Tag: PDP

  • ‘PDP’s desperation to take over Nasarawa’ll fail’

    ‘PDP’s desperation to take over Nasarawa’ll fail’

    Nasarawa State Governor Tanko Al-Makura has said the move to exterminate the All Progressive Congress (APC) before 2015 elections will not succeed in Nasarawa State.

    The governor spoke through his Senior Special Assistant on Public Affairs, Abdulhamid Yakubu Kwarra.

    He spoke  with reporters in Jos, the Plateau State yesterday.

    Kwarra said:  “The Federal Government and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) are on a mission to kill all opposition parties before 2015 election in a desperate move to win election in 2015. With the rising political profile of APC, the chances of PDP and President  Jonathan in 2015 is getting slimmer each day, it is obvious PDP or President Jonathan has no chance at all, hence they have launched a persecution of the major opposition party APC to achieve their aims. They are now instigating Members of the Nasarawa State House of Assembly to impeach Governor Tanko Al-Makura, just as they did in Adamawa State.

    “But, I want to assure them, they will not succeed in the case of Nasarawa State because the people who elected Al-Makura are going to come out to resist this impunity. Nigerians should know that this is the 9th impeachment move on Governor Al-Makura. They have tried it eight other times, but this is the first time they are making move to serve impeachment notice on the governor.

    “If the move is borne out of malice, it will definitely fail, but if it is based on genuine cause, that is only way it will succeed. But in doing so, the law makers should make sure they do not abuse the procedures. What we saw happened in Adamawa State in the name of impeachment will not stand.  I see the judiciary reversing the whole thing because it was done in clear abuse of legal procedures.”

    Kwarra, who is former Majority Leader of Nasarawa State House of Assembly, said:  “The relationship between the Executive and the legislature in Nasararwa State has been mutual in the last three years.  This impeachment move is based on external factor;  it is all about 2015 election. PDP is just desperate to take Nasarawa State from the grip of APC.

    “The authority in Abuja wants it by all means and at all cost.  They are threatened by the formidable opposition party in this country and they are doing everything to retain power, despite the fact that they are a collateral failure with all the challenges and parts of their master plan is to destabilise APC control states.

    “What PDP is doing amounts to a declaration of the war on the people of Nigeria and they way they are going about it, the thing may consume all of us if care is not taken.”

     

  • APC’s allegation unfounded, says PDP

    APC’s allegation unfounded, says PDP

    The leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has denied the allegation that the impeachment of the Adamawa State Governor Murtala Nyako was instigated by President Goodluck Jonathan and the PDP.

    In a statement yesterday by its National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, the PDP described the allegation as wild and unfounded, adding that it was meant to cause confusion and incite the people against the President, the PDP and institutions of government.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) accused Jonathan and the PDP of instigating and bankrolling Nyako’s impeachment and the gale of impeachment threats hanging over other APC governors.

    The PDP said: “While we do not wish to join issues with a party that has become notorious for falsehood, deceit and blackmail, we wish to alert Nigerians that this is part of the  orchestrated plot by the APC to discredit and blackmail institutions of government, particularly the legislature, the citadel of democracy and stronghold of the will of the people and ultimately set the stage to destabilise the polity.

    “We note that this onslaught against the legislature is not spontaneous. Nigerians may indeed recall the vicious attack on the National Assembly early this year wherein the APC also raised a false alarm that federal lawmakers were being induced with millions of dollars to defect to the PDP.

    “We invite Nigerians to note the anti-democratic and anti-Nigeria actions of the APC. Indeed, never in the history of this country has an opposition constituted itself into a rebellion against our dear nation and its corporate existence.

    “Never in the history of this country has the opposition sought spiritedly to cause confusion to destabilise our nation using wild allegations and lies; never has an opposition resorted to supporting insurgency and instigating violence through their utterances for political capital; never has an opposition taken it upon itself to continue to insult and attack the person and office of the President and government institutions for parochial interests.

    “We in the PDP believe in democracy and the principle of separation of powers as enshrined in our constitution. As such, we have never and will not for any reason whatsoever interfere in the activities of the legislature at any level.

    “Our advice to the APC is that resorting to blackmail and unfounded allegations will not help them. They must understand that in a democracy, the will of the people and the rule of law are paramount.

    “Nobody is above the law or above the will of the people. Also they must note that the law does not exonerate an erring official simply because he is in the opposition”.

     

  • PDP ’ll win Osun poll, says Sambo

    Vice President Namadi Sambo has said the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will win the August 9 governorship election in Osun State.

    Sambo, who spoke in Abuja yesterday in his capacity as chairman of the party’s governorship campaign committee, maintained that the election in Osun would follow the Ekiti State’s trend where the PDP won the poll.

    According to him, the Federal Government will ensure a peaceful, free and fair election in Osun, adding that the mandate was taken through the “back door” by the sitting governor.

    “We are looking forward to have a peaceful election in Osun State and I want to assure you that the mandate that was taken through the back door will come back to the PDP as it was seen after the election in Ekiti State.

    “The people of Osun will now have the chance to choose for themselves where they belong and they belong to the PDP,” he added.

  • APC flays PDP over opening of Maiduguri Airport

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has criticised the opening of the Maiduguri International Airport by the Federal Government for former Borno State Governor Ali Modu Sherriff.

    The Defence Headquarters a fortnight ago claimed that the restriction on the facility at the airport was due to military use in line with the operations against Boko Haram insurgents.

    The “military use” led to the denial of 286 pilgrims, who were going for the lesser Hajj (Umrah), access to the airport.

    APC’s National Secretary Mai Mala Buni, who spoke in Damaturu, Yobe State, accused the  Federal Government of being bias.

    “It is unfortunate and unacceptable for government to employ selective justice through politics in the use of public institutions and infrastructure built with public funds.

    “Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima and Senator Ali Ndume were denied take off from the airport but the authorities reopened the airport to Sherriff to facilitate his defection to PDP.

    “This is a repeat of what happened during the Ekiti governorship election where APC governors were refused landing at the Akure Airport,” he said.

    Buni noted that the PDP government was orchestrating primitive politics, which does not speak well for the development of democracy.

    “I think government must  stop this dirty politics and concentrate on issues that will improve the lives of Nigerians, instead of these brazen abuses of public office with impunity.”

    The national secretary said instead of the PDP to get serious about the insecurity, collapse of institutions and infrastructure, corruption and unemployment, the party is receiving those who have failed to actualise their selfish goals in the APC.

    “We are happy that politicians with personal interests have realised the APC’s commitment to national agenda and are leaving the party.

    “Let me assure you that in the APC there are no vacancies for political jobbers who do not have the interest of the people at heart.

    “We are happy Nigerians have seen these politicians and will decide next year.”

     

  • APC  alleges murder  plot against Aregbesola

    APC alleges murder plot against Aregbesola

    •I can’t wish him dead, says Omisore

    OSUN State All Progressives Congress (APC) has raised the alarm over an alleged plot by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to use Israeli snipers to assassinate Governor Rauf Aregbesola during his campaign rally.

    The party’s Director of Publicity, Research and Strategy, Kunle Oyatomi,  accused two chieftains of PDP as the masterminds of the plot.

    The APC urged the Israeli Embassy to check on its citizens, who might have been contracted “to nip the evil in the bud” before the Middle East country gets itself negatively involved in an explosive situation in Nigeria that could affect relationship between the two countries.”

    It also called on elders not to fold their arms and watch the PDP set Nigeria ablaze, since, according to APC, “that is what assassination of Aregbesola would spontaneously cause.”

    The APC said PDP sources informed it that “there is great consternation within the party that for as long as Aregbesola is present and visible, there is no way the PDP can rig the election. So, their last option to ‘win’, according to sources, is to take out completely the governor.

    The APC recalled that it had alerted Nigerians and the international community to PDP’s plans to militarise the state one week to the election and terrorise the APC leadership and assassinate some of them.

    “We also alerted the nation that the PDP has brought into Osun, fake police and army uniforms which their thugs will use to terrorise voters at polling units and possibly snatch ballot boxes.”

    Also yesterday, the APC said that “lying is a trademark of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) from top to bottom.”

    The party was reacting to a statement credited to PDP’s National Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh, that “while its candidate and members had been campaigning and seeking the support of the people, the APC had been engaging in political gallivanting, rigmarole and ineffective propaganda…”

    But, in a reaction to the alleged murder plot, the governorship candidate of the PDP, Senator Iyiola Omisore, has denied the allegation.

    Omisore, who spoke through his Director of Media, Prince Diran Odeyemi, said he would not want Aregbesola dead, but alive to congratulate him after he might have defeated him at the poll.

    Omisore said he was sad that what pre-occupied Aregbesola and APC were not serious issues, but allegations.

    He advised the APC and Aregbesola to focus on development issues instead of “unsubstantiated” allegations.

     

  • Nyako’s travails… From genesis to revelation

    Nyako’s travails… From genesis to revelation

    The impeachment of Adamawa State Governor Murtala Nyako underscores the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)’s agenda to emasculate the opposition party, ahead of next year’s general elections, writes Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU

    He had a premonition of the tragedy. Yet, the governor could not avert it. The handwriting was bold on the wall. But, little did he guess that the House of Assembly would complete the impeachment process with speed. After two weeks of anxiety in Adamawa State, the hammer fell on Governor Murtala Nyako yesterday. He was removed from office by 18 of the 25 members of the House of Assembly. The impeachment, according to observers, may have created a hollow in his political career.

    But, his deputy, Bala Ngilari, a lawyer, was spared by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) legislators, which gave him a soft landing. Faced with options of impeachment and resignation, he swiftly embraced the latter to avoid disgrace.

    Since he defected from the PDP to the All Progressives Congress (APC), Nyako has been in the eyes of the storm. His foes have been plotting his downfall. Indeed, the forces against him were formidable. Apart from the legislators, prominent politicians who supported the plot include the former PDP National Chairman Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, his son, Awwal, former Lagos State military Governor Buba Marwa, former Education Minister Senator Jibril Aminu, former Adawawa State Governor Boni Haruna, former Minister of State for Health Dr. Idi Song, former presidential Political Adviser Ahmed Gulag, PDP elder Joel Madaki and governorship aspirant Makus Gundiri.

    The motivation, said a source, was provided by the Presidency. The aggrieved PDP leaders were united against Nyako’s continuity in office for two reasons. The first is to weaken the APC and decimate its Governors’ Forum. Nyako is a vocal member of this forum that has given President Goodluck Jonathan sleepless nights. The second is to punish him for his shift of political allegiance. When the lawmakers issued an impeachment notice, it was evident that they were acting the scripts written in Abuja. The impeached governor’s ordeal may not be over. Outside office, he may become a victim of witch-hunting. The new governor may beam a searchlight on his administration and push for his prosecution.

    Nyako clearly understood his plight, limitationS and threat to his political career. He is a retired soldier, former military governor and member of the highest ruling class under the military rule. He is conversant with the grammar of military politics. But, the impeachment battle under the civilian regime is a different ball game. It is not a conventional war which a General like him is not prepared for. In a battle of this nature, the weapons of war include the federal might, the militarisation of the impeachment process, massive funding for the plot and the numerical supremacy in the House of Assembly. Even, an opposition governor, who is endowed with exemplary negotiation skills, persuasive talents and power of political inducement, would still have a slim chance of survival. Thus, a political solution was foreclosed.

    For the septuagenarian politician, the last two years have been turbulent. Nyako has been battling with the insurgency by the members of the Boko Haram. In the Northeast state, a state of emergency has been declared. On two occasions, the former governor escaped being killed by the sect members. Few months ago, he forwarded a letter to the Northern Governors Forum, alleging that the Federal Government adopted a wrong strategy in tackling the insecurity. Stressing that the military was incompetent to handle the crisis, Nyako said soldiers relied on obsolete and inadequate weapons. He also complained that a full-fledged genocide was being committed against the Northern Nigeria in the name of fighting insurgency. He alleged that ill-trained soldiers were drafted to curb the menace. ‘‘They are being poorly trained, totally ill-equipped, given only uniform and are killed by their trainers in Nigerian Army training centres as soon as they arrive in the Nigerian Army camps being used by the so-called Boko Haram insurgents.

    “Virtually all the Nigerian soldiers killed or murdered in these operations so far are of Northern Nigeria origin. The administration has also hired militia men from across the continent, especially North Africa, who have been deceived into accepting to come because they were made to believe that they would be fighting infidels,” he added.

    The letter may have been misunderstood by Jonathan. According to sources, the President, who was infuriated by the tone of the letter, complained that Nyako had refused to withdraw the memo or apologise. But, the governor insisted that he would not compromise the security of Adamawa State.

    To observers, Nyako’s nightmare started when he lost grip on the House of Assembly. When he defected to the APC, the legislators did not defect with him. During the impeachment saga, the odds were against him. Of the 25 legislators, 20 insisted that he should vacate office. Following his defection, relations between the executive and legislature became frosty. When cracks appeared on the wall, the stage was set for the inducement of the legislators by the governor’s detractors.

    As the impeachment drama was unfolding, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) froze Adamawa State bank accounts. Instantly, the administration was crippled. The House met and drafted the impeachment notice. Many allegations were raised and the burden of proof was on the embattled governor. According to the notice, Nyako was expected to defend 20 charges of gross misconduct. He was accused of abuse of office, misuse of public funds and personalisation of power. In addition, there were allegations of squandering N1 billion Scholarship Trust Fund and the abuse of the law by appointing his wife, Dr. Halima, as the Chairman of the Adamawa State Action Committee on AIDS. Some officials of his administration were also accused of looting. The legislators explained that some of the impeachable offences were committed by Nyako three years ago.

    To save the governor from the looming disaster, some Adamawa opinion leaders attempted to broker peace between him and the House. But, the conditions for truce were stringent. The House led by Speaker Umaru Fintiri demanded that Nyako should render accounts. It accused the government of illegal deductions from the allowances of the civil servants totaling N142 million. Nyako was asked to submit bank statements showing income and expenditure and pay the withheld salaries of teachers who had embarked on strike.

    Asked why it took the House three years to beam a searchlight on the administration, a legislator, Adanu Kamale, said time factor was a non-issue.

    Nyako’s real offence was his defection from the PDP. But, the lawmakers also had another axe to grind with him. He had come under attack for not inaugurating the chairmen and secretaries of 37 Development Areas Authorities (DAA). Many of them were nominated by the lawmakers. When he sought to appease them with their inauguration last week, it was too late. Also, last week, Nyako, said a source, was offered the option of resignation. But, he rejected it, saying that the impeachment plot lacked basis.

    Moving the motion for the impeachment, the Deputy Speaker, Kwamoti Laori, said the House relied on Section 188, sub-section 3 and 4 of the 1999 Constitution, which stipulate that the process can proceed after a 14-day notice. It was seconded by Hon. Umar Abdulkareem.

    “We have satisfied the two-thirds majority, with 20 out of 25 members, which empowers the House of Assembly to call on the Chief Judge to constitute an investigation panel,” Laori said. However, when the Clerk of the Assembly showed up at the Government House to serve the impeachment notice on Nyako, he was not around. For two days, efforts to deliver the letter was abortive.  The Clerk later pasted the notice on the wall of the Government House.

    To save his career, Nyako approached the temple of justice. The former Acting Chief Judge, Justice A.D. Mammadi, granted his prayer for an order of interim injunction restraining the House from taking any further action on the impeachment. But, four days later, the jurist, whose tenure was about to expire, approved the plot by swearing in members of the impeachment panel. The seven-man committee was chaired by Alhaji Baba Kaigama.

    Nyako and Ngilari shunned the panel, claiming that it was not properly constituted. They neither sent their aides nor counsel to represent them. Two issues were raised by the governor. He said the panel was not inaugurated by the Chief Judge because the Acting Chief Judge who set it up had to retire immediately. Also, the impeachment notice was not served on the governor. It was pasted on the wall of the state secretariat. Thus, the governor’s aide, Peter Elisha, submitted that the procedure is wrong. “The panel was not properly set up. It was not properly constituted. It was not inaugurated,” he said.

    The APC Publicity Secretary in Adamawa State, Phineas Padio, was in the same frame of mind. Faulting the process, he said it violated the law. Padio pointed out that it was strange that the acting chief judge, who highlighted the guidelines for the impeachment, later set up the panel when it was clear that the procedure had been breached. He also said the method used by the lawmakers to serve the impeachment notice on the governor and his deputy was unconstitutional. “The acting chief judge had ruled that the notice of impeachment must be served through personal means. He even quoted a Supreme Court ruling that said it could not be served through the pages of newspapers as the House did. Yet, he went ahead to constitute the panel, although the notice was not properly served,” he fumed.

    Nyako’s spokesman, Ahmed Sajoh, defended the refusal of his boss to appear before the committee. He said: “It is an illegal body, which has no basis in law.” Sajoh said that the House should have served the notice directly, instead of pasting it. “They are supposed to serve it. Besides, the panel was illegally constituted because those behind it ignored a subsisting court order. The composition of the committee itself is faulty.  Card-carrying members of the Peoples Democratic Party are among the panelists,” he added.

    Efforts by non-partisan Adamawa leaders to save Nyako also hit the rock. Pleas by traditional rulers led by the Lamido of Adamawa, Alhaji Mohammed Musdafa to the lawmakers to have a change of heart fell on deaf ears. The Council of Pastors led by Rev. Victor Ordinan also offered to broker reconciliation, but without success.  Prominent PDP chieftains were monitoring the 20 legislators. A member of the PDP Elders and Stakeholders’ Forum, Dr. Umar Ado, warned the legislators against backing out. He described the impeachment as a party assignment, stressing that only the PDP has the power to discontinue it. Although sources also said some retired Generals requested the President to intervene in the crisis, he refused to assist his political foe and ardent critic.

    At the weekend, the investigative panel hurriedly concluded its assignment on a controversial note after sitting for two days. As the panel was writing its pre-determined report, Nyako was receiving supporters on solidarity visit.

    Yesterday, the hammer fell on the governor. Before the impeachment, a source said he had packed out of the Government House.

    The question now is: What next after the impeachment?

     

  • For ex-Adamawa governor, uncertain era beckons

    For ex-Adamawa governor, uncertain era beckons

    At last, the axe that had dangled on embattled Governor Murtala Nyako for weeks finally fell on him. With 18 votes of 25, he was impeached by the Adamawa State House of Assembly, dominated by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) members, thus abruptly ending his reign ten months before the expiration of his second term. He is of the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC), having dumped the PDP last year along with four other governors elected in 2007 on the PDP ticket.

    After deliberating on the report of a 7-man investigative panel that probed allegations of financial impropriety against him and his deputy, Bala Ngilari, the Assembly moved against Nyako, putting a stop to weeks of uncertainty that enveloped the state as a result of high-wired political intrigues that pitted the two parties against each other. The panel that investigated the two former helmsmen submitted its report to the House on Monday, though the duo shunned the panel. The speaker of the House, Umaru Fintiri, speaker, led the plenary that axed the former governor yesterday.

    Unlike Ngilari, who resigned from office to avoid being impeached, Nyako, a former naval chief, braved the odds throughout his travails with the state lawmakers. Instead of throwing in the towel to avoid impeachment, he stood his ground till the end like a soldier that he is. But he did not watch with arms akimbo as his traducers dug his political grave. While the plot against him was being hatched, he approached the court to stop the onslaught.

    On July 3, an Adamawa State High Court, presided over by the Acting Chief Judge, Justice Ambrose Mamadi, dismissed Nyako’s application to restrain the Assembly from proceeding on his impeachment process. Delivering the ruling, Mamadi said no breach of Section 188 (1-9) of the provisions of the 1999 Constitution as amended was committed by the Assembly. Curiously, the same court had earlier granted an interim injunction on June 26, restraining the Assembly from proceeding with the impeachment process against the governor. The injunction only lasted till July 2. It was the same acting chief judge that the Assembly asked to set up the panel that nailed Nyako.

    But the impeached governor does not seem to be a stranger to political upheavals, especially the type that can rock the boat. In February 2008, shortly after he was elected in his first term of four years, the Election Petition Appeal Tribunal pronounced Nyako guilty of all the 16 allegations against his election. The Tribunal upheld nullification of his election, and the then House Speaker, James Barka, was sworn in as Acting Governor on 26 February 2008. He however bounced back after a fresh election was conducted, winning a landslide victory in all 21 Local Government Areas. Soon after he resumed on April 29, 2008, political intrigues resurfaced, as the House initiated moves to impeach him before he completed his tenure. It took the personal intervention of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua before the Assembly rescinded its decision. Fortunately for him, the relationship blossomed again, so much that in March 2010, the Adamawa State House of Assembly passed a vote of confidence on Governor Nyako, calling him a “messiah” to the people of Adamawa State. It was on the crest of the popularity that he ran for a second term and was once again re-elected.

    Now that he has been stripped of paraphernalia of power, Nyako has few options before him. Will he return to the PDP and use it as an umbrella to shield himself from the long arms of the law? Not a few rule out this option, given the way he exited the party and brickbats he has thrown against its bigwigs since then. Not only did his dumping of his former party bruise the ego of the self-styled largest political party in Africa, Nyako later labeled President Goodluck Jonathan’s presidency as incompetent. He also fired a sling at the presidency, accusing it in a letter to the Northern Governors’ Forum as the brain behind the insurgency ravaging the Northeast. Will Nyako then remain in the APC? That seems plausible for a man who refused to hearken to the hawks in the ruling PDP in order to save his face during his impeachment ordeals. There are strong indications that he may stay in the APC and ask for legal opinion on his removal which he has described as unfair.

     

  • Expelled PDP members defect to ruling party

    Expelled PDP members defect to ruling party

    FOUR expelled stalwarts of the Osun State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have joined the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The former PDP members were received into the APC by Governor Rauf Aregbesola at a campaign rally organised by the APC in Ilesa.

    But popular Fuji musician King Wasiu Ayinde Marshal (K1) was attacked by thugs after the rally.

    As at the time of going to the press, the state of health of the musician and his band boys could not be ascertained.

    The four defectors were among the six expelled on Monday for anti- party activities.

    They are the former PDP State Secretary Chief Yinka Adeojo, former Chairman, Osogbo Local Government, Alhaji Teslim Igbalaye, former Personal Assistant to former Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola Mr. Razaq Oyelami and a former Assistant State Secretary Alhaji Razaq Oyetunji.

    Aregbesola  urged the people to pray fervently for a smooth election, saying the poll will determine the destiny of  the state in the next 20 years.

    He said the people should  not be intimidated by the proposed deployment of soldiers and police during the August 9 governorship election.

    He described the seven and a half years of the PDP in Osun State and 15 years at the centre as a waste.

    Aregbesola urged the people not to fear soldiers and the police, saying they are constitutionally charged to protect the people.

    He said: “All security agents, according to the constitution of Nigeria have the responsibility to protect the people. Therefore, police or soldiers cannot point his gun to any Nigerian who has committed no crime.

    Also, Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun said the APC government had brought back the glorious era of the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, to the Southwest.

    Amosun described as ridiculous the opposition’s reduction of governance to “stomach infrastructure,” warning the people not to be deceived “by cash and carry politics.”

    Speaking on behalf of the defectors after receiving the APC flag, Oyelami described PDP as a party that has nothing to offer the people.

    He described the three and half years of Aregbesola in office as progressive, enterprising and growth-oriented, advising the people not to vote wrongly to a party of “buccaneers”.

     

  • PDP Reps endorse Jonathan for 2015

    PDP Reps endorse Jonathan for 2015

    Members of the People Democratic Party (PDP) in the House of Representatives yesterday endorsed President Goodluck Jonathan to run for the 2015 election.

    But Speaker Aminu Tambuwal was absent at the meeting.

    Addressing State House correspondents at the Presidential Villa in Abuja after the meeting with the President, House Leader Mulikat Adeola-Akande said the caucus passed a vote of confidence on Jonathan.

    She said: “We are the PDP Caucus of the House of Representatives. A meeting like this is not strange because we met with the President, who is our leader.

    “We deliberated on issues affecting our party. The House Caucus, on our own, decided to pass a vote of confidence on Mr. President and also endorse him for second term.”

    On whether or not the President accepted, she said: “We did the endorsement and we are urging him to run for second term.”

    On Tambuwal’s absence, Adeola-Akande said: “I am sure when you see Mr Speaker, you will ask him. This is a PDP meeting. Obviously, he will have his reasons why he was not at the meeting.”

    The House Leader said security issues were also discussed at the meeting and the government received kudos for efforts to restore peace in trouble spots of the country.

  • 2015: Presidency, PDP plan to win in more states

    2015: Presidency, PDP plan to win in more states

    Akwa Ibom State Governor Godswill Akpabio has said the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is planning to regain the states it lost to other parties during and after the 2011 elections.

    The governor spoke yesterday in Abuja after a meeting of some governors and House of Representatives members of the PDP with President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Akpabio, who is the Chairman of the PDP Governors’ Forum, addressed State House correspondents at the end of the meeting in the early hours of yesterday at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

    The governor said PDP members in the House of Representatives passed a vote of confidence on Jonathan and endorsed him to run in next year’s Presidential election.

    He said: “Then, after we moved into a further meeting with Mr. President and all the PDP governors and members of the National Working Committee (NWC), led by the National Chairman of the party (Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu) , based on the fact that in the next few months, we shall be going into major primaries.

    “So, we want to deepen internal democracy and strategise on how best we can win the primaries and, by implication, also ensure that we bring out the best candidates, taking a cue from what had happened in Ekiti. If we are able to carry out proper internal democracy and bring out the most popular candidates, then the main election will be less rancorous. Of course, the party will sail through with a view to getting up to two-thirds of the states of the federation, as it was when we started in 1999.

    “When I came in, there was a period that the PDP had up to 29 governors. In 2011, we still had up to 25 governors. Then, some governors tried to defect to other political parties, which they are liberty to do, because this is democracy. But we are gaining more.

    “Now, we have at least 19 governors with the coming of Ekiti State. We also have three deputy governors who are still with us – those of Sokoto, Adamawa and Nasarawa states. That brings our number to about 22. So, if we shoot to 28 in the 2015 elections, it is not too bad.

    “It (the meeting) was an appraisal and for us to use the opportunity as PDP governors to congratulate the party leader on the very successful election that was held in Ekiti State. It was very free and fair and applauded by the international community and all Nigerians to a point where even the candidate of the opposition announced that indeed it was a victory well deserved. There was no need to contest such a victory in court. That is the kind of thing we would like to see.

    “Mr President has entrenched true democracy in Nigeria. This has happened in Edo State; it had happened in Ondo State. It will happen in August in Osun State. For me, as a Chairman of PDP Governors in Nigeria, my hope and prayer is that God should increase our number and make us to have the majority of governors in the country. This is because the PDP is the only true national party in Nigeria…”