APC), in their pleadings, did not admit that it was the Returning Officer that cancelled the result of the election in the seven polling units, but rather, that it was the 1st respondent that cancelled the election in the seven units as distinct from the units’ results.

    “Indeed, as pleaded at paragraphs 24, 25, 27 and 29 of the petition, it was the 1st respondent that cancelled the election in the seven units for the reasons alleged by the petitioners.

    “The tribunal ought to have held the petitioners bound by their pleadings that it was the 1st respondent that cancelled the election in the units and the fact that the 3rd respondent also pleaded that it was the 1sy respondent that cancelled the election in the units.”

    They argued that even if it was any of the electoral officials that announced the cancellation and rerun election, in law, they acted as INEC’s agents of the fst respondent (INEC).

    The appellants noted that the petitioners did not only fail to tender results from the seven polling units to support their claim that election actually held in the polling units and the results were cancelled;  they also failed to exhibit the votes scored  by the parties that participated in the election, if actually their was an election.

    Oyetayo and APC argued that, rather than holding against the petitioners, for not supplying the necessary evidence, the tribunal wrongly relied on the evidence of PW74, which it had earlier expunged from the record for being hearsay.

    They argued that, in the absence of vital evidence, “the tribunal ought to have held that the petitioners did not make out the case that there was any election in the seven polling units and that the Returning Officer cancelled the results of the election in the seven units.”

    Appellants fault voiding of results

    The appellants equally faulted the reason for which the tribunal voided the results in 17 polling units, in relation to the election held on September 22, 2018.

    They argued that the tribunal did not only contradict itself, it exceeded its powers in engaging in the computation of votes by the disputing parties and proceeding to declare a winner based on its computed figures.

    The appellants also faulted the finding of the tribunal in pages 193 and 196 of the majority judgment, where it said: “It is our considered opinion that the non-recording of the columns in the result sheets, which we regard as the check-list or control columns, is an act of non-compliance with the Electoral Act.

    “The argument of the respondents that the non-compliance did not affect the result of the parties, because the petitioners’ witnesses testified that they have no quarrel with the scores credited to the parties, is not tenable. Thus is because a party does not have to quarrel with the scores of an election in order to establish electoral malpractices

    “The effect of our finding on the non-recording of the necessary columns in the identified EC8C forms means that the votes from the affected 17 polling units are invalid. The votes are: APC 2,029 and PDP 1,246.”

    To the appellants the tribunal, by the above quoted findings, did not only engage in doublespeak, but also betrayed the many contradictions inherent in its reasoning.

    They argued that, as against the tribunal’s position, the essence of an election petition is to challenge the scores of the party that won.

    Oyetola and the APC  queried the merit of the tribunal’s finding that the non-filling of some portions of forms EC8A in 17 out of 3010 polling units, where election was held through out the state, amounted to substantial non-compliance.

    They argued that since all the petitioners’ witnesses agreed that the non-filling of the forms EC8A did not affect the scores of parties at the election, it was wrong for the tribunal to have held otherwise.

    According to them, “the tribunal erred in law and acted without or in excess of jurisdiction when it set up it own table to collate and deduct results of 17 polling units on alleged non-filling of columns of EC8A in spite of evidence of petitioners witnesses, all admitting that the non-filling of the columns did not affect the result of the election.”

    They added that the tribunal’s decision to decide the petition in respect of an election held in over 3000 polling units on alleged non-filling of columns in 17 units is misconceived and amounted to a wrongful exercise of judicial power.

    ‘Tribunal acted outside powers’

    The appellants argued that the tribunal acted ultra vires (outside) its powers when it held that the rerun election of September 27 was illegal, without taking into account the Supreme Court’s decision in Faleke v. INEC (2016) 18 NWLR part 1543 at page 61 as it relates to INEC’s powers to order a rerun election.

    They noted that the tribunal contradicted itself in its conclusion, in page 191 of the majority judgment, when it said the information omitted in the Forms EC8A in relation to the 17 polling units, were essential to proving over-voting, when it earlier held that over voting could not be proved without voters’ register.

    The appellants argued that, having earlier found that accreditation is not done on Form EC8A and that same (accreditation) cannot be proved without voters’ register, the tribunal was without jurisdiction to overrule itself.

    They accused the tribunal of acting without jurisdiction when it “embarked on deducting the votes of parties and declaring its own winner in the name of imaginary non-compliance of failure to fill columns of forms EC8A which has no effect whatsoever, on the result of the election, thereby arriving at a decision that is null and void.

    “The tribunal has no power to make deductions in votes and declare its owner winner not being a Collation or Returning Officer. The decision of the tribunal is not supported by law and evidence on record.”

    The appellants also faulted the tribunal for allegedly amending the petitioners’ claims and proceeding to grant reliefs not sought by them.

    For instance, they noted that the petitioners claimed to have won the September 22, 2018 election and sought to be declared so, but the tribunal based its decision to uphold the petition and set aside the return of the appellants on the basis of allegation of non-compliance with the Electoral Act, in relation to the September 22 governorship election.

    The appellants equally noted that nowhere in the entire petition did Adeleke and the PDP complain about non-compliance with the provisions of the Electoral Act in relation to the September 22, 2018 election.

    They added that the only ground, in the petition, alleging non-compliance with the provision of the Electoral Act was in relation to the rerun election held on September 27, 2018.

    The appellants argued that the tribunal was wrong to have declared Adeleke winner of the election, held on September 22 and 27, 2018 on ground of non-compliance rather than ordering a rerun election.

    They noted that, not only did the decision disenfranchise the electorate in the affected polling units, it breached the provision of Section 140(2) of the Electoral Act.

    The appellants argued that having admitted to have benefited from INEC’s alleged non-compliance with the Electoral Act by not filling some portions of the Forms EC8A and asked that the results from those polling units be cancelled, the petitioners could not have asked the tribunal to declare them winners of the same elections.

    Faulting the tribunal’s cancellation of election in the 17 poling units, the appellants added: “The lower tribunal wrongly disenfranchised the electorate in the said polling units after casting their votes and without any challenge to the scores generated from the voting exercise.”

    The appellants contended that the tribunal was in error when it held that the petition was not statute barred having been filed outside the stipulated 21 days after the election was held.

    The particulars of errors, the appellants noted, exist in the fact that while the petitioners’ claims were directed strictly at the election of September 22, 2018, they did not file their petition until October 16, 2018.

    They noted that the petitioners’ contention was that the election had been concluded as at September 22, 2018 and that they ought to have been declared winner of the election.

    The appellants further noted that Adeleke and the PDP “did not reckon with and in fact, denounced and rejected the rerun election held on 27th September 2018 and sought an order to invalidate the rerun election.

    “Based on the foregoing, it was wrong for the tribunal to hold that the petition was not statute barred as at the time it was filed on 16th October 2018.”

    The appellants are praying the Court of Appeal to dismiss the petition by Adeleke and PDP for being unmeritorious and set aside the majority decision of the tribunal, which they argued, “is against the weight of evidence.”

  • April 5 for ruling on PDP’s joinder application

    A Federal High Court in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, has adjourned till April 5, judgment on whether or not the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will be allowed to join a suit by the governorship candidate of Social Democratic Party (SDP), Precious Elekima, against the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Elekima is protesting his exclusion from the alleged pre-result collation suspension meeting between INEC and other parties that participated in the March 9 elections.

    He prayed the court to invite INEC to explain why he and his party were excluded from the meeting.

    The candidate is also asking the court to make an interlocutory order stopping INEC from further action on the process pending the determination of the substantive suit before it.

    PDP, at the last sitting, indicated interest to be joined in the suit, filing applications.

    The party said it fielded candidates’ governorship and legislative elections, and so will be affected by the judgment.

    Read also: Obasanjo to PDP: purge yourselves of bad eggs ahead of 2023

    But the plaintiff opposed PDP’s application, insisting that the matter is against INEC and so nothing concerns any other party.

    Justice Henry Oshoma, however, adjourned till yesterday for hearing.

    At the resumed sitting yesterday, PDP’s lawyer Mark Agwu urged the court to dismiss SDP’s rejection of PDP’s request to join, insisting that the outcome of the matter will affect the party.

    SDP, however, maintained its ground that the suit had nothing to do with who wins the elections, but is only concerned that the election was postponed by INEC by the exercise of its power on section 16 of the electoral act.

    “The plaintiffs are only seeking a fair hearing in the matter they brought before the court, and no form of allegation was made against the party seeking to join, for which its attention will be required in the suit,” Agwu submitted.

    Justice Oshoma, in his judgment, said: “Having listened to the argument and counter argument from both parties, I have decided to adjourn the matter till April 5 for ruling.”

  • Rivers: INEC to resume collation of of March 9 elections results

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) will resume the collation of election results as planned, it was learnt.

    The commission last week fixed 2nd to 5th of April for resumption of collation of results of the last governorship and state Assembly elections.

    INEC also noted that election had been concluded in 21 state constituencies and fixed 13th April 2019 should there be any need for supplementary election.

    The collation of the results for the election held on March 9 was suspended due to violence allegedly carried out by soldiers and armed thugs. Consequently, the Commission set up a Fact-Finding Committee that visited Rivers State and submitted its report which revealed that while election could not hold in a few areas, it was successfully concluded in others with the declaration of winners in 21 state constituencies. Collation was ongoing at the time of the suspension of the process.

    Announcing the outlined activities and timeline to resolve the electoral logjam in Rivers State, INEC National Commissioner in charge of Information and Voter Education Committee, Festus Okoye, said the commission will on 30th March 2019 have a meeting with critical actors in the state after which the headquarters of the commission will release a guideline for the continuation of the process.

    Read also: 2019 general elections was free, fair – CODER

    The meeting, however, turned rancorous as stakeholders exchanged hot words, which threw up fears that the exercise might be affected.

    But the Commission said yesterday that it will resume the collation of results despite calls for the fresh election and rancorous stakeholders meeting at the weekend.

    The Chief Press Secretary to the Chairman of the Commission Mr. Rotimi Oyekanmi said rachour among political parties during a stakeholders’ meeting before any major election is a common phenomenon.

    Oyekanmi, therefore, said whatever might have transpired during the stakeholders meeting in Rivers at the weekend was not enough to alter INEC timeline to conclude the election in the state.

    He said, “Regardless of their drama, however, the Commission will go ahead with its schedule of activities for the resumption of collation and conduct of supplementary elections where necessary in Rivers State.”

    He added that whatever position taken by the parties at the stakeholders meeting will absolutely not have any impact on the plan of the commission.

    He stressed, ” It does not change anything. The Commission will go ahead with its plan.”

    Oyekanmi explained further that “Rancour among political parties during a stakeholders’ meeting before any major election is a common phenomenon. At most of this type of meeting the Commission organized before any of the governorship election the conducted over the last 3 years, it has been the same story. Political parties regrettably bring their bitter differences to the meeting, but this is very unfortunate. They need to show maturity and stop this unnecessary bickering that will lead them nowhere.”

    Speaking on the call for withdrawal of Mrs May Agbamuche Mbu, INEC National Commissioner who chaired the stakeholders meeting in the absent of Chairman of the Commission, Okoye said that INEC will not abdicate its constitutional and statutory responsibility and create a constitutional crisis.

    He stressed that the “Commission is determined to conclude the collation of results for State Assembly and Governorship elections in Rivers State. The Commission is courageously following its timetable and schedule of activities outlined for the conclusion of the collation and electoral process in Rivers State.

    The process of collation and conclusion of the process is transparent and painstaking. All the critical stakeholders in the electoral process are involved in the process leading to the final collation of results. It is the constitutional and statutory responsibility and mandate of the Commission to organize and superintend elections.

    It is the responsibility of the Commission to collate and announce the results of elections and the Commission does not share this responsibility with anyone, body, institution or agency. The Commission will conclude the collation of results before pulling out of Rivers State. The resolve of the Commission is to transparently collate the results and announce the results.

    The Commission is the regulator of political parties and sets the parameters for the conclusion of the process based on the law and the constitution. The Commission will not abdicate its constitutional and statutory responsibility and create a constitutional crisis. ”

    On the staged walked out by some governorship candidates in the polls under the umbrella of Coalition of Governorship candidates, Okoye said “Each Political Party is a legal entity registered by the Commission in accordance with the constitution and the Electoral Act, 2010(as amended).

    The Commission did not register any Political Party known as Coalition of Governorship Candidates and does not deal with any coalition. The Commission extended invitation for the stakeholders meeting to registered political parties and they attended the stakeholders meeting in that capacity.

    All the candidates in the election filed their nominations under the banner and platform of their respective parties. Our plea is that all the candidates and political parties should cooperate with the Commission for the expeditious conclusion of the collation process. Although protests and walkouts are part of the democratic process, it should be employed in a manner that serves the national interest.”

    On Zamfara state, he said “the issue of the electoral fortune of the APC in Zamfara State is before the Supreme Court of Nigeria. The Commission is a law-abiding institution and will prefer to wait for the decision of the Supreme Court on the matter. The Commission will not make any comment that will prejudice the due determination of the suit in the Supreme Court.”

  • Atiku far better than Buhari, Obasanjo insists

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has defended his endorsement of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar.

    He said despite the fact that Atiku lost to President Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC), he remains “far better” than the incumbent.

    The elder statesman spoke on Sunday evening when the Southwest PDP leaders led by the party’s National Vice Chairman (South West), Dr Eddy Olafeso, visited him at his Pent-House Residence within the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library (OOPL), Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    In attendance at the meeting were Senate Minority Leader, Biodun Olujimi; Senators-elect Oyo South Kola Balogun; Ondo Central Ayo Akinyelure; Rep-elect (Ibarapa North and Central), Hon Ajibola Muraina; former Osun State Governor Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola; former Minister for State for Defence Erelu Olusola Obada and PDP gubernatorial candidate in Ekiti State 2018 election, Prof Olusola Eleka.

    He said: “Politically speaking, you can’t be my friend if you don’t buy into the Nigeria’s project. For me, till death, I will continue to push for a better Nigeria.

    “I said if you compare the two of them (referring to Atiku and Buhari) with what I know and all I have written about the incumbent, which they have decided to cover up, Atiku is better than the incumbent by far. That’s the point I am making. And nobody is perfect.

    “I am not a perfect person. I have my shortcomings. If I deny my shortcomings, it means I am not being truthful to myself.

    “But, my shortcomings have nothing to do with my love for Nigeria. It has nothing to do with being greedy or selfishness.”

    Obasanjo told his guests Nigerian situation demands a vibrant voice and opposition in PDP to engender a virile democracy.

    The former Head of States also bemoaned the failure of leadership, saying Nigeria can’t move forward “if we continue the way we are.”

    He urged the PDP to purge itself of “bad eggs and hypocrites,” whom he said, lacked commitment to return the opposition party to its lost glory.

    Obasanjo lamented many of the PDP leaders are still preoccupied with what ministers to “their pockets and stomach,” wondering why some of them left the party while others lost hope the seconds the results of 2019 Presidential election were announced.

    Obasanjo, whose Coalition for Nigerian Movement(CNM) failed to provide a formidable force to unseat President Muhammadu Buhari and his the All Progressives Congress(APC) at the centre, advised PDP to purge itself of “hypocrites and bad eggs.”

    He noted the purging exercise would put the party on a higher pedestal to scout for those he called “critical mass of committed people,” who “would be ready to stand with the party come rain, come shine.”

    Obasanjo said: “I knew PDP would lose election in 2015 because it was clear. And I knew PDP will need to be rebuilt after losing the election.

    “You need what I call critical mass of committed people, and come rain, come shine they are committed. With that, you can make Nigeria better.

    “You see peoples’ faces beautiful but you don’t know what each person harbours inside of him.

    “If you discover a bad egg, remove such a person. And if such person has learnt his or her lessons there can still be room to accommodate the person.”

    Also at the meeting were former Lagos Deputy Governor Kofoworola Bucknor-Akerele; former Deputy National Chairman Shuaibu Oyedokun; PDP Governorship candidate in 2017 Ondo State Governorship election, Eyitayo Jegede SAN among others.

  • Obasanjo to PDP: Purge yourselves of bad eggs, hypocrites ahead of 2023

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on has urged the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) to purge itself of “bad eggs and hypocrites,” whom he said, lacked commitment to return the opposition party to its lost glory.

    Obasanjo rued that many of the PDP leaders are still preoccupied with what ministers to “their pockets and stomach,” wondering why some of them left the party while others lost hope the seconds the results of 2019 Presidential election were announced.

    The elder statesman spoke on Sunday evening, when the Southwest PDP leaders led by the party’s National Vice Chairman (South West), Dr Eddy Olafeso, visited him at his Pent-House Residence within the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library (OOPL), Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    In attendance at the meeting are; Senate Minority Leader, Biodun Olujimi, Senators-elect, Oyo South, Kola Balogun, Ondo Central, Ayo Akinyelure, Rep-elect (Ibarapa North and Central), Hon Ajibola Muraina, former Osun State Governor, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, former Minister for State for Defence, Erelu Olusola Obada and PDP gubernatorial candidate in Ekiti State 2018 election, Prof Olusola Eleka,

    Obasanjo told his guests that Nigerian situation demands a vibrant voice and opposition in PDP to engender a virile democracy.

    The former Head of States also bemoaned the failure of leadership in the country, saying Nigeria can’t move forward “if we continue the way we are.”

    Obasanjo whose Coalition for Nigerian Movement (CNM) failed to provide a formidable force to unhorse President Muhammadu Buhari and his the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the centre, advised PDP to purge itself of “hypocrites and bad eggs.”

    He noted that the purging exercise would put the party on a higher pedestal to scout for those he called “critical mass of committed people,” who “would be ready to stand with the party come rain, come shine.”

    Obasanjo said: “I knew PDP would lose election in 2015 because it was clear. And I knew PDP will need to be rebuilt after losing the election.

    “You need what I call critical mass of committed people, and come rain, come shine they are committed. With that, you can make Nigeria better.

    “You see peoples’ faces beautiful but you don’t know what each person harbours inside of him. If you discover a bad egg, remove such a person. And if such person has learnt his or her lessons there can still be room to accommodate the person.

    “Politically speaking, you can’t be my friend if you don’t buy into the Nigeria’s project. For me, till death, I will continue to push for a better Nigeria.

    “I said if you compare the two of them (referring to Atiku and Buhari); with what I know and all I have written about the incumbent which they have decided to cover up, Atiku is better than the incumbent by far. That’s the point I am

  • Obi hails Tinubu’s advice on VAT

    Vice Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Peter Obi has hailed National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, on his position on the proposed increment in Value Added Tax (VAT).

    Tinubu, last Thursday, advised the Federal Government against increasing VAT rate as being canvassed by the Minister of National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma and the Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service, Mr. Babatunde Fowler.

    In a statement yesterday by his media office, Obi described Tinubu’s advice as gratifying and making economic sense given the situation in the country.

    According to him, Tinubu’s position was clearly at variance with that of his party, saying it goes to underscore the uncoordinated campaign the APC dished out to Nigerians.

    Obi, who said tax must be relaxed to act as incentive to local and foreign investors, insisted that the right way to shape up the economy in the face of mass unemployment is to have attractive economic policies to encourage entrepreneurs and investors.

    Read also:  VAT increase will raise misery index, says MAN

    According to him, the call for an increase in VAT or other taxes in the present economic situation amounted to insensitivity on the part of the government.

    He, however, noted that Tinubu’s advice was in tandem with the position of the PDP, stressing that tax reduction was one of the main electioneering campaign messages of the PDP presidential campaign.

    “It is extremely unrealistic for anybody to think of growing the economy and creating jobs by increasing tax. It’s too simplistic an approach,” Obi reiterated.

    The former vice presidential candidate enjoined Tinubu to also advise the All Progressives Congress (APC) to embrace restructuring, saying it is the only option left to move the country forward.

    “Anybody thinking this country will work without tinkering with the political and economic structure is deceiving himself because no nation grows on injustice,” he noted.