Tag: 2023 Elections

  • Gov Ikpeazu insists Abia PDP will choose guber candidate

    Gov Ikpeazu insists Abia PDP will choose guber candidate

    Abia State Governor Dr Okezie Ikpeazu has pledged to ensure that the gubernatorial candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party in the state “emerges through the decision of the party.”

    Ikpeazu so declared at a meeting of leaders of the Abia State PDP held on Wednesday 16 March 2022 at the International Conference Centre, Umuahia.

    PDP leaders, in turn, commended “the decision of the State Governor that the leadership of the Party and all the ward chapters will participate in charting a direction towards the emergence of a worthy flag bearer.”

    Governor Ikpeazu told the party executives that he benefitted from the decision of the party twice and would not stand in the way of the party in exercising a similar choice for his successor.

    Ikpeazu stated, “I affirm that the choice of the people and the party is my choice. I am a democrat brought up and elevated by the choice and decision of our party members. You are the ones to make the choice. I can only provide guidance and counsel. I respect the supremacy of the party and the voice of the majority”.

    Abia State Chairman of the PDP Rt.Hon. Alwell Asiforo Okere, PhD and State Secretary Barr Iro David disclosed the decisions in a communique issued on Wednesday in Umuahia.

    Participants at the meeting were members of the State Working Committee, State Executive Committee Members, Local Government Executive Committee Members of the Party and Principal Officers of the one hundred and eighty-four (184) wards in the State.

    Ikpeazu’s declaration comes as party faithful and other stakeholders in Abia State politics await his direction or lean towards a successor as his tenure ends in May 2023. Contentions on representation based on the Abia Charter of Equity or the zoning formula to adopt.

    The Abia PDP leaders pledged to work harmoniously and “mobilise all Party resources to work for the success of our Party’s candidate at the general election come 2023”.

    The PDP leaders also passed a vote of confidence on Governor Ikpeazu “for his giant strides in the state”. Those strides include “outstanding improvements in Foreign Direct Investments as captured by the records of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics (NBS)” and “for his ability to make Abia State the West African hub for Small and Medium Enterprises”.

  • 2023: PDP announces date to commence sale of nomination forms

    2023: PDP announces date to commence sale of nomination forms

    The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has announced the date to commence the sale of expression of interest and nomination forms for the party’s primaries ahead of the 2023 general elections.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports National Publicity Secretary of PDP, Mr Debo Ologunagba disclosed this while reading the communique issued at the end of the party’s 95th National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting in Abuja on Wednesday.

    The PDP NEC approved Thursday, March 17, 2022 for the commencement of sale of expression of interest and nomination forms as the NEC approved the party’s guidelines, timetable and schedule of activities for the 2023 general elections.

    Ologunagba said that the NEC also approved N40 million for nomination and expression of interest forms for the presidential election.

    He said that the decision was taken after extensive deliberations on issues of urgent national importance as well as preparations for the 2023 general elections.

    “In preparations for the 2023 General Elections, NEC approved the PDP Electoral Guidelines for the conduct of primary elections

    “NEC approved the timetable and schedule of activities of the PDP for the 2023 general elections.

    “The following amounts for the forms were approved by NEC:

    “State House of Assembly -Expression of Interest at N100,000 and Nomination Form at N500,000.

    “House of Representatives- Expression of Interest -N500,000; Nomination Form-N2,000,000.

    “For the Senate: Expression of Interest -N500,000, Nomination Form N3,000,000.

    “Governorship – expression of interest – N1,000,000, while Nomination Form is N20,000,000.

    “President- Expression of Interest form-N5,000,000 and nomination form – N35,000,000,” he said.

    He disclosed that NEC also approved a 50 per cent reduction in nomination fees for youths aged 25 years to 30 years for various elective positions.

    “NEC also approved the commencement of sale of expression of interest and nomination forms from Thursday, March 17, 2022,” he said.

    Ologunagba added that the party also approved the establishment of a 37-member Zoning Committee to make recommendations for the zoning of various elective positions for the 2023 general elections.

    The national publicity secretary, who said that the committee had two weeks to submit its reports, noted that the committee members would be drawn from states.

    Ologunagba said that the NEC expressed confidence in the ability of the NWC to lead PDP to win the Presidential election, majority of state governors as well as majority of seats in the National and State Assemblies.

    On the state of the nation, he said that NEC strongly condemned the issue of corruption and insensitivity resulting in worsening insecurity and agonizing economic hardship in the country.

    He said that the NEC also condemned corruption in government which was responsible for the excruciating fuel crisis and collapse of national grid that crippled economic and social activities in the country.

    “NEC notes that Nigerians are now looking up to the PDP for solution and as such urged all Party members to remain united in the PDP’s mission to Rescue and Rebuild our country from the misrule of the APC,” Ologbondiyan said.

  • 2023: Get acquainted with new Electoral Act – Okowa tells PDP aspirants

    2023: Get acquainted with new Electoral Act – Okowa tells PDP aspirants

    Gov. Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta has tasked members and aspirants of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) to get acquainted with the new Electoral Act.

    The governor gave the charge while swearing-in the Senior Political Adviser and three Special Advisers on Monday in Asaba.

    The appointees are; Chief Funkekeme Solomon, Senior Political Adviser; Mr Austine Ayemidejor, Chief Emmanuel Onyeuku and Mr Darlington Ijeh as Special Advisers.

    Okowa said; “let me enjoin all members of our party, the PDP, especially the aspirants, to get thoroughly acquainted with the new Electoral Act.

    “Going forward, we are under obligation to ensure that our utterances, conduct and actions are always guided by the provisions of the law.

    “As a party, the PDP at both the national and state levels has never been stronger, more cohesive, and more united.

    “As individuals or groups, we must shun anything that will undermine the new spirit in the PDP.

    “If we do this, I can say without any fear of contradiction that the PDP is poised to reign supreme, come 2023”.

    Okowa said that the appointment of the SA’s would enable his administration attain the Stronger Delta mantra given the appointees wealth of experience.

    He charged them to discharge their responsibilities in accordance with section 196 (Sub-section 1) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended).

    “This is crunch time, and a lot is expected from you in terms of sacrifice, dedication, and fidelity to the cause of a Stronger Delta standing on the tripod of Prosperity, Peace, and Progress.

    “I urge you to make fairness and equity your watchwords in the discharge of your duties.

    Indeed, it is my earnest expectation that you will justify the confidence reposed in you by this appointment,” he said.

    While congratulating the appointees, Okowa described their appointment as well deserved and necessary to bring in more experienced hands.

    “These men are adroit in their ability to marry policy and politics and are expected to help to bolster the administration’s efforts to finish strong in an electioneering year.

    “They have been part and parcel of our S.M.A.R.T, now Stronger Delta, vision, and have acquitted themselves as strategic thinkers, astute administrators, and capable leaders, essential qualities required for the office,” Okowa said.

    Responding on behalf of the appointees, the Senior Political Adviser, Solomon, thanked God for the appointment and appreciated the governor for considering them for the job.

    He pledged their collective resolve and commitment to deliver on their duties to ensure that the people of the state got full benefit of their service.

    The State Deputy Gov. Kingsley Otuaro, the Speaker, State House of Assembly, Chief Sheriff Oborevwori, were among other dignitaries that graced the event.

  • 2023: It is time to enthrone a new Nigeria – Gov. Fayemi

    2023: It is time to enthrone a new Nigeria – Gov. Fayemi

    Gov. Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti, on Saturday, says now is the time to rekindle the candle of a new Nigeria as the 2023 general elections draw near.

    Fayemi said this at a birthday symposium in honour of Mr Hamzat Lawal, Chief Executive Officer, Connected Development, in Abuja.

    According to him, the coming transition provides another opportunity for Nigerians to take a new day at making a new Nigeria of their dream.

    He said that Nigerian citizens need to build a consensus around major issues of concern and develop a national template for some irreducible behaviour in leadership positions.

    He said this is because nation-building is an unfinished business before every generation and it is always a pressing business of the day that must be done urgently.

    “These challenges that affect our country today, provide us with the opportunity to take a position and take a stand and walk for the resolution of such challenges.

    “Nigeria will belong to those who are prepared to stand up, stand firm and take control of their destinies as the late Senator Robert Kennedy once said, `it is from numberless diverse acts of courage and belief that human history is shaped.

    “We can all to do a bit in our little ways to cause a beautiful change that will lead us to make our country and indeed the world a better place.

    “I am personally uncomfortable with the practice of our politics and our political conversation; we should have outgrown bigotry, tribalism and ethnoreligious biases.

    “It is time to rekindle the candle of a new Nigeria and the coming transition provides another opportunity for us to take a new day at making a new Nigeria of our dream.’’

    Fayemi called on citizens to love the country and imagine it as a major world power in no distant time.

    According to him, leaders are made from the crucible of experience of passion and courage and the readiness to sacrifice because nothing ventured is nothing gained.

    “If we trace Hamzat’s history very well from who he was and the focused dedicated and inspirational Youngman he has become, we will see he has taken strongly from these lessons.

    “He is the founder of Follow the Money, a civic tech advocacy platform, that has helped in tracking government expenditure and service delivery.’’

    Fayemi said that Hamzat is a major voice in the sustainable development goals action movement for young people and emerging leaders.

    He said that some lessons to take away from Hamzat’s story include that for one to succeed, one needs to imbibe certain virtues in life and that is one of the most important things youths often take for granted.

    Fayemi, therefore, urged youths to value knowledge because without it they would not develop the right intellect, experience and skill set to help them prepare for a functional future.

    He said that the pursuit of knowledge would liberate them from fears, biases and limitations.

    “This is the kind of education that has helped Hamzat. We also need to develop skills that prepare us for selfless leadership through volunteerism, community engagement and mobilisation for collective causes.‘’

    Fayemi urged youths to value competence, courage, generosity of spirit, a sense of giving than receiving, being solution providers than complainants, perseverance and delayed gratification to succeed.

    Also speaking at the event, the Founder of Stanbic IBTC Bank PLC, Atedo Peterside, eulogised Hamzat as a person of integrity who had achieved a lot and worked hard to build a great reputation.

    Peterside said he shared similarities with Hamzat, when he founded the bank 33 years ago as a youth, adding that older experts were sceptical to join the bank so those who joined him then in 1989 were younger than him and were ready to take a risk that the older and more experienced personnel were not willing to take.

    “However, after five years of success stories of the bank, the older people started applying and we employed them and last February the bank was 33 years.

    “Youths should know their weaknesses and strengths, work on their weaknesses by engaging those that can cover that area of weakness and also to build on the strength.’’

    Peterside urged youths not to abandon good principles in their pursuit of achievement but to imbibe the virtues of integrity, shared vision, teamwork, and meritocracy, adding that “they should also be bold to be truthful to earn the trust of the people, especially those they work with.’’

    He urged Nigerian youths to shun sentiments and cooperate with each other across the board to achieve success in their endeavours.

    The celebrant, Hamzat Lawal, CEO CODE and Founder of Follow the Money, has been working in the civic space, saying that he impacted lives and built people’s capacity the same way he was influenced by Ewa Ileri.

    Hamzat, therefore, launched a mentorship initiative called the Ewa Illeri Leadership School, adding that every year, he would select 20 Young people to go to Ebonyi for learning.

    He said that as he clocked 35, he would use the new face of his life to contribute his quota to change Nigeria through politics, adding that Nigeria is where it is today because youth allowed it for far too long.

    He added that Nigerians have been agonising and complaining on Twitter, Facebook and so on but there is now a renewed opportunity and hope for young people to take their place in Nigeria’s political history.

    He said that a political movement called the Green Nigerian Movement has been launched to mobilise youths, persons with disabilities in the 774 local government areas to build alliances to change the political narrative.

    “Today we must agree that we will play politics with empathy. We’ll play politics with ideology. We’ll play politics with value

    “I think that ‘the saying that politics is dirty’ should be an old order. If we choose to remain on the sidelines, then we should not complain. I, Hamza Lawal, from today would play partisan politics.

    “With the Green Nigerian Movement, we have committed that we will mobilise 40 million people, we cannot make a change if we don’t change the dynamics of how things are done.’’

    Hamzat, therefore, called on Nigerians to stop agonising, to join him to consolidate, mobilise and educate people at the grassroots to understand the powers that they hold in order to decide the next president of Nigeria.

  • 2023: Obasanjo denies endorsing South-East for president

    2023: Obasanjo denies endorsing South-East for president

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo did not endorse the South-East for the presidency ahead of the 2023 election.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Obasanjo made this known in a rebuttal released by his media aide, Kehinde Akinyemi.

    Obasanjo’s rebuttal follows an online report quoting him to have backed the region to produce the next president for the country.

    According to the report, the former president stated that south-easterners can bring a lot to the table if elected.

    The ex-president speaking via his media aide, Kehinde Akinyemi, stated that while receiving Mao Ohuabunwa, a presidential aspirant, in Abeokuta, Ogun State, words were put in his mouth thus the misrepresentation in the media.

    However, Obasanjo tackled Ohuabunwa as being the brain behind the report, saying he (the aspirant) put words into his mouth.

    The former president through the statement noted that it was a wrong approach by Ohuabunwa.

    Speaking through his Media Aide, Kehinde Akinyemi, in a statement made available to newsmen in Abeokuta, Obasanjo said, “If that was the way the presidential aspirant wanted to approach his ambition; such was a wrong way.”

    He said “He came here and the former President received him as a gentleman and in the spirit of his 85th birthday celebrations only for him to go and put words into his mouth. Baba is not that sort of man and if that is the way he wants to fulfil his ambition that is a wrong way.”

  • APC Putting Everyone at Risk by Endangering Itself – By Azu Ishiekwene

    APC Putting Everyone at Risk by Endangering Itself – By Azu Ishiekwene

    By Azu Ishiekwene

    The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) looks determined to set itself on fire, even though the story out there is that the match box has been snatched from the hand of its interim chairman and Yobe State Governor, Mai Mala Buni. The danger still looms.

    After toppling the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) government of President Goodluck Jonathan in 2015, the APC turned on itself, feasting on its own entrails. Of course, the winner-takes-all factor in a presidential system can tempt winners to lose their heads. In the case of APC, however, the party lost its head even before it was tempted. That head has been replaced by an echo chamber – and it’s not funny.

    Within days of winning the election, cracks surfaced on the post-sharing agreement among members of the legacy parties in 2015. The Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) was supposed to take possession of the “crown” (the presidency), while the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) was, roughly speaking, supposed to manage the party.

    Positions were also supposed to have been shared on a prorated basis amongst members of the five legacy parties that contributed to APC’s victory to give everyone a sense of belonging and stabilise the government.

    That did not happen. After declaring that he was “for everyone and for no one”, President Muhammadu Buhari went on to appoint a transition committee (headed by Ahmed Joda) which froze out nearly everyone except anyone who contributed little or nothing to bring Buhari to power.

    It wasn’t long before the party began to fall apart. Buhari ruled a divided government for the first four years, with reverse defections that almost turned his majority party into a minority in the Senate. At a point, his wife and First Lady, Aisha, literally camped with the rebels, saying this was not the government the party rank and file worked for.

    The seed of the instability of that early beginning has produced a party that neither resembles a party nor anything remotely close to a collection of people with a shared political interest. It’s more like an assembly of opportunistic strange bedfellows, occasionally worshiping the god of kinetics at a shrine called Aso Rock.

    In seven years, APC has evolved into a party with no board of trustees, no governance structure, no idea of its past, or care about its future. It has now produced three chairmen who left at gunpoint after serious allegations of raiding state governors for money during the party’s primaries. The party has scores of wounded former and current members waiting, with long knives, to take their revenge.

    Of course, the APC has also attracted some big defectors to its fold, a number of them serving governors, who are at once the mainstay and biggest source of instability in the political parties. But by and large, these political refugees have their eyes firmly on one thing: how they can use what is left of the present system to help or perpetuate themselves. They know that the party they’re joining is not better than the one they’re leaving, except that it offers temporary shelter to their hope of grabbing power, entrenching themselves or escaping accountability.

    APC is a party of ironies. The same cane that was used to beat its former chairman, John Oyegun out of office and used again to beat Adams Oshiomhole only two years later, is now being unleashed on Buni, making his predecessors look like saints. Yet, it was not supposed to end this way. After the alleged corruption and inflexibility of the Oyegun years and the alleged multiplication of the sins under Oshiomhole, Buni was supposed to be a breath of fresh air.

    He was supposed to be the prince in shining armour recruited on a temporary basis to combine his day job as governor with that of being the party’s messiah. Two years on, the messiah needs a messiah. His adversaries are painting a picture of him that suggests that Oshiomhole should have been made life chairman. The Comrade must be laughing in Etsako.

    Not only has Buni, a first-term governor, been accused of deliberately stalling the convention even after three postponements, his accusers say he is doing so because he also wants to be nominated Vice President. In other words, he wants to be a player in a game in which he is supposed to be a referee and to secure his ambition, they allege, he has now procured a court injunction to postpone and postpone the convention until it can produce a consensus candidate of his choice.

    A source claimed that it was to avert this coup that Buhari changed his travel plans and returned to Abuja from Kenya first, before continuing to the UK. It would now seem that with Buni’s precipitous removal on Monday, the bomb has been defused and perhaps the worst is over.

    Perhaps. But the signs for the party are not looking good. Buni’s supporters who can’t understand why his enemies won’t let him get back home and out of his sick bed before plunging the long knives, have threatened to challenge his removal in court, as if his appointment and overstay were not a travesty which of course we were told was a necessity at the time.

    As of the time of writing, Buni, prince charming only yesterday, has become penny stock. Out of 21 APC governors he is left with only three – Dapo Abiodun, Yahaya Bello and Hope Uzodinma. Yet, there is a bitter struggle ahead, all of which shouldn’t be the business of bystanders if the ruling party has not only become a danger to itself but also a danger to bystanders.

    The nasty jostling for power among the various blocs in the party involving serving political appointees with disguised interest to run for office and aspirants who have openly declared their interest is matched only by Buhari’s indifference to the outcome of what promises to be a fight to the finish.

    A country that once despised President Olusegun Obasanjo for the sort of meddlesomeness that not only offered couples mat but also insisted on showing them how to lie on it, now has to deal with a president who has zero interest in what conjugal arsenal is deployed in the other room. The president’s aloofness even at moments requiring broadmindedness to define the party’s value and character is even more telling because other power blocs that could have provided a countervailing force have been frustrated out of the fold.

    The APC is now more or less reduced to an echo chamber, with folks engrossed in the kinetic science of decoding the president’s body language or where that fails deploying his name in fraudulent political transactions. It’s a dizzying turn of fate that has left a vacuum for hijackers and also taken a heavy toll on governance which, in the best of times, has been absent.

    While the public is pinning away on long lines outside petrol stations, chafing under shambolic electricity supply, teachers strike and rising prices, all that we hear of these days are politicians telling us why they deserve another shot at office without any need to account for their present record. We also hear incoherent assurances of progress by the president as he waves from the steps of his departing plane on his way to yet another medical trip abroad. It’s hard to ignore the echoes of disarray from the APC tent or to pretend that when the rains fall, it would be APC’s problem alone.

    The Third Force with a promise of political redemption so well-articulated early on, remains, well, a third force.

    And the state of the official opposition compounds our misery. PDP is not better and is not even pretending to be. The fight for the soul of the party will break out into a shooting war sooner than later. The casualties would not be found largely among politicians who have perfected the art of survival by defection, but among voters who wish in vain that after eight years in the limbo the party would become a truly viable option.

    I laugh at those who expect a dramatic outcome from Buni’s current travail. It won’t happen. Buni, like Oyegun and Oshiomhole before him, will survive the current turbulence, even if he does so with a few bruises.

    As for the party’s future, the answer is blowing in the wind.

    Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

  • 2023: If Buhari should insist I run for president, I will – Gov El-Rufai

    2023: If Buhari should insist I run for president, I will – Gov El-Rufai

    Governor of Kaduna State, Malam Nasir El-Rufai has said if President Muhammadu Buhari should insist he run for the office of president in the 2023 General Elections, he will obey.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Governor El-Rufai made this known on Wednesday while stressing that he has no intention to contest the 2023 presidential election.

    El-Rufai, who disclosed this while speaking on Channels TV, said he was physically tired and needs to take a break from politics when his tenure as Governor of Kaduna State ends in 2023.

    While reiterating that he never wanted to run for the office of the Governor of Kaduna State but that the president prevailed over him, El-Rufai also addressed speculations of him being running mate to former Governor Rotimi Amaechi in the 2023 elections.

    “I’ve said over and over that I’m not a contestant for any office. I’m not aspiring for anything. If [former] Governor Rotimi Amaechi is interested in running for any office, he has the right to do so. But I’m not running for anything and I’m not going to be on his ticket.

    “I’m physically tired because I do take my work seriously. For the last eight years, I’ve worked myself flat out and I’m not young anymore. I’ll be 63 next year.

    “So I prefer to look at other options to contribute to the development of my country. But of course, I didn’t want to run for Governor, but the President insisted; so if he insists that I do something, I have so much regard for him and his judgement, that I will do it even reluctantly,” El-Rufai said.

  • Osinbajo to speak on presidential ambition soon – VP Spokesperson, Laolu Akande

    Osinbajo to speak on presidential ambition soon – VP Spokesperson, Laolu Akande

    Professor Yemi Osinbajo’s spokesperson, Laolu Akande has said that the Vice president will make his presidential ambition decision known in no distance time.

    While fielding questions from state house correspondents during the Osinbajo’s 65th birthday ceremony in the presidential villa on Tuesday, Akande mentioned that at the appropriate time the Vice president will tell Nigerians if he would contest or not.

    He said that at present, Mr Osinbajo is focused on supporting President Muhammadu Buhari to deliver in addressing Nigeria’s challenges.

    “Well, like he has said up to this time, he is committed to the work that he is elected as vice president and to support the president.

    “ That is what he is focused on now; and like I have also said in my last tweet, whatever will be his activities or whatever he would do will be communicated officially,” he said.
    Mr Akande said that the vice president, based on his observations in the last seven to eight years, was driven by the notion that the government and governance and leadership ought to have a heart of justice and a heart of service.

    “He often says in most of the meetings that we hold that the reason why we are here is because people put us here.

    “ We are here in the interest of the people; so, he is someone that is committed to that notion of service to the people, whether in government, whether as a pastor, whether as a lawyer.

    “In every aspect of his life, he understands very diligently the idea that we are here to serve.’’

    Laolu Akande added that the Vice president principle has been people- driven and he will continue to make effort to impact on the people of Nigeria

  • No timetable for 2023 general elections yet – PDP

    No timetable for 2023 general elections yet – PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) says it has not released any timetable or any schedule of activities preparatory to the 2023 general elections.

    Its National Publicity Secretary, Mr Debo Ologunagba, said on Sunday in Abuja that the purported timetable or any schedule of activities already going viral on the social media was faked.

    “The attention of the National Working Committee has been drawn to a fake election timetable circulated in the social media.

    “It was purportedly signed by the PDP National Organising Secretary, Umar Bature, as the schedule of activities and timetable of the PDP for the 2023 general elections.

    “The PDP states in clear terms that it is has not released any timetable or any schedule of activities whatsoever for the 2022/2023 electioneering year.

    “No such document was signed and released by the National Organising Secretary.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, the PDP is a party of due process.

    “The PDP will release a timetable and schedule of activities for the 2022/2023 electioneering year after extensive consultation and approval by critical and statutory organs of the party at appropriate levels,’’ he stated.

    He added that the fake timetable was the handiwork of mischievous elements seeking to create confusion and mislead the public and distract the party at this critical point in time.

    “At the appropriate time, the official timetable and schedule of activities of the PDP will be formally published through the official communication channels of our party and not in the social media,’’ Ologunagba stressed.

  • 2023 zoning and aspirants’ pairing permutations [5] – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    2023 zoning and aspirants’ pairing permutations [5] – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    By Ehichioya Ezomon

    However their posturing and positioning for attention, the crowded field of aspirants for the president in 2023 will be streamlined in a matter of weeks, to separate the pretenders from the contenders.

    The main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), like its counterpart, the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), has tens of aspirants for the Office of President of Nigeria, who, alternatively present themselves for the post of president or vice president.

    Similarly, their pairing for a joint ticket is not limited to one aspirant, but a gambling with multiple choices, to avoid being caught off guard whenever the issue of rotation of the presidency is settled between the North and South in the 2023 election cycle.

    Until the field is weeded, the list below summarises the match-making in the PDP that’s few aspirants in the North – perhaps due to the number of state governors on the party’s platform in the region – unlike in the South that has a suffuse of such aspirants.

    Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, a Governor-elect of Adamawa State, who traded the position for a vice presidential slot in 1999, and won the presidency along with former Head of State, retired Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, remains the number one contender at the PDP primaries, and at the general election beginning in February 2023.

    A serial presidential candidate on several platforms, Atiku has a wide berth to choose a running mate in Southern Nigeria, among whom is his joint ticket holder in the 2019 polls, Mr Peter Obi, a former governor of Anambra State.

    Other aspirants that can pair with Atiku are former Senate President, Chief Anyim Pius Anyim and Governors Nyesom Wike of Rivers State, Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi of Enugu, Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta, Seyi Makinde of Oyo, Udom Emmanuel of Akwa Ibom, Godwin Obaseki of Edo, and former Governor Segun Mimiko of Ondo State.

    Mr Obi stands out as the foremost contender in the PDP if the presidency were to shift to Southern Nigeria, and to the South-East. If otherwise, he can pair with Atiku, Governor Bala Mohammed of Bauchi State or Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal of Sokoto State.

    Chief Anyim, a former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, and an early jumper into the ring in the South-East, bolstered by a high-profile birthday bash in Abuja lately, has garnered momentum and popularity to pair with Atiku, Governor Mohammed, Governor Tambuwal or former Governor Ahmed Makarfi of Kaduna State.

    Mr Tambuwal, former Speaker of the House of Representatives, who tested his mettle in the PDP primaries in 2019 and fell short to Atiku, is being matched with Mr Obi, Chief Anyim or Governors Wike, Ugwuanyi, Okowa, Makinde, Emmanuel or Obaseki.

    Governor Wike, reputed as the PDP major financier and trouble shooter, was a shoe-in as running mate to Tambuwal had the latter gained the ticket in 2019. But he’s switched his support, first to Governor Mohammed, whom he describes as “overqualified” for president in 2023, and now to any Southern candidate under PDP.

    Even as Wike has warned Atiku about misjudging the support of Southerners in the 2023 electoral runs, all Northern PDP aspirants, including Atiku, Tambuwal, Mohammed and Makarfi want to give their all to be on a joint ticket with him.

    Governor Ugwuanyi, a quiet operator, outwardly concerned with rolling over the APC in the coming local government poll in Enugu, is using the campaigns for the candidates to ask the PDP hierarchy to look how he would garner votes if handed the party ticket. And a group of “Northern Elders” has endorsed his candidacy to pair with Atiku, Mohammed, Tambuwal or Makarfi.

    Governor Makinde, the stand-alone PDP governor in the South-West, is positioned to clinch the ticket or the running mate position. He can also pair with either Atiku, Mohammed or Tambuwal.

    Governor Okowa, an unassuming personality, hasn’t been overly sensitive to the post of president. Still, he’s eminently qualified not only by reason of his training as a Medical Doctor, but also his experience as a former Senator and Secretary to the Government of Delta State. So, he’s good to go on either way of the presidential calculus with Atiku, Mohammed, Tambuwal or Makarfi.

    Governor Emmanuel is the first State Chief Executive to broach a successor for 2023, and free himself of any local encumbrances, as he buys the urging of support groups to give the presidency a shot, and pair with Atiku, Mohammed, Tambuwal or Makarfi.

    Governor Obaseki, in the APC, would’ve had the blessing of President Buhari, who reportedly regards him as a “worthy son” even as he’s in the PDP by circumstance of being denied the APC ticket in the 2020 governorship poll in Edo. That said, he stands a good chance, as other aspirants in the South, to couple with Atiku, Mohammed, Tambuwal or Makarfi for the presidency.

    Senator Makarfi, a former Caretaker Committee chairman of the PDP, was a viable presidential material pre-2019 elections, but declined to test his acceptability at the primaries. He hasn’t also been forthcoming in the lead-up to 2023, but stands a chance to run with Governors Wike, Ugwuanyi, Okowa, Emmanuel or Obaseki.

    Dr Mimiko, a two-term governor of Ondo, has sojourned in several political parties before returning to the PDP, where he can run for the president with Atiku, Mohammed, Tambuwal or Makafi.

    Dr Abukakar Bukola Saraki, former governor of Kwara and Senate President (2015-2019), has long courted the presidency, which he’s sure is within reach in 2023. But the zoning of PDP’s chairmanship to North Central (Middle Belt) may’ve punctured his ambition that could flourish pairing with any of the Southern aspirants.

    Governor Samuel Ortom of Benue State is also caught in the web of zoning the PDP chair to North Central. Otherwise, pundits were positioning him with his roaring friend, Governor Wike, in a Christian-Christian ticket they’d predicted would scale through.

    Mr Dele Momodu, a journalist and publisher of Ovation magazine, has surprised pundits, as he forges ahead with his presidential ambition after defecting to the PDP, and blasting the APC administration of President Buhari that he’d staunchly supported.

    Momodu’s seriousness is gleaned from his homecoming to Owan, Edo State, to get the blessings of his community people, and the wide consultations with power brokers across the country.

    He’s selling a mantra of “I’m the right man for the job,” arguing that having hobnobbed with heads of governments in many countries, and with local mandarins in Nigeria, coupled with his experiences in journalism and business, he’s the answers to Nigeria’s problems. So, he can pair with any of the contenders from the North.

    As the presidential field expands, so are the chances shrinking for aspirants to clinch the PDP (or APC) ticket either as the candidate or running mate in bruising primaries, and in the February 2023 polls featuring serving or past governors with loaded war chests.

    *Mr Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria.