Tag: PDP

  • Umana  commends Attah for advocating open primary

    Umana commends Attah for advocating open primary

    The immediate past Secretary to Akwa Ibom State government and a leading gubernatorial aspirant of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Mr. Umana Umana, has commended former governor, Victor Attah, for openly advocating free and open contest in the party’s forthcoming primary.

    Umana, in a statement in Uyo yesterday, said the co-chair of the committee on Resource Control at the just concluded National Conference has lived up to his true billing and status as father of all Akwa Ibom indigenes.

    He described Attah’s call for a level- playing field for all the gubernatorial aspirants, irrespective of their senatorial districts, as a further demonstration of his true statesmanship.

    The former SSG said the former governor’s declaration during a reception for him at Asan Ibibio that zoning is not the way forward for Akwa Ibom was praiseworthy.

    In a speech that drew deafening roar of approval at Asan Ibibio, the cradle of Ibibio civilization at the weekend, Attah said: “As I looked around, I see a number of faces here of people I know are aspiring to the office of governor of this state.

    “A large number of those aspirants are from Eket Senatorial District. This should be expected because of the sequential logic that after Uyo and Ikot Ekpene, it should be Eket.

    “But there must be a level playing field for all aspirants. This is particularly true at this time when there is such a crying need to give hope back to our people: to restore their confidence in their government and to rebuild the state.”

    He added: “Zoning will certainly be a major consideration but at a time like this certain other compelling determinants cannot be sacrificed on the altar of zoning alone.”

    Umana said Attah’s declaration was consistent with the position of the national leadership of the PDP and the demand of majority of Akwa Ibom indigenes at the PDP elders and stakeholders’ town hall meeting on April 15 in Uyo.

  • Expel Lamido now, Northern youths tell PDP

    Expel Lamido now, Northern youths tell PDP

    The Jigawa state chapter of the Northern Youth Forum (NYF) yesterday urged the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to investigate the anti-party activities of Governor Sule Lamido with a view to expelling him.

    NYF’s Publicity Secretary, Sani Auyo, in a statement berated the governor for his recent criticism of President Goodluck Jonathan’s performance and reelection bid.

    Lamido, the group said, lacks the moral justification to criticise Jonathan being a beneficiary of the PDP.

    “Governor Sule Lamido is well known for his political antics of open disobedience to his political mentors like the late Mallam Aminu Kano, the late Alhaji Abubakar Rimi. We, as a group are disturbed.

    “Governor Lamido is uncomfortable with the growing number of Nigerians asking President Jonathan to contest in 2015. What we may not explain is whether Governor Lamido is driven by envy or just cheap publicity but we are calling on Nigerians to ignore the ranting of Sule Lamido and maintain their support and solidarity to the transformation agenda of President Jonathan,” the group said.

    It went on:  “In Lamido’s history of anti-party activities, it is clear that he never had the masses at heart. He never thinks of the north as his constituency but his personal political goals as the north’s agenda.

    “Most importantly, we call on the PDP national leadership to bring an end to this cheap blackmail by expelling Governor Lamido from the party.”

     

  • 2015 Senate: APC, PDP plot Umeh’s fall in Anambra

    2015 Senate: APC, PDP plot Umeh’s fall in Anambra

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) are fighting hard to stop the senatorial ambition of the National Chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), Chief Victor Umeh, in 2015.

    Though none of the political parties has conducted their primaries in the state to elect their candidates for elective positions, Umeh had already given himself automatic ticket for the Central Senatorial Zone without any challenge.

    The Nation gathered yesterday that is was Umeh’s automatic ticket to himself in the Central Senatorial zone that made some National Assembly members of APGA, led by Ekwunife to defect recently to the PDP.

    According to Ekwunife, “I have joined a party where I will be given the opportunity to air my views and not staying in a place where one person will take every decision, political party is not a cult group,” she said.

     

  • Adigwe visits PDP elders, seeks support

    Adigwe visits PDP elders, seeks support

    A Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Delta North senatorial aspirant for the 2015 election, Hon. Pascal Adigwe, has reassured the people of the senatorial district that he will ensure more dividends of democracy and even distribution of basic infrastructures for the area if he is elected.

    Hon. Adigwe gave the assurance at a consultation visit with some stakeholders, leaders and party chairmen and ward executives of PDP at Oshimili South, Aniocha South, and local government areas in of Ndokwa.

    Speaking at one of the town hall meetings held at Ogwashi-Uku in Aniocha-South, the senatorial aspirant said his visit was to interact with the party leaders and also seek their support.

    He used the occasion to highlight some of his past achievements during his tenure as a member of the House of Representatives for Aniocha/Oshimili Federal Constituency which include attraction of link road from the state through Edo, Kogi States up to Abuja, the completion of the long abandoned Federal Prisons Ogwashi-Uku, award of scholarship to students in higher institutions as well as empowerment of men, women and youths, among other achievements.

    Adigwe, who was accompanied on the visit by his teaming supporters led by his campaign organisation Director–General, Hon. Joe Adigwe, stated that it was the turn of Aniocha to produce a senator, adding that other areas that make up the district such as Ika, Ndokwa and Oshimili North and South Federal Constituencies have produced at different times, senators for the Delta North Senatorial District; he, therefore, urged the people to look inwards and give their support to his aspirations.

     

  • 2015: PDP’s Jonathan  versus APC’s whom

    2015: PDP’s Jonathan versus APC’s whom

    There is probably no one left in Nigeria who thinks President Goodluck Jonathan will not be running for president in 2015. Not only will he run with flourish irrespective of the rigmarole enacted by the sycophantic Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN), he will do so with damnable indifference to  the devastations caused by the Islamic sect, Boko Haram, and with complete contempt for the manner the sect exhibits his leadership failings. There will be no contest for the PDP’s presidential ticket, at least not a contest properly describable as a dignified joust. If anyone would be courageous enough to compete against Dr Jonathan for the coveted party ticket, it would be mimic jousting designed to create the false impression of internal democracy within the self-styled biggest party in Africa.

    With TAN rallies in full swing all over the country, signing up millions of people whom the organizers describe extravagantly as converts to the Jonathan cause, it is already taken for granted that within the PDP, Dr Jonathan is unassailable, and his campaign already in full blast. No one will dare oppose him except to mimic democratic reality, and no one in civil society, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) or Nigeria’s servile law enforcement agencies will dare caution him or draw his magisterial attention to how ignobly he subverts the law. The country, in other words, quiescently acknowledges Dr Jonathan as the PDP presidential candidate and his campaign a trifling, inconsequential infraction.

    In the next few weeks, however, all attention will be focused on the main opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) as it begins its complex permutations to produce a winning presidential ticket. Given Dr Jonathan’s head start, not to say Nigerians’ sniveling propensity to venerate a sitting president, the APC will have the most unenviable task in the world to demolish the cultural strictures that promote sycophantic adulation of those in office. The party will be challenged to hammer out a platform that resonates with hostile or undecided voters, to outfox subservient and compromised law enforcement agencies determined to thwart common sense and humiliate the constitution, and to rein in rebellious regional political warlords whose regicidal instincts lead them to the most atrocious murder of principles and values ever. The APC will not find its task easy at all, nor, given their tendency to fight to the death whenever they disagree, do I envy the short, brutal and merciless uphill journey they must make in less than five months before the next polls.

    Compared with the conservative PDP, which appeared to have been born into power, and whose leading apparatchiks seem to think it is born to rule, the less obsequious APC, now increasingly looking like an outsider in the national political war, will want to ride upon a revolutionary manifesto to overthrow the old order. The party will not be discomfited by the discordance with which of many of its conservative but leading lights uncharacteristically flaunt a radical manifesto, nor will it allow the fratricide going on within its ranks to slow it down. It will expect that its hope of achieving victory in any coming encounter with the ruling party will triumph over its feeling of massive political incapacitation. The PDP is united by its long stay in office, and the spoils of office that cement that unity. On the other hand, the APC’s long stay out of office has become demoralizing, causing its leaders to fret endlessly and to fritter away its strength in meaningless, persistent and debilitating quarrels.

    Indeed, the most pressing task before the APC will be how to select a winning ticket from a political milieu that has morphed considerably into an unrecognizable form. Tom Ikimi, the chairmanship aspirant who recently left the opposition party, reveals that the APC anchors its hope of taking the presidency on winning the Southwest and Northwest votes in 2015. But contrary to his sinister and cynical tone, there is nothing intrinsically wrong with that calculation, especially if the party thinks the votes from those zones are sufficient for victory. However, the calculation may be based on a wrong assessment of the character and cultures of the country’s geopolitical zones. The Southwest, for instance, used to be single-mindedly progressive, and its definition of progressivism not contentious. Today, the Southwest’s political culture, which used to be fairly distinguishable from the rest of the country both for its idiosyncratic progressivism and the firm values and principles that sustain it, has moved much closer to the national mean of general and enervating pragmatism.

    Worse, even the Southwest political elite is now fractured into contentious parts by internal schisms, some of them caused by nothing more than an insular struggle for regional dominance. Shorn of the principles and ennobling values that had defined its politics, religion and culture, nay its very existence, for more than a century, the region has become distressingly susceptible to the riotous application of religious parochialism. More alarmingly, a sizable faction of the region’s power elite, as demonstrated by Olu Falae, Yinka Odumakin, Ayo Adebanjo, among others, remains dangerously trapped in the bitter, vengeful and anachronistic politics of the past, especially their dichotomous view of northern feudalism versus southern liberalism. Yet, the iconic Obafemi Awolowo made a last ditch attempt in the closing years of his political life to bridge the so-called ideological divide between the North and the Southwest, to find a common ground between the so-called northern feudalism and south western liberalism.

    If the APC is to make progress and unite the Southwest behind the opposition party’s worldview, it will have to appeal to the voters directly, over the heads of the scaremongering and parochial factional elite that now holds the region in thrall. The party will also have to draw attention to the region’s culture of accommodation, its liberal spirit of tolerating other perspectives — be it religious, political or cultural — and then advertise the existence of a richer, better future outside the dogmas and insularity of the past. There are indeed shared affinities between the Northwest and the Southwest, and these affinities are not only shared with other regions; they in fact do not preclude either accommodation or rapprochement with those other regions. Going by the outcome of the national conference, and the insistence of some members of the Southwest elite that the recommendations be peremptorily implemented without recourse to either an enabling law or the National Assembly, it is feared that even the jurisprudential legacy .of the region has been corroded by emotions and long interactions with the lawless propensity of the Jonathan government.

    In picking Dr Jonathan’s opponent, the APC will have to ensure it carries along a sizable part of the Southwest, almost the entire Northeast and Northwest, in spite of the ongoing insurgency in parts of the North, and a healthy share of the North-Central. The South-South is largely out of reach, except a part of the ticket comes from there, and the Southeast seems all but lost on account of its emotive commitment to the patronizing Dr Jonathan. These permutations, as well as a clear appreciation of the changing political culture of the Southwest and an accurate sense of what needs to be done, will closely influence the APC’s choice of presidential candidate and running mate.

    Indeed, by now, the APC must have realized that it cannot hope to fight the ineffective but paradoxically entrenched Dr Jonathan without a more than disproportionate application of unorthodox politics. Its choice of standard-bearer must be revolutionary, unexpected, forward-looking, and transcendental. The party has only a few weeks to do this, and correspondingly fewer weeks to sell him. That candidate must, therefore, have no baggage to tie down the party’s resources, and must suffer no handicap to make the party fritter away its time and goodwill.  The APC may have a few leaders enamoured of brinkmanship; now they must draw upon that facility in a chess move certain to determine whether the party survives or dies, whether it succeeds or fails, whether it has a future or is crushed by the weight of its incandescent past. Now more than ever, it must take a bold and radical step, perhaps the most remarkable ever, to make a solid political statement. Will it? Can it?

    I think the party is faced with two main choices: to play safe by hugging the past, or to take a gamble with futuristic daring. Either choice is certain to have implications for Nigeria’s political future: whether we would slip into one-party rule and fascism projected deliberately or inadvertently by the Jonathan government; or whether we would begin the process of national renewal. The choice, I believe, lies between former military head of state, Muhammadu Buhari, the taciturn, principled and doughty retired army general, who is sadly misperceived and misunderstood by a large swathe of the South and North-Central; and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, who is not even yet a member of the party, but could, should he join the party, represent its future and hope. If the APC honestly recognizes that most of the factors expected to shape national politics and influence the electorate’s voting pattern in 2015 have been concocted by Dr Jonathan and the PDP, such as religion and ethnicity, then it will have no illusion what its responses must be. Gen Buhari is probably the best man for these trying times, but best men seldom win elections anywhere except in dire, unusual circumstances. In Nigeria, where voters lack the competence to read the signs of the times, it is even worse. The APC will have to gauge whether the fanatical support Gen Buhari attracts from parts of the North is worth the risk of alienating the untrusting remainder of the country.

    On the other hand, everyone knows Hon Tambuwal’s heart and soul are in the APC. If he can overcome the frightful parliamentary fallout of defecting to the opposition, he will probably open the eyes of the APC to more tantalizing political possibilities. Not only is he unencumbered by ethnic and religious baggage, he is modern, intelligent, a consensus builder with cross-over appeal, has a mind of his own, and is principled and loyal to causes, and much more. For its sake and the sake of the country, I hope the APC does not rule out Hon Tambuwal. This is the time for the party to do a strategic rethinking of its methods and ideas; a time to abandon the staid and stultifying formalism of the past; a time to let former Vice President Abubakar Atiku exit the presidential race with all the maturity and dignity commensurate with his political stature; and a time to let Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso of Kano bide his time for a future when his stature and exposure would stand him in good stead.

    This indeed is time for a miracle; APC had better furnish the country one. For every democrat, every Nigerian, every patriot who has the instinctive feel of the danger Nigeria faces with a government heading towards tyranny, one-party rule and unexampled impotence and incompetence knows it is of capital importance to deny Dr Jonathan four more years of misrule.

  • The Peoples Democratic Party Of Nigeria (PDP): Lying as Modus Operandi

    The Peoples Democratic Party Of Nigeria (PDP): Lying as Modus Operandi

    We would not have bothered much if PDP lies were limited to within itself but unfortunately, what happens within it and organisations integral to it are worse

    The late James Ajibola Idowu Ige, SAN, (September 13, 1930 – December 23, 2001) and Uncle Bola, to us, left behind enough quotable quotes and other inimitable contributions to Nigeria’s political history and lexicon to make his name absolutely unforgettable. Among these are his description of the five ‘Abacharite’ political parties as akin to five leprous fingers and PDP, after his usually deep observation, as the People Deceiving Party of Nigeria. The party has never been able to live down that apt description in its many years even as they continue to humour it as the largest party in Africa. The good thing is, its members do not only deceive Nigerians, they also live on a diet of lies. Only this past week, as a means of inflicting a pre-determined governorship candidate on its Adamawa chapter – how happy would they not be seeing Ribadu by President Jonathan’s side during the campaigns – a notice suddenly materialised inviting the 14 governorship aspirants to a meeting with the president. Commenting on the invitation, one of the aspirants described it as a ploy. Elucidating further, he said, and I quote: “We were asked to come to the meeting at 9 pm on Thursday. But we got wind of a plot by some forces in the presidency to hold the entire aspirants hostage in Abuja till Friday afternoon when the meeting will hold. As the meeting holds on Friday, Yola Airport will be closed and all roads leading to Yola will be blocked. They will then proceed to hold the primary election in the absence of all the aspirants so that they can manipulate the process for an anointed aspirant.”

    We would not have bothered much if PDP lies were limited to within itself but unfortunately, what happens within it and organisations integral to it are worse; and here we take, for our example, The Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) – President Jonathan’s lodestar campaign organisation. Although both the party and government continue to deny any relationship with TAN, below are the views of a perceptive Nigerian, Simbo Olorunfemi, in a letter to the Editor of The Nation, published on Thursday, September, 2014.  Under the caption, ‘What Manner of Democracy Is This?’, she  wrote inter alia: ‘The advertising campaign by the Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria and her co-travellers, obviously well-oiled from an abundance of unexplained resources, has been running for over six months now. The government has nothing to do with it, we are told, yet the Secretary to the Government of the Federation always finds time to be at these rallies to receive a pile of signatures. The president has nothing to do with it, yet his ministers, from time to time, abandon their duty posts to partake in this trend. Even, Ministers Adesina and Okonjo-Iweala could not help but leave their busy desks to take part in rallies at Ibadan and Port Harcourt’. Lies, lies and yet, more lies. What exactly are we to make of these people?

    Nigerians were, however, served the mother of all these PDP lies by Hussain Obaro of Ilorin, Kwara State, who, again, in a letter to The Nation Editor, titled: The Big Scam From TAN, indicative of how politically conscious Nigerians have become, and published on page 19 of The Nation’s edition of Tuesday, September 2, 2014, when he  poignantly captured the fact that these people would go to any length to deceive and to defraud. Hussain is here quoted in full:

    “Few months ago, a non-governmental organisation under the aegis of Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN), circulated a message all over the internet urging youths to register their bio-data for job opportunities through TAN. Millions of Nigerians, employed and unemployed, rushed into cybercafés to purchase network-browsing time while those who have smart phones and other ICT gadgets with subscriptions made do with it and registered duly and happily. Nigerians were asked to fill in their phone numbers, permanent home address, and local government areas, among other sensitive information.

    Few weeks later, TAN began an endorsement rally in support of President Jonathan’s re-election bid throughout the various geo-political zones in Nigeria. To the dismay of Nigerians, the bio-data which they naively gave to TAN with the expectation that they would be provided jobs were carefully collated and presented at the various TAN rallies to the representatives of President Jonathan, Secretary to the Government of the Federartion, Chief Anyim Pius Anyim, as the Nigerians who are happy with the president’s transformation agenda in the creation of jobs, good healthcare delivery system, improved national security etc and have happily and willingly endorsed President Jonathan for another term of office come 2015!

    The use of bio-data of young Nigerians to score cheap, shameless and ridiculous political points without their consent is not only criminal and offensive, it is unfortunate and an insult on the sensibility of these young Nigerians, it is an embarrassment to this country and its image as it is a dent not only the credibility of the conveners of TAN but also on the presidency.

    The youths of this country should not be cowed or tricked into endorsing President Jonathan for another term in office. TAN should have come out openly and allow these young Nigerians to freely express their opinions on whether they wish to do so or not. Nigerian youths have been taken for a ride and for fools. TAN should as a matter of urgency render an unreserved apology in all the national dailies, national radio stations and television stations to Nigerians on their heinous crime and atrocity against the people.

    Failure to do this would be met with legal consequences, as various youths fora would have no other choice than to proceed to a law court for a legal battle. The sensibility of any people has never been this insulted in the history of this country. If you can’t help us out of unemployment, poverty and poor standard of living imposed on us by corruption and lack of ideas of our leaders, at least, don’t insult us or take us for fools”.

    Were I to be one of these young people, I would insist we collectively institute a class action against this infuriating banality from high quarters to teach a lesson they will never forget.

    Nigerians can now see why the PDP would not mind pre determining election results via pre-programmed ballot papers as was allegedly done in the 21 June, 2014, gubernatorial election in Ekiti whose later discovery made such deployment impossible in the subsequent Osun election. It also brings to mind the humongous lies currently being  peddled all over Ekiti by an in-coming government that has become hyperactive about money, going illegally to the state’s bankers for information about state accounts against all  protocol and decency simply because they had  allegedly pre-committed  huge Ekiti funds, straight  from  monthly  federal allocations, to servicing election related  agreements.

    The way PDP is going, shamelessly lying about everything and fighting shy of exposing and prosecuting sponsors of terrorism to the utter discomfiture of our hard fighting soldiers, we may one day wake up to find we no longer have a  country to call our own. God forbid.

  • ‘Why PDP ’ll continue to suffer defeat’

    ‘Why PDP ’ll continue to suffer defeat’

    OSUN State All Progressives Congress (APC) has said the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its leadership will continue to suffer defeat and disgrace as long as it propagates deceit and lies about issues.

    The party’s Director of Publicity, Strategy and Research, Kunle Oyatomi, spoke yesterday while reacting to the statement of INEC denying PDP’s claim that electoral officers were allegedly suspended for “helping APC to rig” elections in Obokun and Osogbo local governments.

    APC, in a statement in Osogbo yesterday, said: “The PDP has again suffered the shame of being exposed as habitual liars in their mean attitude to political engagement in Osun State.

    “PDP’s obsession to weave a structure of lies to support its baseless case at the tribunal has led the opposition party to clutching at straws and fabricating stories to give a semblance of validity to the tissue of lies that are behind its bogus case against Omisore’s defeat at the August 9 gubernatorial election.

     “Cases at election tribunals can only stand on the bases of fact and credible figures, not on fabrication and lies that have become the habit of the PDP.

    “That the current lie of the PDP against the APC and INEC has been exposed is ominous precursor to the imminent defeat of the party again at the tribunal.

    “The APC therefore called on the good people of Osun never again to believe whatever the PDP says because the PDP is virtually incapable of telling the truth and therefore is untrustworthy.”

  • Kekemeke: PDP, LP are dead in Ondo

    Kekemeke: PDP, LP are dead in Ondo

    Hon. Isaac Kekemeke, a lawyer, is the Chairman of the All Progressives Congress, (APC) in Ondo State. In this interview with DAMISI OJO, in Akure, the state capital, former Secretary to the Government (SSG) spoke on the party’s chances in next year’s elections.

    How did  you emerge as the APC chairman in Ondo State?

    It was a keen contest. I had 499 votes; my closest rival had 497, followed by an aspirant with 136 and another had 10. I have received delegations from almost all the local government areas with some other interest groups who pledged their support. Upon receiving these delegations, we gave them our vision and mission and told them that the congresses were over. We are now aiming at changing our status from an opposition party to a party in power; from a party outside of government to a party in government; from the street of Akure to Alagbaka Government House; from the streets of various local government headquaters to their secretariats and our new vision is to build electorally prosperous APC in the state.

    Now that you are the chairman, how would you sell your party to the people?

    I think there is a number of reasons why people should vote for us. First is that our party has a manifesto. The manifesto is people-centered; the manifesto is about impacting on the lives of the ordinary Nigerian. The manifesto is about social welfare. The manifesto is about heath. The manifesto is about education. The manifesto is about the development of infrastructure. The manifesto is about providing security. The manifesto is about power so that individuals can thrive. In fact, it is about the fact that government exists only for the people. And that’s what APC governors do all over the country, building roads, providing security, quality education, health services, caring for the elderly, providing jobs. This is all our party is about.

    The second reason is that I do not think that any non-partisan Nigerian will want our country to run the way it is running for another four years.So, for anybody who is not a partisan person, for anybody who is not taking immediate benefit from this government, I think it is almost unreasonable to say we should have another four years of what is happening in our country today. That is a compelling reason why I think people should vote for our party. At least, let’s have change. Let’s move on. The PDP has done its best for almost 15 years. Let them get out.

    Many people believe the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria(ACN )performed woefully in the last governorship election in Ondo State due to some reasons. What is your plan ahead of next year’s and 2016 elections?

    The ACN lost because it didn’t have structures here and that they started late, and maybe, a number of other factors. Don’t forget the APC has new people from the PDP, new people from the Labour Party and new people from the legacy parties. It is now a mega party. What we will do differently is that we have started to build our structures. We will mobilise the people. We will run an organised campaign. We will be transparent with forms. And of course, the process of picking our flag bearer will be decided according to the constitution and the guideline of the party. We are going to do a number of things differently. We have many more people now; we have much more commitment than before.

    How can you rate  APC governors, particularly in the Southwest? Do they deserve second term?

    The philosophy of our party is the well-being of the people. You can almost be sure that, rather than becoming non-functional, I know they will gear up and want to work hard. I think there is an unsaid desire to leave a legacy for posterity and for generations to come. That’s the difference between those who served under the APC and those who served under the PDP who are just about power and power alone.Our governors are performing everywhere apart from the Southwest and they deserve second term.

    What are your chances of winning elections in Ondo State?

    Our chances are high. Our party has become a destination of choice for many people in other political parties, for many people in the government, both at the state and the federal. I receive calls. I hold meetings almost every other day with people in those parties, expressing their desire to join and team up with us. Here in Ondo State, the Labour Party is dead. Our Iroko leaves have continued to wither because there is no more water to supply the Iroko tree. It’s just a matter of time to get him off there. The administration in the state is already deteriorated. The PDP is in coma. The only living party is the APC. So, people are coming and we are trying to put our house in order. We will take over government. We will get united. We will expand and we will win.

    I am appealing to the citizenry in the state to keep faith with the APC for the betterment of the people and the country. We are embarking on mobilisation tour to all the 18 local government areas to sensitise people on the need to embrace the progressive party that has a people-oriented programmes.

  • Alabi: PDP ‘ll bounce back

    Alabi: PDP ‘ll bounce back

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) ceased to be the ruling party in Ondo State in 2008 when power shifted to the Labour Party (LP). Its efforts to bounce back in 2012 hit the rocks. Now, Hon. Ebenezer Alabi, the Chairman of the crisis-ridden chapter, says it will bounce back in next year’s polls. He spoke with Correspondent DAMISI OJO in Akure.

    What is the state of affairs in the Ondo  State PDP now?

    Since we lost our foremost leader, Dr. Olusegun Agagu, we have been intensifying efforts to rebuild the party in Ondo State.After his demise, we believe it is time to ensure that the party should not die naturally. Hence,the serious reconciliation we are embarking on. We preached to our people on the need to sink our differences. Honestly, we were able to bring on board estranged members and we are waxing stronger every day. The result of the inconclusive Ilaje/Ese-Odo by-election was as a result of the disunity in the party.Now, we are having  a very formidable and strong PDP in Ondo State that is battle-ready to take over government.We have been receiving people into our fold on daily basis. That has shown that the reconciliation is working. We are trying to sustain the unity and to further the reconciliation because we still have one or two people who are still aggrieved with the party. We are reaching out to make sure that all of us are under the umbrella before 2015 elections.

    What about aggrieved members who believed thay have been betrayed by the party leadership?

    It is true that most of them are still very angry and that one is manifesting in the way they treat some leaders in social outings and, at times, political gatherings. But, we are trying to preach to our people, especially the youths, that we should allow yesterday to belong to the past. We should forget what happened in the past because, if we still hold on to what some people did in the past, we will not make any breakthrough in the forthcoming elections. The PDP is a very strong party. We realised that it was the division among us that actually made us to lose elections. Now that we have realised our mistake and we are correcting them on daily basis, I will still plead with our youths that they should allow the party to forge ahead with the people coming on board because everybody is important as far as this party is concerned.Our past political office holders have a lot to contribute to this party and we are making them to contribute and to rebuild the party to an enviable status. I will keep appealing to them to forget the past and look into the future in the  overall interest of the party.

    Recently, people from other parties defected to the PDP. What was responsible?

    The reconciliation effort of the party is one of the factors that actually encouraged people to start moving into the party. In the past, when we were divided, they believed that nothing could come from the party because of the division. But today, when they have seen the unity in the party, people are coming on board. Secondly, people can now compare and contrast the achievements of the PDP in the past with the present administration. They can assess the two administrations and appreciate the life-changing programmes that the PDP embarked upon under the leadership of our late leader, Dr. Olusegun Agagu. Today, they can see the number of roads that we tarred. They can see the impact in all the communities in terms of the structures we put in place; the schools, the hospitals and so on and so forth. Today, they can tell what is cosmetic from what is actual project that will make impact on the life of people. So, having seen the past administration, having assessed what the PDP did in the past and what the PDP is capable of doing, many people are moving to the party in Ondo State.

    The trend is  the same  in other states of the Southwest. They have seen that these people did not do miraculous projects that are actually different from what we were doing when we were there. Today, we are the toast of the people, especially in Ondo state because of what we were able to achieve when we were there.

    Some people are saying that Ondo PDP has hope now that the party has bounced back in Ekiti…

    I don’t know why some people hold that opinion about the outcome of the Ekiti governorship election. Ekiti was created out of the old Ondo State and whatever happens in Ekiti automatically translates to what happens in Ondo state. Following the victory of our party in Ekiti State,many people have moved over to the PDP in Ondo State because of the outcome of that election. In other states in the region, people are also moving to the PDP because there is this bandwagon effect. It’s like the Southwest usually thinks along the same line.

    What do you think is responsible for this?

    I can say a lot of factors are responsible for the resurgence. The last congresses and convention of APC created problems for the party. That’s why most of them are now defecting to the PDP. We don’t impose candidates in the PDP; we always provide a level-playing ground for aspirants and whoever wins becomes the candidate of the party.

    A lot of us also believe in the Transformation Agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan because what he did in the Southwest cannot be compared to what we have been seeing in the past. Look at the roads. For example, in the past, it was very difficult for people to travel from Lagos to Benin; they would be stopped on the road for days. But today, contractors are working on the road on daily basis. See what’s happening to the Ibadan-Lagos expressway. Repair work is going on in the axis of Akure-Ilesha-Ife too.

    What is the chance of your party in the next general elections?

    The chances of Ondo PDP are very bright, judging from what we can see on ground today.  Not a single person has left PDP. In the last governorship election, the PDP came second and the APC came third. Since then, like I said, nobody has left the PDP. If you look at the percentage of our performance in the election and the number of those who have moved to the party and who are still joining us, you will know that the coast is very clear for the PDP to win in Ondo State.

    What is the implication of Governor Olusegun Mimiko’s defection to the PDP?

    Already, a seven-man committee is negotiating his defection.The Party would welcome him, if he comes.

  • Ekiti PDP women back Jonathan for second term

    Ekiti PDP women back Jonathan for second term

    Ekiti Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Women Coalition 2015’  has urged the party to field President Goodluck Jonathan as its candidate for next year’s election.

    At a rally in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, the group also asked the President to declare his re-election bid in the national interest.

    PDP women leaders from the Southwest witnessed the rally, which was addressed by the leader of the group, Mrs. Bolajoko Oriire Olapeju.

    She said: “ The efforts of President Jonathan since he assumed office in 2010 proved that he eminently deserves a second term and he deserves our support.”

    Olapeju described the group as “a pressure group driven by the desire to join the teeming groups to support the re-election of President Jonathan in flying PDP’s flag in the 2015 general election.”

    Urging women to support the President, she said the number one citizen has appointed more women into the Federal Executive Council (FEC) more than his predecessors.

    She said: “The good works of the President are felt all over the country, in spite of the activities of enemies of progress.”

    Olapeju added: “We are in Ekiti to enlist your support in this crusade to ensure victory for our President and our great party.”

    Also speaking, the group’s leader in Ekiti, Mrs Modupe Orubuloye, said women delegates had come from 16 councils to drum support for the President’s bid.

    She said: “They are resolute in their support for another term for President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan.”

    Olapeju said the group’s activities cut across party lines because “President Jonathan’s good works cut across party lines and he has impacted positively on all and sundry.”

    She added: “Women must not be deceived and they must not allow  themselves to be deceived because the President has done very well for Nigerians and the Nigerian women.”