Tag: Peoples Democratic Party

  • Masari, Lado clinches APC, PDP tickets in Katsina

    Governor Aminu Bello Masari and Yakubu Lado were on Monday announced as the winners of the Guber Primaries for their parties, the All progressive Congress, APC, and the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, respectively.
    The Chairman of the Katsina State APC Gubernatorial Primaries Committee, Dr Isa Adamu, while announcing the result of the primary which held at the Muhammad Diko Stadium in Katsina, said Governor Masari scored 5,562 votes to beat his closest challenger Abubakar Ismailia Isa Funtua who scored 8 votes and the third contestant who entered the race late: Garba Dankali scored one vote.
    Dr Adamu further disclosed that the election was free and fair without blood letting and that none of the aspirant brought any formal complaints to his committee.
    He said “The total number of delegates to the election was 5959, while the number accredited to vote was 5627; there were 56 invalid vote casts’’
    In his acceptance speech the Governor commended the process which he said was transparent and called on his opponents to join him in building a new Katsina state and the party.

    Read Also: Masari calls for more NHIS enlightenment

    He said “I promise the people and the party that I will not let them down .I shall work to unify the party and develop the state even to a greater level than it is now’’.
    ‘’I am also grateful to the members of the primaries committee who arrived the state at about 3am on Saturday morning for a job well done’’
    In another development, the Peoples Democratic Party at about 3am Monday morning announced Senator Yakubu Lado as the winner of its Guber primaries held at the premises of its party headquarters in Katsina.
    The Chairman of the PDP primaries committee for Katsina state, Senator Bala Adamu Kadiya while announcing the result of the election which according to him was contested by 6 aspirants, showed that Senator Yakubu Lado polled 33485 votes, to beat his closest challenger Architect Ahmed Yar’Adua who polled 233 votes with the other contestants scoring no votes, with the exception of Musa Natsuni who scored one vote.
    Former governor of the state Barrister Ibrahim Shema, who stayed through out the night to monitor the process, promised to fund the electioneering campaigns of Yakubu Lado.
    Earlier the state Chairman of the Party, Salisu Yusuf Majigiri denied bribery allegations which has been trailing the decision of the party to adopt the consensus arrangement which produced Yakubu Lado, challenging any one with a proven evidence to come forward
  • Convention venue: PDP bows to Wike

    The leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has decided to hold its national convention in Port Harcourt, Rivers State capital.

    This was one of the key decisions taken at the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting held yesterday at the Abuja secretariat of the PDP.

    The party reportedly agreed to hold the convention in Port Harcourt, after Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike, tendered an apology to the leadership of the party and other stakeholders at the meeting.

    An inside source said some party chieftains also apologised on behalf of the Rivers Governor, adding that he was sober and contrite while tendering his apology.

    Governor Wike had on Wednesday, gone on air, threatening to “teach the PDP a lesson” if the party failed to hold the convention in Port Harcourt.

    The governor’s threat was in response to a statement by the chairman of the party’s Board of Trustees (BoT), Senator Walid Jibrin.

    Jibrin had, at a stakeholders meeting on Monday, dismissed reports that the PDP convention would hold in Port Harcourt, saying that the party hadn’t taken a decision on the venue.

    Speaking with journalists, shortly after the meeting, Senate President, Bukola Saraki, confirmed that the issue of venue was amicably resolved by all stakeholders.

    Saraki said, “We all agreed  to hold it in Port Harcourt. Some of the issues that we are having before, which were reported in the newspapers were discussed.

    “Everybody decided that we should stay with the party. Where tempers were flared, people apologised and everybody felt that yes, there was a commitment to assure everybody that there will be free and fair primaries. So today has been a very good day”.

    All the aspirants were said to have collectively assured the meeting that their initial fears over the Port Harcourt venue for the convention had been allayed by the leadership of the party.

    They reportedly reposed confidence in the ability of the leadership of the party and the convention committee to conduct a seamless exercise.

    However, the convention, where the party’s presidential candidate will be elected, has been shifted from October 5-6 to October 6-7.

    No fewer than 3,619 delegates across the country are expected to vote to elect the party’s presidential flag bearer at the convention.

    Other resolutions arrived at included a written commitment of all the 12 presidential aspirants to a bond accepting the outcome of the primary election and to join forces with the eventual winner to form a united front.

    The party on its part, pledged to ensure transparent, free, fair and acceptable primaries that will be acceptable to all the aspirants and their supporters.

    The PDP also expressed readiness to engage democratic stakeholders all over the world towards achieving a credible free and fair general election in February 2019.

    The meeting, which was presided over by the national chairman of the PDP, Uche Secondus, was attended by all its presidential aspirants, the party’s governors, members of the National Assembly among others.

  • APC, PDP pick governorship candidates tomorrow

    Members of the  All Progressives Congress (APC)  and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will, tomorrow, pick the governorship candidates of the two parties  for next year’s elections.

    The primaries will be held in all but six of the 36 states.

    Excluded are Anambra, Bayelsa, Ekiti, Kogi, Ondo and Osun states because governorship elections in those states will be held in later years.

    The acting National Publicity Secretary of the APC, Mr. Yekini Nabena, said direct primaries will be used in Abia, Akwa Ibom, Anambra, Bauchi, Bayelsa, Cross River, Edo, Ekiti, Imo, Kano, Lagos, Niger, Ogun, Ondo, Osun, Taraba and Zamfara.

    Adamawa, Benue, Borno, Delta, Ebonyi, Enugu, Gombe, Jigawa, Kaduna, Katsina, Kebbi, Kogi, Kwara, Nasarawa, Oyo, Plateau, Rivers, Sokoto and Yobe are to use indirect primaries.

    The two parties have had to adjust their timetables for the primaries several times in the last one month to accommodate inputs of various vested interest groups and to ensure rancour-free voting.

    Ahead of its primaries,the APC in Lagos State yesterday commenced the distribution of identification cards to its  members.

    The state chairman of the party, Alhaji Tunde Balogun, led other executive members to distribute the cards at the ACME Road secretariat of the party in Ikeja.

    The cards were distributed to members through selected party leaders across the different councils in the state.

    Addressing the selected party leaders, Balogun said the move  was to enable members participate in the governorship and subsequent primaries.

    He said no fewer than 1.7 million cards were issued based on the data of members.

    He appealed  to the representatives to ensure the cards were delivered to registered members in their respective areas immediately, saying: ”We have carefully selected you because of your good records in your areas and because we believe you can deliver in getting these cards across to our members .

    “I implore you to do your best in delivering on this assignment so that our members can get their cards before the governorship primary on Sunday.”

    Balogun directed them to distribute the cards to identified party members immediately in the presence of their council chairmen and council party chairmen in their respective areas.

    He said the distribution must also be done in the presence of the state executive members representing each of the 20 constitutionally-recognised councils.

    The chairman said that the party arrived at the arrangement to ensure that cards do not fall into the wrong hands.

    Balogun warned that for no reason should the cards be given to the wrong people and urged the leaders to return unclaimed cards to the secretariat.

    He added: ”Please make sure you check the photographs on the cards before giving them out.

    “We do not want a situation where these cards get to the wrong hands. In case you cannot get the owners of some of the cards, please return them to the secretariat; we will know what to do.

    “And for some of you who cannot get all the cards because of bulkiness, please do come tomorrow, as that is the deadline for distribution.”

  • 300 Ekiti PDP defect to APC over alleged imposition of candidates

    About 300 members of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) have defected to the All Progressives’ Congress (APC)in Ire-Ekiti in Oye Local Government Area OF Ekiti State.

    The defectors said they quit the PDP over alleged imposition of State Assembly and National Assembly candidates ahead of the 2019 general elections and alleged one-man dictatorship in the umbrella party.

    At a well-attended rally held in the town on Friday, the defectors who were led by Hon. Emmanuel Ogunlayi and Hon. Stephen Mosele said they were left with no option than to join the APC because their complaints were allegedly rebuffed and left unattended to.

    They added that they were attracted to the APC by President Muhammadu Buhari’s impressive performances, adding that they would work harder for their new party during the forthcoming  general elections.

    The former PDP members who pledged their allegiance to APC at Ire Ekiti Ward 1 and Ward 2, said they were attracted to the broom party by former Member of House of Representatives from Oye/Ikole Federal Constituency, Hon. Bimbo Daramola.

    The defectors were received by the state APC Chairman, Mr. Paul Omotoso, who led other members of the State Executive Committee to the community for the rally.

    Speaking at the rally, Daramola welcomed the defectors into the APC saying the people of the state will begin to enjoy a new lease of life the moment the Governor-elect, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, is sworn into office.

    Daramola said: “You can see that good things are happening in Ekiti APC and this was as a result of my ambition for the House of Representatives. I am re-contesting based on my records and reputation in APC and it is on these bases that I want to be judged.

    “They knew what I did in my first term. I built a 32-bed hospital in this town among other things I did for my constituents.  APC knew the value of having a ranking lawmaker in Abuja.

    “They knew the value of having a qualitative legislator who can complement Dr Kayode Fayemi here, because the expectations of our people are daunting.

    “My contesting is not to acquire power and wealth, but to consolidate democratic gains for my people. Within six months Fayemi is sworn-in, the euphoria of inauguration will be over and people will expect gains from government and this makes it necessary for us to have those who can complement his efforts and that I know I am qualified of achieving if given the chance”, he said.

     

  • Adeleke vows to contest results in court

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate in the just concluded governorship election in Osun State, Senator Ademola Adeleke, vowed yesterday to use both physical and legal means to upturn the result of the poll in his favour.

    Adeleke claimed at a press conference in his hometown, Ede, that he was robbed at the polls, and said no effort would be spared to seek redress.

    The PDP flag bearer urged the people not to be low spirited, adding that the defeat was a temporary setback which would become a victory in the end.

    The senator said he sympathised with those that were wounded during the election, promising that those arrested would be released soon.

    He also expressed gratitude to domestic and international observers for their impartial coverage of the election allegedly marred by violence, malpractices and irregularities.

    Adeleke added that the people of Osun must remain vigilant but calm.

    Osun PDP Chairman, Hon. Soji Adagunodo, also alleged that the gubernatorial election was rigged and accompanied with violence.

    Adagunodo lauded Nigerians and members of the media for their enthusiasm and the passion demonstrated in support of democracy.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Thursday, announced Alhaji Gboyega Oyetola of the All Progressives Party (APC) as duly elected and winner of the rerun election after it had declared the Sept. 22 governorship election inconclusive.

  • Obaseki to PDP: You are ignorant of international investment

    Edo State Governor, Mr. Governor Godwin Obaseki, has said State Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Chief Dan Orbih lacked ignorance of how to secure international investment.

    Governor Obaseki who was reacting to the mocking of his sleeping viral photographs by the PDP said he has never portrayed himself as a machine.

    Obaseki said the several MOUs he entered have given way to final investment decisions for the Benin River Port, Benin Industrial Park and the Modular Refinery.

    Speaking through his Media Adviser, Mr. Crusoe Osagie, Governor Obaseki dismissed the celebration of the viral pictures.

    He said he could experience fatigue and exhaustion, an indisputable fact of life, to which all humans are susceptible.

    Obaseki listed several world leaders such as former United States President, Bill Clinton; the Chancellor of Germany, Angela Merkel; Japanese Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe; former United States President, Barack Obama; his Economic Adviser, Larry Summers; Pope Benedict XVI; former British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown; former Italian Prime Minister, Silvio Berlusconi and the former Austrian President, Heinze Fischer, that have succumbed to fatigue at meetings.

    Read Also: Obaseki commences health improvement programme

    According to him, “Our records of the number of jobs the Governor Godwin Obaseki-led government has created are intact and we are racing towards exceeding the 200,000 mark.

    “Scientists across the world agree that climate change and human activities account for the flooding and other environmental challenges facing the world and Edo State is not insulated from these global trends. The Storm Water project is on course and on completion will mitigate the impact of these harsh global realities.

    “On the provision of infrastructure in schools, the technical requirements for the commencement of reconstruction and re-modelling works have been done and work is billed to commence soon.”

  • PDP goes to court over Osun election

    The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has said it’s going to court to challenge the inconclusive verdict passed on last Saturday’s governorship election in Osun State.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had declared the election, following the cancellation of the service in some local government areas.

    But in a statement on Monday by its spokesman, Kola Ologbondiyan, the party insisted that the election was concluded and results announced in all polling and the collation centers.

    According the PDP, that signified the lawful conclusion of the election, thus removing INEC’s powers to declare the election inconclusive.

    The statement said, “Our electoral law is clear that once an election result is declared, INEC is bound to return a winner. INEC, in trying to play the card of the defeated All Progressives Congress (APC), contravened the law by refusing to announce a return, even when the declared results have thrown up a winner.

    “Section 69 of the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended) states that inter-alia “in an election to the office of the President or governor whether or not contested and in any contested election to any other elective office, the result shall be ascertained by counting the votes cast for each candidate and subject to the provisions of sections 133, 134 and 179 of the constitution, the candidate that receives the highest number of votes shall be declared elected by the appropriate Returning Officer”.

    Read Also: ‘PDP’s call for result selfish’

    “Concurrently, Section 179 (2), (a) (b) of the constitution directly prescribes that “a candidate for an election to the office of Governor of a State shall be deemed to have been duly elected where, there being two or more candidates – (a) he has the highest number of votes cast at the election; and (b) he has not less than one-quarter of all the votes cast in each of at least two-thirds of all the local government areas in the State.

    “INEC’s action in declaring a concluded election as inconclusive is therefore an annulment, totally duplicitous, constitutionally illegal, ultra-vires and as such null and void”.

    The PDP called for the immediate arrest and prosecution of the Osun State Governorship Election Returning Officer, Prof. Joseph Fuwape, for “succumbing to the pressure of the APC” and declaring a decided election as inconclusive.

    “We demand that INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu immediately summon the courage to do the needful by declaring our candidate, Senator Ademola Adeleke, as winner.

    “It is completely ludicrous, that INEC and the APC are now attempting to divert the narrative from the substance of the election by making outlandish allegations against the PDP and lobbying Civil Society Organizations and Electoral Observers to validate their illegality.

    “Moreover, even if the Osun governorship election is conducted over and over again, the PDP will still win as the people of the state have chosen the PDP and its candidate, Senator Ademola Adeleke.

    “Nevertheless, we insist that the September 22, 2018 election, under our laws, is conclusive and our candidate must be declared winner”

  • EIU, HSBC and 2019 polls

    IN a replay of the cataclysmic events of 2014, many months before the epochal 2015 elections that saw power changed hands between the incumbent Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) government and the daring challenger All Progressives Congress (APC), the next few months before the 2019 polls will witness many vainglorious predictions and desperate politics that defy the laws of physics and politics. Some days ago, the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), the research arm of The Economist magazine, and Global Research Unit, an arm of HSBC, one of the world’s leading financial and banking services organisations, both predicted that 2019 was going to be a portentous year for Nigeria. More directly, the EIU, which is never shy of paddling in political pools, predicted that the APC would lose the presidential poll by a wafer-thin margin. The HSBC on the other hand merely warned that a second term for President Muhammadu Buhari, whose approval ratings it claimed had fallen to an all-time low, would complicate Nigeria’s economic outlook and also slow its growth.

    Predictably, presidential aides have been as peevish as ever in responding to the two soothsayers. While not joining issues directly with the EIU, aides nonetheless asserted that the president’s record of achievements would ensure victory for the APC in 2019. And as for the gloomy HSBC report, aides growled cantankerously, no one should set great store by it because it was compromised by the organisation’s unscrupulous private and financial interests. President Buhari never once admitted that the late Gen Sani Abacha looted Nigeria blind, but his aides, in responding to the HSBC report, denounced the global organisation for helping the late dictator to launder stolen Nigerian money. They insisted that the organisation had no moral right to publish what they described as a tainted and compromised report.

    The EIU was undoubtedly provocative. In its report released two Tuesdays ago, the London-based magazine summarised the woes that would probably befall the APC. “Intra-party politics would be chaotic ahead of the poll and we ultimately expect the incumbent to lose power,” it said ominously. “The 2019 elections will be a close contest between the ruling APC and the PDP. We expect the PDP presidential candidate to win, but for the next administration to flounder against the same problems as the incumbent one. The next government is likely to be led by the PDP, the main opposition, potentially in a coalition with smaller parties, but instability will remain an insoluble challenge.”

    The HSBC also came to virtually the same conclusion without framing it in political terms. It said the following in a dismissive report entitled “Nigeria, papering over the cracks”: “The president’s approval ratings sit near all-time lows, (and) largely reflect the impact of Nigeria’s painful recession in 2016-17 and the sustained economic hardship that has accompanied his presidency, including rapidly rising joblessness, and poverty. A second term for Mr. Buhari raises the risk of limited economic progress and further fiscal deterioration, prolonging the stagnation of his first term, particularly if there is no move towards completing reform of the exchange rate system or fiscal adjustments that diversify government revenues away from oil.”

    Both the EIU and HSBC have substantial grounds to come to dire conclusions about Nigeria’s 2019 polls. In terms of the sheer economics and econometrics of their arguments, they seem logical and unimpeachable. More, they have a track record of being right on some critical issues and at major moments. But they can also sometimes get it wrong, as all economists and political pundits know when they try to predict human behaviour. With the exception of some diehard APC stalwarts and sympathisers, Nigerians know that President Buhari and the APC were more prepared to take office than to govern. For instance, it took the president more than six months to put a cabinet in place, and key macroeconomic issues requiring urgent and knowledgeable interventions were left severely alone, perhaps to do autocorrect.

    In addition, nearly everyone knows that the Buhari presidency’s policy initiatives have been quite awkward, often misplaced, and sometimes poorly targeted. The government has made many key interventions for which they have been applauded, but the poverty level has increased alarmingly and, as the EIU said, joblessness has also ballooned. When the government was consistent, sometimes on the wrong issues, it was not coherent; and vice versa. In fact, some of the government’s policy interventions have accentuated an already bad and festering economic situation. If the Buhari presidency’s handling of economic issues is fraught with a lot of missteps and amateurishness, its approach to politics has been even more overly retrogressive and lacking in sophistication. On the futuristic matter of laying a solid foundation for democracy, something both the presidencies of Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan contemptuously forswore, the Buhari presidency has been spectacularly neglectful, perhaps faring even much worse than its predecessors. And while ex-presidents Obasanjo and Jonathan sustained a strained and vacillating relationship with the rule of law, President Buhari has treated it with disdain.

    However, the APC, after the initial two or more years of demonstrating clumsiness in intraparty politics, it has seemed to change tack and organise itself more like a political party. It has not reached the level of discipline required to help it forge a winning platform, and has not even given any indication that it possesses the philosophical and ideological grounding upon which to produce a winning electoral formula and impose discipline and cohesion, it has nevertheless made some progress in terms of speaking with one voice, regardless of the fratricidal struggles between the party hierarchs and the more obstreperous and dictatorial governors. The EIU thinks the party may be unable to close ranks before 2019, but it is really difficult to build any proposition on this subjective summation. They could in fact close ranks and, notwithstanding the defections from the ruling party witnessed in the past few weeks, forge a tentative unity sufficient enough to give them a slim victory that contradicts the prediction in favour of the PDP.

    So, when both the EIU and HSBC predicted President Buhari’s loss in 2019 and the regaining of the presidency by the PDP in coalition, it is not clear whether they were not reflecting their wish rather than what they really think based on the facts available to them. President Buhari, despite his vaunted claims of integrity, honesty and counterinsurgency record, has suffered low approval ratings both domestically and internationally. He is probably viewed internationally as a breath of fresh air in a corrupt and polluted environment, but they fear that his ideas are jaded, archaic and parochial. He has sadly not made impression on his international hosts and guests on the same engaging level as, say, the late Burkinabe leader, Thomas Sankara, or even the fallen Libyan strongman, Muammar Gaddafi, or, still citing fairly recent examples, Thabo Mbeki of South Africa. As the United States president Donald Trump was quoted to have said, there was nothing in President Buhari’s person or ideas or manners that excited anyone.

    It had to be then that many international bodies yearn somewhat for someone who could excite them, even if he made a few mistakes. They are not interested in what he has done right, of which there are of course many, to be fair to President Buhari, but in what he has done nobly and endearingly wrong. The EIU and HSBC, like some other international bodies and probably foreign governments, wish for a change from a dour and gritty president to a more ideological and effervescent leader. Do the conclusions of these global institutions resonate with Nigerians? Yes, to some extent. But do Nigerians think the EIU and HSBC are right in their conclusions? Perhaps they wish the global organisations are right; but fundamentally, they suspect it is too early to come to those conclusions.

    The APC may be fractured, but it is mending. On the other hand, the PDP, the beneficiary of the defections from the APC, may be enjoying some boom now, but it is not altogether certain that the boom would last, or in the end be salutary. Much worse, there is nothing in the PDP renaissance that indicates that the party would hammer out a concise and resounding ideological platform capable of winning the next polls. And until the party holds its convention, produces a brilliant and charismatic candidate able to do battle with the APC’s President Buhari, and get the party united behind that candidate, it may be unduly early to gift them victory, whether slim or fat. Without a peaceful and progressive convention, and without a great candidate, it is mystifying that the EIU and HSBC seemed to think that the APC was knackered, and the PDP resurgent.

    The APC itself may bank on the elections it is currently sweeping at local and state levels as indicators of where the next presidential poll would head. They are wrong. At the federal level, President Buhari will probably be the main issue, apart from his government’s mismanagement of the economy. Contrary to what he thinks, his security appointments have chafed their sense of patriotism, and his sanctimonious airs have been grating. He is seen as disdainful of democracy and contemptuous of the rule of law. He bared his fangs while he still needed the people’s revalidation, and has ruled more like an autocrat than a democrat. The electorate will, therefore, think twice before endorsing him for a second term. But as they prepare to endorse or not endorse him and his party, and as he sticks to his disagreeable conservatism that eschews the fundamental rearrangement of the political structure which has brought so many woes upon the country, they will cast wary glances in the direction of the PDP hoping that that nebulous party would somehow get its act together, forge a great governing ideology, even if it is archconservative, and produce a winner. Yet, just as nothing has shown quite clearly that the APC would lose, nothing also has shown openly that the PDP would win. Clearly, both EIU and HSBC jumped the gun in their conclusions.

  • Adeleke: Victory assured if…

    After casting his vote, the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Senator Ademola Adeleke, has assured his supporters that, if he is not rigged out by the authorities in charge of the process, he is sure of victory. Adeleke who arrived exactly 8am at his polling unit 009, Ward 2, Abogunde/Sagba registration area, Ede North, was the first to vote at the unit.

    The Card Reader Machine initially had difficulties authenticating his fingerprints but after about five minutes, he succeeded in doing his accreditation.

    The PDP flag bearer, who voted at about 8.07am, told reporters afterwards that so far everything was proceeding normally and that if it continues that way he is sure of victory.

    He said attempts were made to frustrate his bid, to destabilise him ahead of the election but everything failed in the end.

     

  • 2019: Tambuwal promises to restructure Nigeria if elected president

    A presidential aspirant of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Sokoto State Governor Aminu Tambuwal has promised to restructure Nigeria if elected president in 2019.

    He also pledged to evolve scientific measures that would enable the security architecture to meet up the challenges of the 21st century and also  make the education of the youth a top priority of his government.

    This, he said, would create independent spirit in the youth to pursue develop their potential and in turn become employers of labour.

    A statement by his media office said the presidential aspirant unveiled his agenda during a meeting with PDP delegates from the Federal Capital Territory, FCT and the North Central in Abuja to the forthcoming national convention on Thursday.

    He said restructuring of the country was paramount to recreate a sense of unity among the people.

    Tambuwal said: “We are here to meet our delegates from the North Central and kick start our campaign properly. This aspiration is fired and motivated by the spirit of service and the spirit to take back our country and reunite our people. And to reposition our country for it to be properly restructured to the benefit of Nigerians.

    “When you give us the flag and eventually elect me as the president of the country, I will rejig the security architecture of Nigeria, employ manpower that has the capacity to address the security challenges of today, using technology.

    “A situation whereby we don’t employ and deploy technology for the security of Nigeria can no longer be tolerated.

    “Repositioning Nigeria by way of ensuring that all of our children are in schools and get required training so that those that will be employed in blue collar jobs and the others that will go for various private businesses are properly trained. And that is why,  when I was elected as governor of Sokoto state, I identified as key, number one priority the education of the citizens of Sokoto state. And we will apply the same formula in our project of making Nigeria great again and make sure every Nigeria child is properly educated.

    “So that our children can realise their potentials and apply them to their benefit, the benefit of their community and the benefit of Nigeria state. The children of Nigeria have to be educated because it the only way we can avoid reoccurrence of Boko Haram. If you have them out there available to use by miscreants who are enemies of this country, it would be easy for to use to harness and misapply. But as a government, we must come up with deliberate policies to ensuring that no child of Nigeria is out of school and that none of them is without training that he or she can probably use to set up private businesses.

    “The talk about restructuring Nigeria is also about that three arms: securing Nigeria, repositioning Nigeria which of course includes creating wealth and we can only create wealth when you have collaboration between government and the price sector. Government one cannot do it and the private sector alone also cannot do it. There has to be a synergy between the private sector and government for us to create wealth so that every citizens of Nigeria can have a better standard of living.

    “We need to restructure this country, because the country has never been this divided. The country has never been this enmeshed with the kind of current security challenge it has as at today.

    “I believe in restructuring Nigeria. The people of South South are asking for restructuring base on the understanding that oil wealth be properly applied in their respective places. Nothing is wrong with that! Let us judiciously apply the oil wealth and develop this country.

    “And the people of South West are asking for restructuring in terms of physical restructuring of the economy, that is to making sure that every part the country realises its potential and ensure enabling environment for business to grow.

    “While the people of the south east are interested in state creation. And while the in the north the issues are not far away from ensuring that we have better education, more development and all of that.

    “And these are issues we would sit down and find a way to make them a reality. So under my administration, restructuring Nigeria will be given a serious attention and it will be a priority.

    “I will not be that kind of president that will shoot out the ideas of Nigerians.”

    The Acting Chairman of the PDP of FCT, Mr. Ibrahim Biko described Tambuwal as a good product that would market itself.

    On behalf of the delegates, Biko pledged their votes for Tambuwal at the PDP convention.

    He said: “The good product sells itself. This man is not too young to rule. Age is on his side and he is fit to move around and also to articulate on issue and proffer solutions.

    “We in the FCT; we are one and as delegates, we speak in one voice. We don’t have divergent opinions. Our vote is a consolidated vote. We don’t divide our vote. So we are promising you our vote and we will not disappoint you.”