Tag: PDP

  • PDP, DSS plot to shift elections, says APC

    PDP, DSS plot to shift elections, says APC

    There are plans to postpone next month’s elections, the All Progressives Congress (APC) alleged yesterday.

    Its proof: claims by the Department of State Service (DSS) that APC planned to hack into the Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC) voter registration database.

    At a news conference yesterday in Lagos, APC National Publicity Secretary Lai Mohammed said the DSS fabricated lies to pave the way for INEC to postpone the elections.

    The APC spokesperson wondered why it took this long for the DSS to come out with its findings, noting that it was done in conjunction with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), after discovering that Jonathan’s administration had been rejected.

    He said: “We will like to tell all Nigerians that the crap called ‘findings’ is part of the ongoing efforts by the Jonathan administration to postpone next month’s general elections. Having seen the handwriting on the wall vis-a-vis the growing rejection of the PDP by Nigerians, the Jonathan administration has gone into a panic mode, while embarking on a plan to postpone the elections.

    “The summary of the ‘findings’ is that our party, the APC, had an ‘’articulated plan to inflate the party’s membership data as well as hack into INEC’s voter registration database through the creation of party membership forms and cards to match INEC’s voters register across the country.

    “Our immediate response, which was issued on the same day and which got a big play, was to dismiss the ‘findings’ as hogwash, a great disservice to Nigeria and an embarrassment to all intelligence-gathering organisations around the world.”

    Mohammed added that having studies the ‘findings’, “we believe it is necessary for us to respond to the allegations in a more detailed manner that will show that we were even charitable to have described the report as hogwash. That DSS report is bunkum, garbage, and is not worth the paper on which it is written.

    “Before you say our claim is outlandish, remember that some prominent Nigerians have publicly called for the postponement of the election – which can only benefit the Jonathan administration and delay its impending Waterloo at the polls.

    “Place the calls side by side with the apparently doctored outcome of the DSS investigations and the timing of the report’s release, and you will understand where they are coming from.”

    The APC chieftain said  the “findings” cannot stand a serious scrutiny by independent investigators because the DSS worked backwards, from answer to question, in an effort to reach a pre-determined conclusion.

    Mohammed maintained that the party was not aware that INEC has made a complaint of anyone or group trying to hack into its system.

    “We are not aware that INEC has made a complaint of anyone or group trying to hack into its system. The DSS ‘findings’ are baseless as INEC’S database is a reflection of the registered members with the Permanent Voter’s Cards (PVCs). Please note that at the time of the DSS’ raids, the PVCs had already been printed. Therefore, of what value would it be to hack into the system and input more names?

    “Simply put, it is not possible for the APC to hack into the INEC Data Base for the following reasons:

    “INEC’s database is not online; how then is it possible for anyone to hack into it?

    “To prevent virus intrusion, there is no Internet service at the APC Data Centre that was raided. Therefore, it is not possible to hack into INEC’s database.

    “The DSS has claimed that hacking tutorials were discovered on an external hard drive. This is a lie! All the USB ports on the pc systems in the office were disabled to prevent virus intrusion. Therefore, the use of external hard drives is not allowed at the APC Data Centre. If this is so, how is it possible for an external hard drive containing these so-called hacking materials to be found on the premises of the APC Data Office?

    “Please note that the work stations at our various data registration centres in the country are manned by unemployed youths with just basic computer knowledge. The question to ask is: Would the party have employed these people if the intent were to hack into INEC’s Data Base or employed gurus in the IT world?

    “It is clear that the DSS purchased a hard drive and downloaded the information themselves from the Internet. After all, the DSS, by virtue of its duties, should be the hacking experts, hence hacking tutorials will be part of their staff induction training.

    “As we have said, the overall motive of the raid of our offices and the so-called findings is to give the impression that the INEC voter’s register has been corrupted, hence cannot be used for next month’s elections. Now, a more specific question: Why did the DSS break into the APC Data Centre at the time it did?

    “It is no coincidence that the DSS raided the APC Data Centre on Nov. 22nd 2014, exactly one week before the start of the PVC distribution exercise on Nov. 28th 2014.”

    The party’s conclusion is that “the DSS came to vandalise our Data Centre is because the Service is working hand-in-hand with the PDP.

    “They carried out the raids to know our party’s strength, in terms of membership. Please note that after the raids, many of our registered members could not find their names on the list when they went to collect their PVCs. This is not a mere coincidence,” Mohammed said.

    According to him, “After the first visit of the DSS, it was clear to all Nigerians that the Service’s claim that we were cloning PVCs could not be sustained. That explains why they could not display single cloned PVC.”

  • Commissioner urges electorate to reject PDP

    Commissioner urges electorate to reject PDP

    The Imo State Commissioner for Information & Strategy, Chief Chidi Ibeh, has advised the electorate to reject the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and vote out its candidates.

    He said a return to the PDP era would impede the Rescue Mission Agenda and halt transformation.

    The commissioner, in a chat with reporters, warned that a PDP-led administration would stop the free education programme of Governor Rochas Okorocha, which he said “has made education possible for the children of the rich and the poor.”

    Ibeh noted that the monumental achievements of the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led administration “have become a torn in the flesh of the PDP members, who are determined to return to power.”

    He recalled that the 12 years administration of the PDP in Imo “not only stagnated development, but also brought  pains, misery and penury”, noting that a vote for the PDP would amount to a return to the ugly past.

    The commissioner, who hails from Ahiazu Mbaise Local Government with the PDP governorship candidate, advised people to shun sentiments in voting, saying those seeking their votes to succeed Okorocha had nothing to show for the years they had been in office, but only chose to cast aspersions on the governor to cover up their misrule.

    He said Okorocha, through judicious use of the lean resources accruing to Imo, provided democracy dividends in all nooks and crannies of the state, “with the families of his critics benefiting from his free education.”

    Decrying the campaign of calumny against the governor by indigenes of Mbaise in positions of authority, to manipulate their ways to power, Ibeh hoped that  his achievements would earn him another victory.

    He said: “The time for a governor of Mbaise extraction is not now, because there is no vacancy in the Government House, Owerri. It is only in 2019 that Mbaise people will come together, discuss and present somebody for the governorship, who will be accepted by all.

    “For now, Chief Emeka Ihedioha, who I understand is running for the governorship, is on his own.”

  • Cross River lawmaker dumps PDP for APC

    Cross River lawmaker dumps PDP for APC

    The Cross River State House of Assembly member representing Boki Constituency 1, Ernest Eki, has defected from the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Eki, who chairs the House Committee on Rural Development and Public Utilities, is the second APC man in the 25-member Assembly. The first is Alex Irek, representing Obubra 1.

    The lawmaker told reporters in Calabar that he defected because the PDP administration had not been faithful to Cross River people.

    He said: “The present administration has not done so well to Cross River residents. We live on deceit. I left the party for good to obtain my mandate in the field.”

  • Akwa Ibom PDP chair: Emmanuel has united us

    Akwa Ibom PDP chair: Emmanuel has united us

    The presentation of the governorship flag to Akwa Ibom State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate, Mr Udom Emmanuel, by the party’s leadership in Lagos has been described as the unifying factor for the party.

    Akwa Ibom PDP Chairman Obong Paul Ekpo spoke at the weekend in Uyo, the state capital, when he addressed party supporters at the Akwa Ibom International Airport to welcome Emmanuel and his entourage from Lagos.

    Ekpo said: “The presentation of the governorship flag to Emmanuel has finally laid to rest the speculations and misinformation that had pervaded the political sphere. I am impressed with this turnout of our people to welcome us. This is a demonstration of the fact that Emmanuel is the best for Akwa Ibom. He is the face of the new Akwa Ibom…”

  • Lamido orders PDP supporters to ‘deal with’ opposition

    Lamido orders PDP supporters to ‘deal with’ opposition

    Jigawa State Governor Sule Lamido has ordered members of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and his loyalists not to spare any non-member of the party.

    The governor gave the directive at the weekend when he addressed PDP’s supporters in Buji Local Government Area.

    It was in continuation of the rallies to canvass support for PDP governorship candidate, Alhaji Aminu Ibrahim Ringim.

    Lamido said the order was limited to former PDP members who defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) and had been “making noise” about bringing change to the state and the nation.

    He said: “This order does not include people like Gen. Mohammadu Buhari and his people, who were in real opposition right from the beginning.”

    He added: “But those in the PDP before, in the state and the nation, people like Senator Danjuma Goje, Rabiu Kwankwaso, Aliyu Wamako and the host of others shouting change, changin Uwasu?”

     

  • Post-primary crisis rocks Borno PDP

    Post-primary crisis rocks Borno PDP

    There is no end in sight to the crisis rocking the Borno State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) over the outcome of its governorship primaries.

    Party elders and other stakeholders are protesting the alleged substitution of Alhaji Gambo Lawan as the governorship candidate.

    Lawan, who is the former National Chairman of the Grassroots Democratic Movement (GDM) and ex-Chairman of Maiduguri Metropolitan Council,  was selected as the flag bearer, following the intervention of the national party leadership. Following the selection, a Certificate of Return was given to him.

    At the selection process were  Vice-President Namadi Sambo, Senate President David Mark, PDP National Chairman Adamu Mu’azu,  PDP Board of Trustees (BoT) Chairman Chief Tony Anenih, Borno State PDP Chairman, Minister of State for Power Muhammed Wakil, and other leaders.

    However, Lawan’s name was substituted with that of Mohammed Imam, a nominee of Senator Ali Modu Sheriff at the Independent Electoral Commission (INEC) office.

    Borno PDP stakeholders, in a letter to President Goodluck Jonathan, called for a reversal of the wrongful substitution in the interest of justice and fair play. The petition was signed by Hon. Aminu Yakudima, Ibrahim Abacha and Salisu Aliyu.

    They said: “The process and composition of the people present is first of its kind in the history of our great party, which you described as the Supreme Court of the party, whose decision is final. You may wish to recall further that Gambo Lawan, having emerged from the old PDP as the candidate, you directed the new entrants to nominate the candidate for the deputy governor.

    “It is disheartening to note that 14 days after the nomination and the affirmation of Gambo Lawan as the candidate, he was wrongly and illegally substituted with Mohammed Imam on the eve of the closure for the submission of the nominees to INEC.

    “We want to believe that you are unaware of this ugly and sad development particularly in a nomination process of this magnitude that was conducted by the highest office in the land. In this regard and in the best interest of the party, we call for the immediate reversal of the decision to substitute Gambo Lawan.”

  • APC, PDP and battle for Lagos

    APC, PDP and battle for Lagos

    For 16 years, the progressive parties have ruled Lagos and impacted on the city-state. Will the situation be different in the general election? Ade Adetayo, who examines the two parties — the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) — contends that the ruling party will have an edge over the opposition platform in the general elections. 

    The struggle for the soul of Lagos State by the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic  Party (PDP) is taking on an interesting dimension. The issues that will shape the contest are many. They include security, economy, job creation and the infrastructure battle. But, the slogans have not excluded innuendoes, half-truths and flowery promises, which to the discerning electorate, may end up as the elusive rainbow on the lambent sky.

    On January 4,  Mr. Jimi Agbaje, the PDP flag bearer, was  in North London to present  a fanciful speech entitled: ‘My Master Plan for a New Lagos’ to a select audience of party supporters from Europe and America. It focused on three key areas of security, education and health. To the PDP faithful in the Diaspora, it all sounded more like some sweet music to their eager ears. But,  to the vast majority of discerning Lagosians, Agbaje’s claim of the ‘real change’ is laughable.And why not? It all boils down to the fact that they have immensely benefitted from what good governance is all about, especially during the tenure of Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN) and his predecessor, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Agbaje’s treatise on the new Lagos therefore,cracks the rib all because a politician cannot give what his party does not have.

    Indeed, one pertinent reason why the APC’s mantra of ‘Change’ has caught the nation’s polity like a wildfire and millions of Nigerians are queuing behind its party flag bearers at both the state and federal levels is the incontestable fact that PDP has failed the citizenry and woefully too.

    In fact, it has become an inglorious acronym andsordid symbol for all that poor leadership entails. Name it-clueless leadership,failed electoral problems, prevailing decrepit infrastructure characterized by epileptic power supply and distribution, pot hole-riddled roads,mass youth unemployment all signpost our journey so far from 1999 to 2015 under PDP. Add these to the twin evils of crass corruption and inexcusable impunity all in high places.And that again explains the growing clamour across the political spectrum for the much-needed and long-awaited change.

    It therefore, stands logic on its head for anyone flying the leaking umbrella of the PDP which has been unable to shield us from the scorching sun of inept leadership as well as the lashing rains of corruption to promise change. Agbaje’s  promises to act as the key to unlock Lagos state’s huge potentials is not in tandem with realities on ground. The reasons are obvious  because those potentials have  already been made obvious to the generality of the residents courtesy of APC’s people-friendly policies, programmes and projects.Where do we start from as the list is endless?

    Do we talk of the unprecedented turn- around in the state’s economy, which even Agbaje admits has witnessed an exponential increase from an Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) of N10 billion  in 1999 to N400 billion in 2014?And which has made it possible for impact-making programmes in the key areas of infrastructural development, healthcare delivery, education, skills acquisition and transportation? What about the  most modern ten-lane Lagos-Badagry  Expressway or the Lekki Export Processing Zone?

    What about the effective waste management system boasting of 5,000 refuse trucks within five years of Fashola’s administration across the state? Can we forget the Operation Green Lagos with clean toilets, eradication of the menace of floods assisted by the dredging of canals in such areas as Orile-Iganmu, Ajegunle and Ogba? What about the most modern mobile  sewage laboratory as the first of its kind in Africa? Do we speak about the clean,orderly and affordable Bus Rapid Transport system that has since become a model for other states?Are these the ones Agbaje refers to as the ‘give-and-take policies of the present administration’?

    If indeed, he is true to his conscience Agbaje would admit that given the spate of preventable fatal accidents caused mainly by the okada riders, government’s clamp down on their nefarious activities  is all meant  to save irreplaceable lives. Some were reportedly  engaged in the nefarious activities of armed robbery and ritual murders. Those whose motor cycles were seized ran afoul of the law. Every responsible government is based on the rule of law.

    In addition, Agbaje’s claim of the collection of N1,000 from market  women per day as unremitted and un-receipted for flies in the face of the aforementioned increase in the IGR. Maintenance of modern markets do not go for free anywhere in the world. And so is quality education delivery, whether we admit it or not. But graciously, the government has made sacrifice in other areas to make the reversal possible.With the vast improvement in the pupils’ and students’ reading culture as evident in improved performance in external examinations set by WAEC/NECO and JAMB, his claim of poor learning conditions in Lagos schools holds littler water. This is incomparable withwhat obtains in the PDP-led states.

    The same scenario plays itself out when the APC flag-bearerof the state, Mr.Akinwunmi Ambode, a thoroughbred, tested and trusted technocrat and financial guru, is pitched against that of the PDP, Mr.Jimi Agbaje, a run-of-the mill failed politician cum pharmacist. While Ambode parades a pride-evoking curriculum vitae as the former Accountant –General, Permanent Secretary Ministry of Finance and Auditor-General, whose experience traversed several of the local government councils in the state, Agbaje’s own pales into insignificance. His only credential in politics is having contested the state gubernatorial ticket on the platform of one the defunct political parties.

    This throws up the fundamental questions. Even as an un biased observer or a referee in the game of politics, who would score more of the vital goals? Ambode of course, based on his wealth of experience in the administrative affairs of the state and his robust qualification in financial management. He stands on the brink of history to carry on the baton of the culture of leadership excellence which the forward-looking administration of BRF will be handing over come May 29,2015?

    The preference for the vastly experienced APC in the Centre of Excellence above the untested and untrustworthy PDP is the wisest of all. The  difference between light  and darkness  is patently clear.

  • APC will sweep PDP out of Katsina, says Masari

    APC will sweep PDP out of Katsina, says Masari

    Ahe All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate in Katsina State, Alhaji Aminu Masari, has said the power of the electorate in the state will win next month’s elections for the party.

    The former Speaker of the House of Representatives said the APC’s appeal and support at the grassroots have put it head and shoulder over other parties in the state.

    According to him, citizens’ disenchantment with the current PDP government over worsening security and poor state of the economy are responsible for the yearning of the people for change.

    Masari spoke in Katsina at the presentation of Alhaji Mannir Yakubu to party leaders and other candidates as his running mate in the forthcoming election, by the chairman of the party in the state, Dr. Mustapha Inuwa.

    He said the issue of homogenous relationship within the party has become pertinent, going by the antics of other political parties in the race to capture the state.

    “APC is ready for the polls and we will ensure that their plans to manipulate the voters did not succeed,” Masari declared and enjoined party members to maintain their trust in the party and where there were grievances, such issues should be tabled and addressed.

    He pledged that an APC government would institute mechanism aimed at curbing insurgencies and youth restiveness in the country.

    Yakubu in his acceptance speech asked for more commitment and loyalty to the party by supporters and members alike.

  • Dynamics of APC, PDP presidential campaigns

    Dynamics of APC, PDP presidential campaigns

    Barely one week into their presidential campaigns, the leading contenders for the presidency, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC), have given indications of the perspectives of their candidates and parties, as well as, strangely, the deep and fundamental intangibles of their worldview as they relate to the concepts of leadership, vision and philosophy, either real or abstract. It is not certain that the limited time available for campaigning is enough to make the PDP persuade Nigeria’s distraught, cynical and skeptical electorate to re-elect President Goodluck Jonathan, to overlook the many problems he has been unable to grapple with in a coherent, consistent and courageous manner, and to sympathise with his emotive responses to allegations of illiberal approach to politics and shocking lack of intuitive appreciation of the elementary challenges facing the country he has ruled for more than five years.

    Nor is it also certain that the limited campaign time will permit Muhammadu Buhari, the APC presidential candidate, room to sell his candidature and virtues, and also to dispel the many criticisms validly leveled against his less than two years in power as military head of state in the early 1980s. Many of those criticisms, in spite of the long intervening years — nearly all of 30 years — still retain their potency and validity. There are doubts he has really transformed from a rigid, abrasive, ruthless and imperceptive ruler he once was. He is accused of jadedness, sectarianism, tribalism, lack of rigour or intellectual depth, and an unforgivable lack of empathy. His opponents will try to put him on the defensive and make the time very short for him to prove his bona fides.

    Indeed, the dynamics of both campaigns will be influenced by the considerations above, some of them extraneous, others misplaced and specious, and yet others simply deliberately mischievous. The more adept of the two campaigns will, however, utilise the limited time fairly effectively, if not to completely prove their competence to present the next president, at least to make their candidate the lesser of two evils. Given the constricted choices the country faces, the electorate will have to choose one way or the other, for choose they must. So far, as a matter of fact, both campaigns have emitted sublime signals, some of them quite portentous, of what their parties are, who their candidates are at bottom, how limited their vistas are, and what they mean to Nigeria. It is not quite clear whether a consideration of these intangibles, these so-called sublime signals, will influence the direction of voting, for the voters are themselves quite limited in horizon and are sentimental. But these signals will doubtless determine the direction, health and sustainability of the country in the medium to long run.

    Take the kick-off of the Jonathan re-election campaign in Lagos for instance. It was symptomatic of the partisan malaise that has turned the PDP into a fearsome behemoth with no internal moral core and absolutely no regard for other political parties and democratic fundamentals. The kick-off also showed in disturbingly bold relief Dr Jonathan’s intellectual weakness, questionable historicism and perverse logic, limited worldview, malignant extemporaneousness, sweeping and unpardonable generalisations and conclusions. “Those of my age and above are finished; we are gone,” moaned the president puzzlingly. “That is why I am addressing those of you that are voting for the first time. We believe it is you that will take us to the moon. My generation has failed, we couldn’t take Nigeria to the moon.”

    The problem is not just that this questionable reading and understanding of history and contemporary events expose the president’s inadequacies, especially his lack of logical reasoning, but that they indicate a far more disturbing manifestation of the low quality of leadership in Nigeria, a lack of mastery of the existential and geopolitical threats facing the country, and an infatuation with boyish utopia.

    The highlights of the president’s Lagos campaign, especially his tendentious rationalisation of his failing counterinsurgency war, his justification of his slow anti-corruption campaign, his defence of inept arms procurement methods, and his shocking inurement to his self-incriminating statements over MEND’s 2010 Abuja bombing, shocked and perplexed the thinking members of his audience, some of whom exclaimed in gasps behind him on the dais. Nonetheless, some of the facts mentioned by the president were incontestable, such as the neglect suffered by the military over the decades. But his suppositions, his inferences, and his conclusions were astonishingly unpresidential, not to say inimical to the growth, stability and good fortunes of the country. There is nothing he said in his Lagos campaign that entitles him to victory, or gives indication he had the subtlety and philosophical depth needed to rule a complex country in the 21st century. When he was right, which was seldom, he did not cut the figure of a president, or present the facade of a noble or of a philosophical-king. And when he was wrong, which was often, such as when he guilefully and gleefully promoted sectarianism and ethnic divisions, he did not surprise.

    Dr Jonathan, alas, displayed none of the composure associated with the high office of the presidency. In the Lagos campaign, as he sadly did elsewhere in recent times, he quiveringly and emotionally fulminated against his opponents, endorsed the anti-democratic tendencies of state security agencies, preoccupied himself and his presidency with elemental things, and propounded none of the salient and uplifting ideas a complex society like Nigeria should embrace. None whatsoever. In the Lagos campaign, he tried to defend himself as much as possible, though he made a hash of it. And almost as an afterthought, he tried to sell a policy or two, but was unable to persuade either by logic or by force of his personality. The past few decades have been ideationally barren for Nigeria. Under Dr Jonathan, the sterility has grown incomparably. Four more years of him would not regenerate the country, as his campaign seeks to convince the electorate, or reposition it in line with the modernising ideas and infinitely changing complexities of the 21st century.

    Conversely, the dynamics of the APC campaign exhibit a different hue. The opposition party, poised as it seems on the edge of victory, has about three weeks or four to prove the capacity of its presidential candidate and his advertised transformation into a modern, if unaccustomed, democrat and liberal. In Lagos, a hysterical Dr Jonathan said that that transformation was not possible, and a vote for Gen Buhari would ineluctably return Nigeria to the dark days of atavistic prosecution of the anti-corruption war, where suspects were crated and jailed without regard to the law. But compared to Dr Jonathan’s campaign volubility, Gen Buhari, not the most eloquent of men, has always spoken laconically, often with a terseness that belies his political and leadership experience and hunger for office. His gaffes and indiscretions are thus few and far between. Beyond seemingly partitioning the campaign between himself and his running mate, Yemi Osinbajo, a law professor, to achieve maximum impact, the general’s taciturnity and the silent and subterranean jostling for power and influence in the APC appear to cause dreadful unease in campaign and political circles.

    Unlike the PDP whose power structure had earlier been defined and shaped, perhaps disapprovingly, under the Olusegun Obasanjo presidency, with occasional eruptions between governors and the presidency, the APC has the onerous and compelling burden of campaigning for the highest office in the land at the same time as embarking on a difficult journey of self-discovery, self-definition, and self-actualisation. The ongoing internal jostling may have no significant effect on the party’s electoral chances if well managed, but in more ways than party apparatchiks think, the future of the party and its performance as a ruling party, should it attain the highest office, could be considerably stymied by that burden.

    A faint trichotomy is thus visible in the APC. On one hand is the powerful and inspiring arm of the party responsible for the formation of the APC, an amalgam of parties many but that powerful and inspiring few at first believed impossible. On the other hand is the northern caucus desperate to regain the presidency, a desperation fuelled by the incontestably poor performance of the Jonathan government. And on the third hand is a coalition of forces made up principally of governors and other party leaders determined to gain the upper hand in the power struggle, an upper hand they hinge on what they describe as the political altruism of checkmating any domination within the party. The battle for supremacy in the PDP was brutally and peremptorily settled by Chief Obasanjo. It will take a little while for that battle to be settled in the APC, whether they win the presidency or not.

    Though the APC is doing its best to conceal that jostling, a perceptive observer will notice the fault lines, as faint and imperceptible as they may appear. But what cannot be hidden is that if care is not taken, and irrespective of whether the party wins the presidency or not, the internal struggle may be won by an arm of the party that does not have the passion, drive, depth and conviction that inspired its formation. On the surface, there may be nothing wrong with having many tendencies within a party, as some developed democracies have shown. But for a party still in formation, and one which seems close to winning the presidency on the strength of the appalling incompetence and failures of the ruling party, it would indeed be cynical for the jostling within the APC to be settled in favour of an arm more desirous of dominating and moulding it into a typical party, almost indistinguishable from the PDP, than imbuing it with the kind of substance and character both the party and country need to survive and flourish.

    But perhaps this observation is an exaggeration. Perhaps the internal struggles in the APC are rather inconsequential. If that is so, the party is lucky. However, all indications show that there is a mild tremor within the party, even if that tremor may not hamstring both its campaign and battle to win February’s presidential poll. What is clear overall is that both the PDP and its candidate, Dr Jonathan, are “spent and finished,” a Freudian slip the president himself made in Lagos at his campaign kick-off. The dynamics of the PDP campaign are such that the party seems fated to lose the elections because of the president’s off-putting personality and general incapacity. The dynamics of the APC campaign, on the other hand, are such that the party seems poised to outperform its expectations in spite of Gen Buhari’s inability to generate excitement by his speech and campaign style, and the dredging up of many of his past objectionable statements and policies by the ruling party.

  • Umahi’s PDP faction begs Elechi for forgiveness

    The faction of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Ebonyi State chapter, loyal to the state deputy governor, Dave Umahi, at the weekend begged Governor Martin Elechi for forgiveness ahead of next month’s election.

    The acting chairman of the party, Chief Joseph Onwe, made the appeal to the governor at the stakeholders’ meeting convened by the governor at the party’s secretariat in Abakaliki.

    He appealed to the governor to ensure that the party’s interest is promoted above others, stressing that PDP, since he was sworn-in in 2007 as the governor, has enjoyed uncommon progress and peace.

    Onwe also begged him to forgive those that had wronged him in the past and move forward.

    He also begged the governor to attend the official flag-off of the party’s campaign in the state tomorrow (Monday).

    Responding, Elechi stressed that he is not only the governor of the PDP that brought him to power but also to other political parties.

    The governor also lamented the disunity in his party, saying he was not aware that the party will kick off campaign on Monday.

    He said his purpose for convening the meeting of the stakeholders of the party was to inform them of the coming of President Goodluck Jonathan to Ebonyi State scheduled to hold on January 16.

    Elechi noted with dismay that the party he is leading is witnessing problems.

    “Many people could not come here on time because of some reasons. I’m usually blunt when I speak. Our problems are of our own making, whether we accept it or not. There were conflicting signals for people not to come for this meeting.

    “By the implication of my being the leader of this party and I was elected on the platform of PDP but having been sworn-in as governor of the state, I’m supposed to be responsible for the interest of everybody in the state regardless of party division. I’m working for the well-being of everybody including those in opposition party. I’m supposed to protect their lives, property and interest just as I do with those in the same party with me.

    “If we approach our business with narrow mindedness and bring unnecessary division among ourselves, we will get to nowhere,”  he said.