Tag: PDP

  • PDP wins all council seats in Ekiti

    PDP wins all council seats in Ekiti

    •APC hails those who boycotted poll

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has won all 16 chairmanship and 177 councillorship seats in Saturday’s local government election in Ekiti State.

    The State Independent Electoral Commission (EKSIEC) Chairman, Justice Kayode Bamisile (retd), who announced the results, described the poll as “peaceful, free and fair”.

    The local government election recorded low turnout of voters.

    Governor Ayodele Fayose sworn in the PDP chairmanship candidates yesterday.

    Also, the All Progressives Congress (APC) hailed the people for boycotting what it called “the compromised local government election organised by Fayose’s faction of the PDP in cahoots with EKSIEC composed of members of PDP faction loyal to the governor”.

    Addressing reporters and stakeholders, Bamisile said the commission did its best on the poll to deepen democracy at the grassroots.

    He added that the Returning officers were drawn from tertiary institutions in Ekiti and Ondo states.

    The results showed that PDP chairmanship candidate in Ido/Osi, Tunde Aladedemi, polled 24,432 votes to defeat the National Democratic Liberty Party (NDLP) candidate, who got 121 votes.

    PDP’s flag bearer in Ekiti East, Ogundana Sunday, won with 27,918 to beat the NDLP candidate, who had 231 votes.

    In Irepodun/Ifelodun, PDP’s Dapo Olagunju was re-elected with 31,724 votes against the candidate of the ADP, who polled 1,361 votes.

    In Moba Local Government Area, PDP’s Ayeni James won with 20,444 votes to defeat the candidate of the ADP, who polled 237.

    In Ikere Local Government Area, PDP’s Ayeni Ezekiel polled 22,354 votes to win, and in Oye Local Government Area, Sunday Alonge, also of the PDP, polled 29,380 to win the election.

    In Ikole Local Government Area, Abiola Olukayode of the PDP won with 29,956 votes while in Efon Local Government Area, Yemi Owoeye, also of the PDP, won with 11,900 votes.

    Omolase Lanre of the PDP was re-elected as Ekiti Southwest Local Government Area’s chairman with 24,657 votes, while Akindele Ogidi, also of the PDP in Gbonyin Local Government Area, got 24,940 votes to win the election.

    The result of Ise/Orun Local Government Area showed that Kolawole Oluropo of the PDP polled 26,420 to win the seat and in Ekiti West Local Government Area, Ayodeji Daniel of the PDP won with 23,162 votes.

    In Emure Local Government Area, PDP’s Olubayode Okeya polled 15,293 votes against ADP’s candidate, who polled 201 votes, while in Ilejemeje Local Government Area, PDP’s Awolola Sunday polled 7,303 to win the poll.

    In Ijero Local Government Area, PDP’s Dada Biodun won with 23,587 votes as against the candidate of the NDLP, who scored 233.

    In Ado-Ekiti Local Government Area, PDP’s Bamisile Clement won with 43,262 votes against ADP candidate’s 770 votes.

    In a statement yesterday by its Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatunbosun, APC said the refusal of Ekiti electorate to participate in the election was a pointer to a rejection of Fayose and his party.

    The shunning of the council poll, the APC said, was a “confirmation of our assertion that Ekiti people are only waiting for 2018 governorship election to send Fayose and his PDP into the dustbin of Ekiti political history”.

    The statement added: “Ekiti people are seriously angry and can’t wait to vote Fayose out in a free, fair and credible election organised by a credible independent.

    “What happened today (Saturday) is a reaction of Ekiti people to their sufferings over non-payment of pensioners, workers’ salaries, misappropriation and diversion of public funds into personal account, greed and executive rascality through which Fayose has impoverished Ekiti people.

    “It is gratifying though that Deputy Governor Prof Kolapo Olusola admitted while talking to journalists that the polling booths were empty during the election, hinging their absence from polling booths on last Christmas shopping by voters.

    “This is just an untenable alibi. The fact is that people naturally reacted to the sufferings Fayose unleashed on them by his mindless cornering of the state’s resources for his personal enjoyment and that of members of his family while Ekiti people suffer.

    “Ekiti people are angry for spending tax payers’ money on a charade called an election at a time workers and pensioners could not even feed or provide for the needs of their immediate family  at Christmas while many are on sick bed on account of the high level of Fayose’s wickedness and heartlessness.

    “We appreciate Ekiti people for the total boycott of the purported local government election supervised by his ‘PDP card-carrying members in SIEC’.”

  • Adeyeye: imposition should stop in PDP

    Adeyeye: imposition should stop in PDP

    The Prince Adedayo Adeyeye Movement (PAAM) has urged the new Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) National Chairman, Prince Uche Secondus, to end impunity and foster internal democracy.

    The group, in a congratulatory message to Secondus, also urged him to end imposition of candidates and godfatherism in the party.

    PAAM is the campaign organisation of a PDP governorship aspirant in Ekiti State and the immediate past national spokesman of the party, Prince Dayo Adeyeye.

    In a statement by PAAM Director of Media, Chief Niyi Ojo, the group said next year’s PDP governorship primary in Ekiti State is a litmus test for Secondus’ leadership capacity.

    Ojo said: “We believe that his victory at the national convention was a sign of good things to manifest in PDP, such as total end to impunity and imposition of candidates.

    “The new era should witness the birth of internal democracy and an end to godfatherism in our party. Prince Secondus has a litmus test with the forthcoming governorship primary election in Ekiti State early next year.

    “A level laying field should be created for all aspirants without any undue advantage to any person no matter how highly placed. This is a task that must be accomplished for PDP to have formidable fronts to confront general elections.”

  • PDP: Christmas presents us strong lessons in hope

    PDP: Christmas presents us strong lessons in hope

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has said the Christmas season presents the country with strong lessons in hope and collective triumph.

    In a statement yesterday by its National Publicity Secretary, Kola Ologbondiyan, the opposition party called on Nigerians not to despair but to use the occasion to show love, care and encourage one another regardless of religious, ethnic and political inclinations.

    The PDP described the nation’s economic situation as a national embarrassment, which it said cannot be glossed with deceit, lies and propaganda. It urging Nigerians to overcome this very sordid situation by rallying around one another in true love as epitomized in the birth and teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ.

    The statement said, “Indeed, this is the worst Yuletide ever. There is no way one can sugarcoat the fact that the anguish Nigerians face today is because of the incompetence of the APC government, which has also amply demonstrated that it does not care about the welfare and happiness of the citizens.

    “Our country’s economic situation has astronomically gone from bad to worse in the last two years and painfully, there is no hope in sight under this APC regime.

    “As we speak, many families are completely stranded; many more can no longer afford their basic needs.

    “Nigerians have become ravaged by economic hardship because the APC-led Federal Government has abandoned them and refused to channel the abundant resources available in the nation for the good of the people. Instead, they are heartlessly diverting such resources for their selfish political purposes while the people suffer.

    “These horrendous realities imposed on us by the APC notwithstanding, we must not become despondent.

    “This Christmas season presents us very strong lessons in hope and our collective triumph over adverse situations as exemplified in the birth and teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ.”

  • Why we backed Secondus, by PDP governors

    Why we backed Secondus, by PDP governors

    Governors elected under the platform  of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have explained their support for Prince Uche Secondus as  their party’s National Chairman. They said it was because  of his strength character and honesty.

    The governors said Secondus as National Deputy Chairman stood for the truth and ensured that  rules were adhered to during  party primaries.

    They spoke at the Thanksgiving Service in honour of Secondus at the Rivers State Ecumenical Centre in Port Harcourt yesterday.

    Rivers State Governor Nyesom Ezenwo Wike said Secondus insisted on his emergence as PDP governorship candidate because he felt it was in the best interest of the party, even though  other groups preferred an ethnic candidate.

    He said: “This position is an opportunity to give Nigerians  what they want.  I can’t understand why people are suffering untold hardship.  Imagine the fuel scarcity with people buying a litre of fuel between N300 and N400.”

    He said Secondus emerged through a credible process where all candidates tested their popularity. He said the governors and other stakeholders preferred Secondus because of his experience and track record.

    “For the first time in the history of our party, we had an election to elect a national chairman.  It was not like the case before where the President and Governors  decided on a consensus candidate “, Governor Wike said.

    Cross River State Governor Ben Ayade said he encountered  Secondus when they had a major challenge in the delegates list of the party, but the former Deputy National Chairman insisted on correcting the illegality without inducement.

    He said all the governors who worked for the emergence of the National Chairman did so because  of the unflinching support Secondus gave them in the past.

    Ebonyi State Governor Dave Umahi said: “Secondus  stood with me when the promise of man failed. “

    He said  all the governors resolved to work with Wike in canvassing for Secondus because  of his character and content. He said that the governors turned their backs on those who took money in the past.

    Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpeazu commended the presence of mind of Secondus, which he said would be beneficial to the party.

    He said: “We are prepared to go the whole route with Prince Uche Secondus.  He will be an exemplary party leader in Africa “.

    Secondus said the PDP is poised to take over the leadership of the country.

    He said: “We are going according to the plans and purpose of God. This country will be returned to the PDP, whether you like it or not, it approved in heaven. You cannot do otherwise “.

    Secondus said God used Wike and his colleagues to bring the post to fruition.

  • 2019: We will provide viable alternative to APC, PDP, says LP

    The Labour Party said it would provide Nigerians with a viable alternative to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in 2019 general elections.

    The party said both the PDP and APC have failed Nigerians in their effort to deliver good governance.

    National Chairman of the party, Dr. Mike Omotosho, said this at a media parley with reporters in Abuja at the weekend.

    He said: “People are already complaining. That is why we said we need to come up as the party of the masses, the party of the people and be the voice of the voiceless and give hope to them. It is the only country we have.

    “Let’s look inwards and see how we can build this country called Nigeria. Whether we like it or not it starts with leadership. The power truly belongs to the people. But the people are not aware that the power belongs to them.

    “For the very first time in the history of this country the Labour Party is poised to provide innovative leadership that will be transparent, that will be accountable, that will be purposeful and most importantly, that will be principled, and responsible to the pains and complains of the people.

    “Whether we like it or not it’s all about the people. That’s what democracy is all about. Let’s focus for once on the people.”

  • Kwara 2019: APC, PDP in battle for the south

    Kwara 2019: APC, PDP in battle for the south

    The people of Kwara South senatorial district are daily being bombarded by aspirants seeking to represent them at the senate come 2019. Already, discussions are rife about ongoing subtle struggle for the senatorial tickets of the two leading parties, the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). In this report, Assistant Editor, Dare Odufowokan, examines the various contending forces in the zone ahead of the 2019 elections.

    AHEAD of the 2019 general election, the people of the southern senatorial district in Kwara state have been discussing ways of ensuring that the area fares better socio-economically and politically in the forthcoming dispensation. The need for the said discussion, according to sources who spoke with The Nation, may not be unconnected with the widespread belief among the people that Kwara South has little or nothing to lay claim to as dividends of democracy.

    Stakeholders from the zone, at the end of a recent convergence in Esie town, Irepodun local government area of the State, collectively agreed that the zone needs to do more politically if it is to catch up with other areas in the state socio-economically. Speakers at the parley were unanimous in blaming what they described as age-long bad representation of the district at the national assembly, for the backwardness they noticed in Kwara South.

    Vowing to continue to work for the emancipation of the zone after the meeting, many dignitaries at the event lamented the political and infrastructural under-development of the district. They also attributed the problems to disunity among the indigenes, citing the many irreconcilable political differences among the elites of the senatorial district as one of the major problems confronting the area.

    Explaining why the people of the area are agitated ahead of the 2019 general election, Comrade Ishaq Adegboye, a former Organising Secretary of the Action Alliance (AA), said there is a widespread desire for a change in the political fortune of the zone among the people. According to him, the forthcoming 2019 senatorial election in the district will be a very interesting one as the people are now determined to take their own destiny in their own hands.

    “Kwara south have been very unlucky when you consider the slow pace of development here. For a people who are know to have championed community development efforts long before other areas in the state and even the country, it is not a good testimony. There are seven local government areas in the district namely, Ekiti, Offa and Oke-Ero, Oyun, Ifelodun, Irepodun and Isin.

    “Our people are known to be industrious and enterprising. We are famous for our age-long self -help initiatives. Developmental projects have been carried out through self help here long before the creation of states. So, haven’t done so much for ourself, we expect more from government. But we have been unlucky. Not even the fact that we produced the Governor of the state have changed anything.

    “It is for this reason, and for the purpose of changing our current situation, that we are mobilizing our people to show more than passing interest in politics. We are telling the people to change the game by changing the people they vote for. Our people ordinarily are more interested in the businesses, leaving politics to a few. But in 2019, when it will be time to elect the next senator, all that will change,” he said.

     

    All eye on the senate seat

    The senatorial district is currently being represented in the upper chamber of the national assembly by Senator Rafiu Adebayo Ibrahim, who before now, was a member of the lower chamber of the national assembly. He contested on the platform of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and defeated the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), candidate, Lola Asiru, counterpart with 53,102 votes to 37, 496 to win the seat.

    Severely accused of underperforming by many of his constituents, Ibrahim has consistently argued otherwise, claiming to be doing his best to improve the fortune of Kwara south. But Adegboye, while asking the Senator to mention specific efforts made in the last three years, said the current senator scores very low among the people in terms of attracting dividends democracy to the zone.

    “I don’t think it is fair on his part to be doing his best. He should mention specific things he has done or he is doing in the past three years. The people are wiser and they know those representing their interest. At the appropriate time, the people will show all of us that they are no fools. Let those who are playing pranks with the mandate of the people continue. 2019 is soon here,” he said.

    Another constituent of the district and former State coordinator of Buhari Support Movement (BSM), Cornelius Oyedepo, told The Nation that the people of Kwara south have been disappointed by their current representatives in government. He lamented that the euphoria that followed the clamor for change in 2015 was greeted with disappointment following the failure of government to extend dividends of democracy to the area.

    “The current governor is from our senatorial district. But what do we have to show for that? The people have always been loyal to the progressive parties. It is unfortunate that we have not been well represented. That is why we are going round and building a formidable platform to ensure that our next senator is someone who will really put our interest over and above any other interest or loyalty,” he said.

    With the above scenario playing out in the zone, little wonder then that the struggle for the senate seat is fast gathering momentum with a good number of aspirants already throwing their hats into the ring to compete for the position. Aside the aspirants currently putting structures up across the senatorial district in preparation for the contest, the leading political parties too are warming up to clinch the seat in 2019.

     

    The race begins

    The race for the senate seat in Kwara south is tense. Expectedly, the contenders for the prized slot are heavyweights in their own rights. Political analysts say right from the primary elections of the leading parties, the ruling APC and the opposition PDP, the people of Kwara south will have an array of aspirants to select from in line with the determination to choose rightly this time around.

    According to Oyedepo, more people are still expected to join the race as the election draw nearer. He explained that beyond the APC and the PDP, some other political parties will also field candidates in the forthcoming election hoping to reap from the new resolve of the people to look beyond the frontline political parties in making the choice of who goes to the senate for Kwara south in 2019.

    “Whoever will emerge victorious this time around will have the people to thank for his victory. The new resolve is such that we will not be swayed by the size of a political party nor the family name of a candidate. The pope know what they want and this time, they are ready to ask for it with their votes. It is only the man who fits their bill that will emerge as the next Senator,” he said.

    Among the names currently being touted to be eyeing the Kwara south senatorial seat is that of the incumbent Governor of the state, AbdulFatah Ahmed. Though he is yet to publicly declare interest in the job, party sources say it is common knowledge within the ruling APC that the Governor will run for the senate seat of his home district during the next general election.

    “The governor will run for the senate. He is going to the senate after leaving office as governor. That is know to us in the APC and I think he deserves it. He has been governor for eight years and he is from Kwara south. Tell me who else should represent the people at the national assembly apart form him. Even the current senator knows that he will not be getting a second term,” a party chieftain said

    And as the name of the Governor continue to crop up as a potential APC senatorial candidate in 2019, political cloud gathers over the fate of incumbent Senator Ibrahim. However, some sources close to him says he has not said he will not be seeking a return to the senate in 2019. According to one of his allies in the senatorial district, the political future of the Senator depends on the party.

    “It is wrong for anybody to say Ibrahim is automatically not running for a second term. He is the current occupier of the seat and he has done very well for the people. He is a loyal party man and the party is very proud of him. So, it is only the party that can decide his political future as far as 2019 is concerned. No one else can. For now, it is better to say he will follow the directive of the party come 2019,” he said.

    Also on the platform of the ruling APC, another possible candidate is Hon. Saheed Popoola, a member of Kwara State House of Assembly. A grassroots politician of note, he was the only Local Government Chairman elected on the platform of the then opposition Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in 2007. His political camp are of the opinion that with his popularity across the district, he stand a good chance of wrestling the APC ticket from both Governor Ahmed and the incumbent Senator.

     

    A straight fight?

    And within the opposition PDP, the struggle for the senatorial ticket will not be less fiery. While talks about the desire of Senator Suleiman Ajadi to seek a return to the red chamber in 2019 on the platform of the PDP are now very rife, he is yet to make a categorical statement on his rumored ambition. But The Nation learnt the two-term Senator may actually be considering running again in 2019.

    “He is a good material. His record as our senator is yet to be surpassed but the party will need more than what he has in stock to defeat the ruling APC in 2019. We need a more vibrant front to go out with. His supporters within the party are already selling the idea of his candidacy but he is yet to officially declare his intention to vie for the senatorial ticket in 2019,” a party source said.

    Similarly, Lola Asiru, the party’s candidate at the last election is said to be warming up to take another shot at the seat. If he does, it would be his first attempt since the return to democracy in 1999. A politician with a wide network of supporters across the zone, his ambition, like that of Ajadi, is still in the realm of speculations. But reliabel sources say he is already working underground to achieve his aim.

    Looming larger than others in the race towards the the ticket of the PDP is Nurudeen Adeyemi Balogun, an America-based aeronautic Engineer who unlike his fellow party men, has openly declared his interest in the job. Though not a known politician before now, his philanthropic gestures across the towns and villages in the district had already endeared him to the people long before his foray into partisan politics.

    And since he showed interest in the race, his political group, the Engineer Nurudeen Adeyemi Contact Team (ENACT), has left no one in doubt of his determination to grab the ticket of the PDP and go ahead to win the election for the opposition party. This is just as pundits say Adeyemi’s entrance into the race may have redefined the chances of the PDP in the senatorial contest.

    “Before now, the fear of the people who feels the current representation is not good enough has been that PDP may not offer any better alternative. But with Adeyemi coming to say he is interested, there is something new on the horizon already and that will make the coming election really competitive. They may be correct to say he is new in politics, but he is not new to the people. We know him through the many selfless contributions he has been making all over the district,” a source added.

    So prominent is the aspiration of Adeyemi, who is the President Igbomina Community in North America (ICNA), that some pundits are already predicting a two-horse race fight between him and Governor Ahmed of the APC come 2019.

    “I see Adeyemi picking the ticket of the PDP in the long run. Currently, he is the man to beat. The majority of the members of the PDP in Kwara south will rather have him fly the banner of the party. And if you consider the fact that with Senator Bukola Saraki’s support, Governor Ahmed will easily muscle others to claim the APC ticket, the final race may just be between the two of them,” Oyedepo predicted.

    Thus, as the race towards the 2019 senatorial contest in Kwara south gathers momentum, the questions on many lips is “who will go to the senate to represent the people of the district? And while political parties and politicians continue to scheme and plan in their quest to clinch the coveted seat, observers of the politics of the state insist the contest will be keenly contested because “this time around, the people are determined to take make their votes count.”

  • We will provide viable alternative to APC, PDP – LP

    We will provide viable alternative to APC, PDP – LP

    The Labour Party said on Saturday it would provide Nigerians with a viable alternative to the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2019 general elections.

    The party said both the APC and PDP have failed Nigerians in their efforts to deliver good governance to the people.

    The National Chairman of the party, Dr. Mike Omotosho, stated these during a chat with journalists in Abuja.

    He said: “People are already complaining. That is why we said we need to come up as the party of the masses, the party of the people and be the voice of the voiceless and give hope to them. It is the only country we have.

    “Let’s look inwards and see how we can build this country called Nigeria. Whether we like it or not it starts with leadership. The power truly belongs to the people. But the people are not aware that the power belongs to them.

    “For the very first time in the history of this country, the Labour Party is poised to provide innovative leadership that will be transparent, that will be accountable, that will be purposeful and most importantly, that will be principled, and responsible to the pains and complains of the people.

    “Whether we like it or not, it’s all about the people. That’s what democracy is all about. Let’s focus for once on the people.”

     

     

  • What future for PDP?

    What future for PDP?

    After the fierce and bitter protracted struggle for the soul of the party that pitted the faction of the pugnacious, tenacious and unyielding Senator Ali Modu Sheriff against that of the restrained but highly astute Senator Ahmed Makarfi, members and leaders of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) must be justifiably relieved at the success of its December 10 National Convention no matter the flaws that attended the exercise.

    The legal triumph of the Makarfi faction, which paved the way for the convention to hold, offered an opportunity for the PDP to pick a leadership that would give it a new face, demonstrate its determination to turn a fresh leaf, undertake a rigorous moral inventory, critically rediscover, interrogate and reinvent its core values and move in an ethically elevated direction diametrically opposite to its badly tainted past. Unfortunately, that opportunity appears to have been squandered by a limited, strategically short sighted and largely unrealistic preoccupation with regaining power at the centre in 2019.

    There is no doubt that the PDP is emboldened in this endeavour by the undeniable disenchantment of a large number of Nigerians with what is widely perceived as the wide gap between the high expectations it aroused among the citizenry during the campaigns and the actual performance of the APC federal government. Can the resultant disappointment and frustration among a not insignificant cross section of the populace help catapult the PDP back to power at the centre in the next election? It is doubtful.

    True, millions of Nigerians continue to groan under the weight of persistent socio-economic hardships. But a good number of them also know that the root cause of the problem lies in the profligacy and prodigality of the preceding PDP administration that failed to utilize the huge oil revenues earned under its watch to lay a solid foundation for sustainable economic growth. Yes, Nigerians do not expect the APC-controlled Federal Government to continually blame its predecessor for problems it was elected to solve. But neither do they realistically expect that the APC will miraculously achieve in two and a half years what the PDP could not in its 16 years in power.

    Of course, it is all too easy to exaggerate the differences between the PDP and the APC, to perceive one as a party of unblemished saints and the other a party of irredeemable sinners. In reality, the ideological, philosophical and even moral boundaries between the two major parties are blurred. Many of those who contributed to the victory of the APC in the 2015 election were decampees from the PDP.

    The ethical infractions associated with the former SGF, Babachir Lawal, ex-DG of the National Intelligence Agency (NIA), Ayodele Oke, or the ongoing monumentally scandalous Abdulrasheed Maina affair even in this APC dispensation of change prove that no party is immune from corrupt behavior. The decisive difference is that, though he may be agonizingly and discomfitingly slow in acting, Buhari makes no distinction between stealing and corruption and those found guilty of malfeasance under him are invariably brought to book.

    Perhaps the major albatross that the PDP has to confront is the unprecedented and colossal corruption perpetrated under the Dr. Goodluck Jonathan administration. Humongous amounts of stolen funds and scores of mind boggling physical assets within and outside Nigeria have been recovered from top functionaries of that government while many are being prosecuted in court. Many Nigerians are unlikely to be persuaded by the argument that the anti-corruption war is one-sided because only members of the opposition are being prosecuted. The fact that other thieves have not been caught does not justify my own stealing if the law catches up with me.

    Against this background, it is my view that the PDP should have been more concerned with electing leaders that could effectively help rebrand, re-position and rebuild the party for the future rather than the preoccupation with zoning of party offices all with 2019 in mind. It should have sought to elect national leaders who symbolize a decisive ethical break with the putrescent past and a desire for a refreshingly different future. That would have jolted an APC that is obviously being lulled into complacency by a lack of viable competition.

    The PDP appears to underestimate the amount of work it has to do to redeem its image, meaningfully change public perception in its favour and become a viable, vibrant and electable brand once again. Although the APC as a whole and the Buhari administration in particular suffer from many self-inflicted wounds and unforced errors, millions of Nigerians still have confidence in the personal integrity of Buhari and Osibanjo. If they emerge as the party’s candidates in 2019, it will be a difficult ticket for the PDP in its present form to beat.

    With the PDP’s loss of presidential power in 2015, the locus of power and influence within the party has unquestionably shifted from the presidency to the party’s governors. This is obviously because the governors control immense resources, which they can readily deploy to achieve their goals within the party as allegedly happened at the PDP convention. But then, the problem of powerful cliques seizing control of a political party and becoming a virtual dictatorship within largely by virtue of money power is not limited to the PDP. It is also a challenge that the APC has to confront.

    Indeed, the overbearing influence of powerful groups, interests and cliques within parties cannot be eliminated. It can only be reduced and continuous attempts made to empower the rank and file of party members to take ownership of their parties. How to reduce the influence and role of money in our political processes including intra-party contests remains an enduring problem.

    The Electoral Act No. 6, 2010 (Amendment Act) Bill 2017 recently passed into law by the Senate takes bold and commendable steps towards ensuring freer and fairer intra-party electoral processes. Among other provisions, the law prevents political parties from imposing arbitrary nomination fees on political aspirants and makes it impossible for parties to impose qualification/disqualification criteria, measures or conditions on aspirants for political offices different from what is stated in the 1999 constitution.

    Even more importantly, the law provides that “all members of political parties are now eligible to elect candidates of parties in indirect primaries”. The aim is obviously to reduce the power of party executives to manipulate primaries. Even though it is well meaning, expanding the base from which delegates to indirect primaries are chosen to include all party members will indirectly work in favour of those who have sufficient funds to bribe the far larger number of people who will now elect delegates. But it is at least another small step in the right direction.

    Surely, the new Prince Uche Secondus-led National Executive Committee of the PDP has its task cut out for it. It remains to be seen if the new Chairman can free himself from the grip of the forces that ensured his emergence to be his own man in the interest of the party. In a polity characterized by unprincipled ideological fluidity and peripatetic political vagrancy among political actors, one cannot but be impressed by Secondus’ ideological consistency over the years. In the Second Republic, he served as the Rivers State Youth Leader of the conservative National Party of Nigeria (NPN) and in the aborted Third Republic he was the Rivers State Publicity Secretary of the National Republican Convention (NRC), another party to the right of the political spectrum.

    A two-term Chairman of the PDP in Rivers State, Secondus has played several critical roles at the national level of the party including South-South Coordinator for the PDP National Campaign Council in 2007, National Organizing Secretary of the party between 2008 and 2012, National Deputy Chairman and also Acting National Chairman of the PDP following the resignation of Alhaji Adamu Muazu in 2015. He no doubt has a rich political pedigree that should serve him well in his new position.

    However, in 2016, Secondus was detained by the EFCC for unlawfully receiving 23 luxury vehicles from embattled businessman, Jide Omokore, on behalf of the PDP. His detention was subsequently declared illegal by a law court, which awarded N10million damages against the EFCC.

    The party’s new National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Kola Ologbodiyan is a professional colleague with a track record of competence, versatility and integrity in media, public relations practice and political consultancy over the years. Ologbondiyan has already hit the ground running and is sure to give the APC a good run for its money. That would sure be good for the polity. I do not know much about the other members of the team but we should be hopeful that they can help lay the foundation for the emergence of a brand new PDP, an organization proud of and faithful to its conservative ideological antecedents in the interest of stable democratic development in Nigeria.

  • Ekweremadu: PDP should conduct primary

    Ekweremadu: PDP should conduct primary

    The Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, has charged the newly elected National Working Committee (NWC) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to ensure transparent and credible primaries, ahead of the 2019 general elections.

    He blamed the party’s defeat in the 2015 general election on lack of internal democracy that manifested in the imposition of candidates and disregard for the party’s constitution.

    Ekweremadu delivered a keynote address at the opening of a two-day retreat for the NWC and State Chairmen of the PDP in Abuja.

    He said: “Another election year is by the corner. The new NWC must ensure that the party does not repeat past mistakes. We must return power to the people, as our name and slogan rightly demand of us. This will not only reassure Nigerians that we are indeed an improved and rebranded PDP, but will also encourage the massive return of former party faithful.”

    Ekweremadu said, the public will evaluate the PDP’s commitment to end corruption and promote accountability and transparency by the way it handles internal party affairs.

    He added: “We have a history of fighting corruption and our systems must be corruption-free. This should stand us out as the only hope to eradicate corruption in Nigeria. The PDP established the Independent Corrupt Practices and Related Offences Commission, and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC.

    “We saw to the enactment of the Freedom of Information Act and introduction of the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS), Treasury Single Account (TSA), and the Biometric Verification Number (BVN). The PDP also ensured that the Civil Society Organisations and the press flourished to promote an accountable and open society.

    “There was no effort by the PDP to tame the Non-Governmental Organisations or the use of the social media. Importantly, we beamed the anti-graft searchlight on our own members to demonstrate that there must be no sacred cows in the war against graft.

    “Therefore, we must conduct our affairs in a way that reassure Nigerians that under the incoming PDP administration, we will not only consolidate on all these track record, but will also firmly eradicate corruption from 2019”.

    The senator warned against any form of undue interferences by the NWC in the affairs of the state chapters of the party.

    “I appeal to the NWC to ensure that the state executives of the party enjoy the freedom to run the affairs of the party at the state level. The current NWC should emphatically denounce all forms of impunity and the politics of godfather and godson.

    “The state executives and members of our party at that level understand the character of the aspirants, their popularity, and the local circumstances in their jurisdictions. They should, therefore, be allowed to work with the electoral panels to pilot the primaries transparently and creditably.

    “But like Caesar’s wife, the state executives must also live above board. This is a new PDP”, he added.

    On the party’s presidential ticket, Ekweremadu urged the NWC to provide a level playing ground for all interested and qualified aspirants.

    He said: “Of utmost importance in the build up to 2019 election year is our choice of presidential candidate. The fate and political fortunes of the party depend on the party’s presidential candidate.

    “The party must, therefore, identify a candidate with the credentials, reach, charisma, competence, and popularity to outmatch any candidate presented by the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC and any other party for that matter.

  • PDP will overcome latest factional crisis – Adeyeye

    PDP will overcome latest factional crisis – Adeyeye

    The immediate past spokesman of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Prince Dayo Adeyeye, has expressed dismay at the latest factional crisis in the party.

    Adeyeye said the defunct National Caretaker Committee handed over a “highly united party” to the new National Working Committee (NWC) led by Prince Uche Secondus.

    He said it would be a “big disappointment” if the party leaders start another factional crisis, adding that the rift will be resolved very soon.

    A group of aggrieved members led by one Emmanuel Nwosu had on Wednesday formed a splinter group known as Fresh PDP following crisis that trailed the December 9 national convention of the party.

    They kicked against the conduct of the convention, citing the emergence of a “unity list” as a major flaw in the exercise.

    Adeyeye spoke with journalists in Ado-Ekiti on Thursday shortly after he was welcomed back to his home state by thousands of supporters.

    Adeyeye said: “I am now home, I am no longer in the executive of the PDP and you know that we have just handed over after serving the party.

    “It will be a big disappointment if we start another (factional) crisis; as far as the National Caretaker Committee in which I served is concerned, we have handed over a united PDP.

    “We have conducted a credible convention, the first real elective convention in the history of the party and it was very successful.

    “We had anticipated that there would be problems after this convention and that was why we set up a reconciliation committee headed by Governor Seriake Dickson of Bayelsa State.

    “He has swung into action already, he is already working. I believe that if we all give support to that committee, it will be able to solve these problems.

    “I believe that within the next weeks, we will get over these problems. It is not unexpected but I believe we will get over our problems.”