Tag: 2023 Elections

  • UPDATE: Everything Tinubu said as he officially declares to contest 2023 presidential election

    UPDATE: Everything Tinubu said as he officially declares to contest 2023 presidential election

    The National leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu has dismissed the calls in some quarters that he should remain a king maker instead of nurturing Presidential ambition in 2023.

    Tinubu dismissed the calls when he fielded questions from State House correspondents after a closed door meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari in the Presidential Villa Abuja on Monday.

    According to the APC chieftain, he is a Nigerian and he has the right to be the king himself, not just a king maker.

    “I have never seen where it is written in the rule book anywhere in any country that a king maker cannot be a king; unless he commits murder. I want to pursue my ambition without the title of a king maker,” Tinubu said.

    The APC stalwart said he was in the presidential villa to formally inform the President of his desire to run for President in 2023.

    “I can say categorically yes! I have informed the President of my intention but I have not informed Nigerians yet. I am still consulting and I have no problem consulting and I have not set a parameter of limitation to the extent of consultation.

    “You will soon hear what you want to hear all you want to hear, a categorical declaration; you’ve gotten that truth from me that I have informed the President of my ambition and you don’t expect more answers than that,” Tinubu stressed.

    When asked how the President responded to his declaration, Tinubu said the President did not ask him to discard his political ambition.

    “He is a democrat. He didn’t ask me to stop, he didn’t ask me not to attempt and pursue my ambition. It is a lifelong ambition. You are running a democratic dispensation and you must adopt the principles and values and virtues of democracy,” he said.

    On the purported ambition of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Gov. Yahaya Bello of Kogi and other politicians nurturing similar presidential ambitions with him in the APC, Tinubu said he would not discuss individuals.

    “I don’t want to discuss individuals now, I must discuss myself. I have the confidence, vision and capacity to build on the foundation of the President and turn Nigeria better. I have done that with commitment and yielding zeal in Lagos State.

    “You have seen that experience and capacity to turn things around and that is also what we are doing. The confusion and drift of the past in PDP is being corrected as we are today. Going back to the data of how many barrels of oil we were producing when we took over and what we have today.

    “You now see excellent infrastructure. Let us think back and be intellectually inquisitive as to the past and the present as well as what the future holds for Nigeria,” he added.

    On the much talked about national convention of the party, Tinubu assured supporters of the party that the convention would hold as planned.

  • BREAKING: I will contest 2023 presidential election – Tinubu finally declares

    BREAKING: I will contest 2023 presidential election – Tinubu finally declares

    National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has finally declared that he will contest the 2023 presidential election.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Tinubu declared his intention to contest the office of the president in 2023 following a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday at Aso Villa.

    The former Governor of Lagos State declared his intention to contest the 2023 presidential election while speaking with State House correspondents, following the meeting that was held behind closed doors.

    Tinubu also disclosed that he informed President Buhari about his ambition, stressing that he has the capacity to turn things around for the country.

    When asked whether he had informed the President of his ambition to contest for the President in 2023, the APC leader answered in the affirmative.

    “I have informed the President of my ambition but I have not informed Nigerians yet, I am still consulting,” he said.

    He dismissed the assertion that ”a kingmaker cannot become a king”, saying he would like to takeover from Buhari in 2023 to continue with the good works of the ruling APC.

    According to Tinubu, contesting the presidency has been a life-long ambition.

  • 2023: Discordant tunes from Southern governors – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    2023: Discordant tunes from Southern governors – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    By Ehichioya Ezomon

    In the lead-up to the February 2023 general election, the main issue of discourse in the polity is the region, between the North and South of Nigeria, that will produce the next president.

    Going by “a gentleman’s agreement” by politicians, and political parties in Nigeria to rotate the “Office of President” in every eight years, the odds appear to favour Southern Nigeria in 2023.

    As President Muhammadu Buhari from the North is rounding off his eight-year tenure of two terms of four years each in May 2023, the South is expected to produce the president for the country.

    The agitation has been intense for the 18 recognized political parties, and particularly the two dominant parties – the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) – to zone their presidential tickets to Southern Nigeria.

    And Southern state governors, capitalising on the nationwide mood and sentiment, have stepped up campaign that the South deserves a carte blanche to produce the president in 2023.

    In three consecutive meetings in Asaba, Delta State, Lagos in Lagos State and Enugu in Enugu State, the governors, verging on a non-negotiable approach that alarmed power-brokers in the North, demanded that the South should produce the 2023 president.

    Consternated by the “effrontery” of the Southern governors, some Northern politicians and intelligentsia countered by boasting that the North would hold on to power after President Buhari, as the region has the numbers to so decide at its own time and choosing.

    But before a groundswell of Northern opinion was formed, Southern politicians embarked on a damage-control, to mollify the “few enraged Northerners,” who, nonetheless, schooled Southern governors on how to approach matters they’ve no control over.

    Meanwhile, as the North seems pacified, and voices of support for a Southern president gain traction in the region, Southern views on the presidency are expected to be coordinated for one accord.

    Yet, in the matter of 2023 presidency, there’re individuals that cannot subsume their ambitions to be president or vice president in the overall aspiration of Southern Nigeria to produce the president.

    That personal ambition was on display during the New Year celebrations, when two Southern PDP governors, reading from different political pages on the 2023 presidential contest.

    At separate events in Bauchi and Abuja, Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike and Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpeazu were discordant on the 2023 presidency, with Wike voting for a Northern president, and Ikpeazu settling for a Southern occupant.

    Wike aspires to be president or vice president, depending on the rotation of the office between the South and North. So, he didn’t mask his ambition, endorsing Governor Bala Mohammed of Bauchi State that could pair him as a running mate.

    On a one-day visit to Bauchi, Wike dispensed with protocols and craved the indulgence of his listeners to deploy the term, “over qualified” to describe Mohammed’s suitability for president.

    Wike’s endorsement of Mohammed doesn’t appear like the typical, which can be debunked as a “misquote” with the drop of a hat. The backing is well-choreographed.

    “I endorse Bauchi State governor, Senator Bala Mohammed, for president come 2023…. He is ‘overqualified’,” Wike declares, adding, “let me use that word if there is any word like that at all.”

    Wike lists the ingredients that recommend Mohammed for president to include: “He is qualified in every ramification. His relationship with people is second to none. So, people calling on him to run for president have seen the qualities in him.

    “Apart from that, the fact that Bala has had all the experiences, from the civil service down to political office; from a director in the ministry, he became a senator, a minister and now a governor. That alone is enough to qualify him.”

    Summing up his endorsement, Governor Wike called on members of the PDP, as well as Nigerians, to support Mohammed’s ambition, saying, “a vote for the governor “is not misplaced.”

    However, at the same period Wike was drumming his support for a Northern president in Bala Mohammed, Governor Ikpeazu visited the Presidential Villa, Abuja, to confer with President Buhari.

    Fielding questions from State House correspondents, Dr Ikpeazu stresses the importance of zoning the presidency to the South, and hopefully subsequently micro-zoned to the South-East.

    The South-East zone has laid claims to the presidency in 2023 on ground of addressing perceived marginalisation of the area in the scheme of governmental affairs at the federal level in the country.

    “I think that the Southeasterners have a right to take a shot at the presidency of Nigeria, and I dare say that our qualification starts from the fact that we understand and know Nigeria better than the other states of Nigeria,” Ikpeazu says.

    “I dare say we go everywhere, we invest everywhere, we are pan-Nigerian people,” he says, adding, lightheartedly that, “today, a lot of people are afraid of Sambisa (forest in North-East of Nigeria) but for an Igbo man, Sambisa is a business opportunity.”

    On how the South-East can clinch the presidency, Ikpeazu urges the political parties to be sensitive to the feelings of the contending groups, as “politics should not be a winner-takes-all thing.”

    “It’s not at all times that you want to use your might. At times, you listen even to those whom you think are weak or unable to find themselves at the centre stage due to circumstances,” he says.

    Ikpeazu counsels that anything that’s self-serving, selfish, and leads to a winner-takes-all mentality should be jettisoned at this time, as “we need to rescue our nation; we need to work hard to put Nigeria in a strong footing before we can begin to look at other things.”

    “So, if we have this at the back of our minds, my thinking is that we will arrive at the fact that there is a geopolitical zone that has been clamouring and yearning for an opportunity to lead. And we should be gracious and magnanimous enough to give consideration to such yearnings and aspiration,” the governor pleads.

    Yet, Ikpeazu believes the issue of a Nigerian president of South-East extraction “is a national question that requires negotiation, discussion and conversation with all parts of this country,” stating that he’s the least qualified to determine what happens in 2023.

    Governor Ikpeazu denies aspiration for the presidency in 2023, stressing that his concern is how to serve his people for the mandate bestowed on him twice that will lapse in May 2023.

    “I also want to spend my time supporting the incumbent president to do his time and his best while we wait for what happens to begin to unfold. These are my views about the presidency,” he adds.

    The difference between Governor Wike and Governor Ikpeazu is a matter of discretion, which Ikpeazu is wont to exercise than Wike, who’s a “tell-it-as-it-is character that shoots from the hip.

    But in discussing the very sensitive and emotive 2023 presidency, discretion is advised, especially for Southern politicians so as not to present a divided house for the naysayers to capitalize on.

    Presenting divergent positions is the kind of development Northern politicians wish for Southern politicians, who often go at each other’s jugular when elective and appointive offices are on offer.

    With such divisions playing well to their liking and scheming to dominate, Northern politicians have repeatedly accused Southern politicians of being unable to present a formidable front when it comes to the issue of the presidency of Nigeria.

    And aren’t Southern politicians showing their hands early on to blunt the campaign for a president from the region before they hammer out which of the geopolitical zones of South-East, South-South and South-West will produce the president?

    Politicians’ driving force is self-interest, but opposition to a Southern president shouldn’t be a spoiler-game in which aspirants, with no chance of getting the ticket even when the presidency is rotated to the South, conspire with the North to retain the office in 2023.

    It’s about time Southern politicians buried their personal ambitions for the overall aspiration of the South for the presidency, which time and circumstance can still decide for any aspirant. So, for once, let them speak with one voice and wait for God’s anointing!

     

     

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

    With best regards. God bless. 08033078357. Twitter: @EhichioyaEzomon WhatsApp: 08033078357.

  • The year 2022: A peep into the political crystal ball – By Dakuku Peterside

    The year 2022: A peep into the political crystal ball – By Dakuku Peterside

    By Dakuku Peterside

    The year 2021 is gone. Political intrigues and manoeuvres were commonplace and soometimes deliberately stifling and exuberating. Political gladiators often played hide and seek games with critical political issues and gave undue attention to political inanities. Some of the key highlights of 2021 were the interests displayed towards the amendment of the Electoral Act, the emergence of the PDP novel National Executive, and the success of the Anambra governorship election that produced Prof Chukwuma Soludo as the governor-elect with high drama and national attention, to name but a few. These were only a dress rehearsal of what was coming. 2022 is here, and all pointers are that this year will define the choices before Nigerians in 2023. This is the year that will determine the outcome of 2023. This column will explore the critical issues in 2022 that will shape the political and economic landscape and define the trajectory of Nigeria in the short to medium term. The issues include the outcome of the Electoral Act amendment, the National Convention of APC, Ekiti/Osun governorship elections, National convention/Primaries of the two major political parties that will produce the flag bearers for 2023 elections, and the commencement of the presidential campaign.

    The Electoral Act amendment bill, which is expected to provide the legal framework for conduct of elections, is one of the intricate stitches to make the electoral system rig-proof, violence-free and protected against excessive monetization. Unfortunately, it has become as controversial as the loopholes and deficiencies it seeks to address. The fate of the bill and its outcome is a matter of conjecture, but there is no doubt it will define the nature and confidence of the people in the 2023 general election. President Buhari rejected the bill that espoused direct primaries and electronic transmission of results. The ball is in the court of the national assembly to overturn the President’s veto and promulgate the law. This looks unlikely as this national assembly seems not to have the temerity to push through this law. It is evident the clause requiring parties to mandatorily chose their candidates by direct primaries will be expunged. This is what President Buhari has said he wants to see before he signs. From what has transpired, the provision for electronic transmission of results will be one of the new features of the Electoral Act whenever the President assents to the bill. This will be a confidence booster and a source of optimism.

    The long-anticipated elective Convention of the ruling party is significant, not just for the party’s future but for democracy in Nigeria. The Convention has been shifted endlessly, giving room for speculations. There is the fear that the Convention will spotlight the deep internal divisions, entrenched powerplay, and contradictions in the party and set a significant crack. Another school of thought believe in the words of President George Washington that a “tiny clique of cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men may have sized the party and subverted the will of the people”.

    Whatever it is, there is an enormous responsibility on the shoulders of Mr President as the leader of the party. Not holding a convention to elect officers has both intended and unintended consequences that will not serve the party’s interest. APC’s error of judgement will be PDP’s gain. The President admitted this much in his media interview. The Progressive Governors, elected on the party’s platform, stand on the threshold of history as they have one more chance to rescue the party from the fatal error of poor judgment.

    Concerning the Presidency, the incumbent will not be running in the primaries or general elections, which will heighten the intrigues and horse-trading. Ethnicity, geopolitics, money, religion will all be in the cocktail that will determine the outcome of the primaries. Restraint may be thrown to the winds in the ruling party as the gladiators do not want to lose out. The opposition PDP will be the bastion of high wire horse-trading with the Governors playing an influential role, in the absence of a centre of ‘gravity’.

    The Governorship primaries of the two major political parties in the various states will be the natural battleground for presidential candidates, godfathers and power brokers. There is little reason to believe the primaries will be transparent, and that will be the foundation of internal rancour and crisis in the two major political parties. Fringe parties stand to benefit from poorly managed internal processes of the major political parties.

    The elaborate shadow boxing within and between the All-Progressive Congress (APC) and the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) will manifest. Each of the two political parties have enough ingredients for self destruction or survival and triumph. In the PDP, the issue of who emerges as the party’s presidential candidate will be highly contentious and may lead to the the implosion of the party. A PDP Governor recently posited, “The process of the emergence of our party’s (PDP) presidential flag bearer is going to cause a problem. But we will overcome it eventually and move ahead to defeat the APC whose process will lead to the breakdown of the party.”

    In the case of the PDP, it is a party riddled with irreconcilable contradictions within it. There may be a significant revolt of the South- East and South-South strongholds if party gives its ticket to someone from the North. On the other hand, how APC manages the emergence of and geopolitics of its presidential candidate may be its albatross. However, if, as expected, the party decides to turn to the southern part of the country for its presidential flag-bearer, then for all practical purposes, who from the South gets it becomes an issue. The competition will be among gladiators who have one justification or another to claim the ticket. All three geopolitical zones in the south have what seems to them to be justifiable reasons to be allowed to fly the party flag. These competing well-entrenched views will pose a conundrum for APC to deal with before a presidential candidate emerges.

    The 2023 election campaigns that will commence in 2022 will allow politicians to address the issues that matter to the electorate. Although campaigns are not usually about issues but personalities, yet voters will relate with issues of economy and insecurity, the same problems that defined the 2015 and 2019 presidential campaigns. It will not be out of place to predict that the political class has learnt little or no lessons. The 2022/2023 campaigns will pit the two major political parties about change. The critical issue is the definition of change, which depends on where one stands.

    By the last quarter of this year, the campaign of the parties will be about three issues, none of which is mutually exclusive: performance of Buhari presidency, economy, and security. Money or “stomach infrastructure” will become the defining factor during the campaign, and each party will want to outdo and outspend the other to win over the electorate. There is a need for politicians not to heat up the polity during their campaigns. Already, Nigerians are victims of unabating insecurity and any additional violence and insecurity resulting from the campaign may get people to the tipping point.

    I expect that APC and PDP will continue to dominate the political space, and the influence of new parties will be minimal at best. The third force of pro-democracy activists, some neophyte political gladiators and some End SARS revolution strategists has emerged. But they have a mountain to climb because they are to compete with the two big parties with experience, money, and a determination to grab and or keep power at all costs. The strength of this third force may be its newness; paradoxically, it is its weakness as well. It appears too late in the day to put up an organizational structure that can wrestle power from these tested political war horses. Historically, the youth, who constitute the major voting demographics have never voted for themselves nor those who may cater to their interests. Often, they abandon reason and behold to godfathers propelled by the power of stomach infrastructure, a lexicon peculiar to Nigerian brand of politics.

    This year will witness two crucial gubernatorial elections – the Osun and Ekiti governorship elections. These will provide an essential indicator for where INEC and the hope of free and fair elections are headed. The outcome will significantly define the prospects for free and fair elections. Whether Nigerians will be optimistic or pessimistic about the 2023 elections will reasonably depend on how these two crucial elections play out. Although they are off season elections with peculiarities different from general elections, it is our contention that they will set the tone for the 2023 general elections. It will test the preparedness of INEC to conduct elections and provide useful lessons for the general elections.

    One disturbing recurrent feature of Nigerian succession politics will replay. It is the neglect of governance in a transition election year. But the consequences in 2022 will be more severe. Neglect of governance in a time of severe economic hardship can yield serious unintended consequences in the form of social unrest and serial protests.

    Nigeria politics is a minefield of complex highhandedness and political dribbling. But in the next few months, things will become more apparent than they are now. Nigeria is in the throes of an economic quagmire, intractable insecurity from terrorism, separatism and banditry, and the ravaging impacts of COVID 19. These asymmetrical issues speak to our current socio-economic realities that put us at the precipice of dysfunctionality and a rude walk to perdition. How we handle these five critical issues raised in this column will make or mar our political experience.

    We are already in a combustible political, social, and economic situation requiring careful navigation of issues to avoid trampling on frayed political nerves and triggering explosives on our national fault lines. By the last quarter of this year, governments in Abuja and various state capitals will stop functioning and shift their focus to politics and survival of political actors and power wielders. Although I do not have a crystal ball, a cursory look into my symbolical crystals for 2022 shows that we will navigate through it safely, although it may be a tough year. All these notwithstanding, permit me to wish my readers a happy new year and the best of 2022.

  • Delta Rep, Waive urges Osinbajo to contest 2023 presidential election

    Delta Rep, Waive urges Osinbajo to contest 2023 presidential election

    The member representing Ughelli North/Ughelli South/Udu federal constituency in the House of Representatives, Hon. Francis Waive has called on Nigeria’s Vice President Yemi Osinbajo to contest the 2023 presidential election.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Hon. Waive asked Osinbajo to contest the 2023 presidential election on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in a statement on Saturday.

    In the statement he personally signed, Waive who is the only APC member of the House from Delta State, opined that nobody from the main opposition party, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) can match the candidacy of Osinbajo.

    While stressing that the Vice President will win the 2023 presidential election with ease from the APC, the lawmaker called on APC leaders to do the needful and support Osinbajo if the party is to win the 2023 presidential election.

    Waive, who is the Deputy Chairman of the House Committee on Power as well as Chairman Nigeria Niger Parliamentary Friendship Group, stressed that the Vice President has displayed all the character traits of a good leader.

    He further stressed that the Vice President has been a trustworthy and loyal deputy to President Muhammadu Buhari, while pointing out that Osinbajo has proven capacity to turn the fortunes of Nigeria around, building on the foundation laid by the present administration.

    Nigeria, Waive said, needs a younger leader like Osinbajo, who the lawmaker argued, has the presence of mind, vast contacts around the country and respect for the multi ethnic and multi religious dimensions of the country.

    “Prof Osinbajo’s intellectual dept, managerial abilities, patience and tolerance is what our country needs at this crucial time in our history,” Waive emphasized.

    He, therefore, called on all people of goodwill to pray and work for the emergence of the Vice President as President of Nigeria come 2023.

  • 2023: PDP replies Babangida, says presidential ticket not zoned

    2023: PDP replies Babangida, says presidential ticket not zoned

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) says it has not zoned its Presidential ticket for 2023 general elections to any part of the country.

    The party made the clarification in a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Mr Debo Ologunagba in Abuja on Saturday.

    Ologunagba said that the attention of the party had been drawn to comments and speculations from certain individuals claiming that PDP had zoned its presidential ticket to a particular part of the country.

    Recall that Babangida Aliyu, a former Governor of Niger State had said the PDP has agreed to rezone its presidential ticket to the North.

    Aliyu said the party decided to rezone the presidency to the North following requests from some Nigerians.

    However, Ologunagba described the former Governor’s comments as speculations, saying it is completely misleading as it did not, in any way, represent the position of the Party.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, the PDP emphatically and unequivocally states that it has not zoned its presidential ticket to any part of the country.

    “The PDP is a political party founded on democratic principles and every action of the party, including zoning, is based on extensive consultations, discussions and consideration of all the issues as well as the various tendencies and interests across the nation.

    “This is with the main objective of ensuring that the unity, peaceful co-existence and development of our nation are reinforced and promoted.” PDP stated.

    Ologunagba urged Nigerians, the party teeming members and supporters to completely disregard the unfounded zoning claims as being peddled.

    “Our Party also cautions those behind the claims to desist forthwith,” the statement warned.

    He urged Nigerians to remain united and focused as the party joins forces for the task ahead.

  • 2023: South East PDP leaders endorse Ex-Senate President, Anyim’s presidential aspiration

    2023: South East PDP leaders endorse Ex-Senate President, Anyim’s presidential aspiration

    …insist he deserves it as a detribalised statesman

    … unblemished administrative records
    As the race to 2023 general elections accelerates, the South East Peoples Democratic Party PDP zonal and state executives have thrown their weight behind former Senate President, Anyim Pius Anyim presidential aspiration.

    TheNewsGuru.com, (TNG) reports that the most visible aspirant from the zone that rightly deserves the presidential slot has been Anyim who appears to have intimidating credentials as a former Senate President and ex-SGF.

    The endorsement took place at a briefing and consultative session hosted by Anyim, former Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), in Enugu on Thursday.

    The political leaders from across Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo states, said they were endorsing Anyim taking “due cognizance of his precious record of distinguished and unblemished service as President of the Senate and Secretary to the Government of the Federation.”

    The PDP zonal leaders and elders said in all the positions, Anyim distinguished himself as a detribalized statesman, consensus builder and true nationalist.

    In a ten-point resolution issued at the end of the meeting, and signed by Senator Theodore Orji, former governor of Abia State, who also chaired the session and Chief Duru-Iheoma, SAN, former chairman of PDP in Imo State, the Southeast PDP stakeholders reiterated that the people of the geo-political zone “have earned the right to occupy the office of President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in 2023 on account of their eminent qualifications and overwhelming contributions to the development of all parts of the federation through the years.

    They said because of that, “the choice of a South East citizen as presidential candidate of the party in 2023 will guarantee to every Nigerian a sense of equity, justice and inclusion in the management of the affairs of the nation. In our view, this is the best way of ensuring that we build a nation that leaves no one or group behind.”

    The resolution further read: “On account of the foregoing, we congratulate Senator Anyim Pius Anyim for the patriotism of his decision to offer himself for national service by aspiring to contest in the 2023 Presidential race.

    “We take due cognizance of his precious record of distinguished and unblemished service as President of the Senate and Secretary to the Government of the Federation. In these positions, he distinguished himself as a detribalized statesman, consensus builder and true nationalist.

    “We, therefore, unanimously endorse his aspiration with all conviction and enthusiasm and eagerly commend him to the rest of the nation as a worthy leader who will pilot the affairs of the nation towards greater security, unity and prosperity for all citizens.

    “In furtherance of the foregoing, we hereby oblige Senator Anyim his request that we all join him to persuade and reassure every part of the country to do justice to the South East and thereby promote equity and justice as core values of our nation.

    “In assuring Senator Anyim of our support for his aspiration, we wish to also extend the same hand of support and solidarity to all qualified and deserving sons and daughters of our zone with similar aspiration and who reach out to us as Senator Anyim has done.

    “It is our solemn appeal to all the peoples of the South East zone to remain steadfast in the hope that we can all join hands in solidarity with all other parts of the federation to build a prosperous nation founded on democracy, equity and inclusion to the benefit of this great nation.”

    In his speech, Anyim said he is stepping out with a sense of humility, as a Nigerian with patriotic fervour, considerable knowledge of Nigeria – its diversities and current challenges; and so properly equipped with clarity of the needed solutions.

    “Let me elaborate; as a young officer, at the then Directorate of Social Mobilization, I understood the need for value orientation as a tool for instilling patriotism.

    “I was also schooled to appreciate the value of social justice, equity and fairness as building blocks for social harmony and inclusion.

    “As a young politician I imbibed the founding vision of the PDP as a grassroot movement that would provide leadership that will respect the rule of law, ensure that power belongs to the people and deliver national cohesion and inclusiveness through good governance.

    “I have been privileged to understand our national problems and appreciate their enormity and peculiarities in the last 21 years from my vantage positions in both the legislative and the executive arms of government.

    “Therefore, I have a clear view of the task ahead as well as the solutions needed to advance the cause of our country.

    “My records as President of the Senate and as Secretary to the Government of the Federation clearly show that I am more interested in building strong institutions than seeking enhancement of personal power or position.

    “My records show effective and efficient management of the nation’s diversity on the basis of equity, justice, fairness and inclusiveness.

    “I am a committed believer in the rule of law; and will always promote and protect the sanctity of lives as well as the rights and liberties of all citizens.

    “My decision is a product of some years of prayers, reflections and introspection on not just my capacity and preparedness to take on the task ahead, but also deep thoughts on our national challenges and the solutions they demand.”

    Anyim who reiterated his earlier position that he will contest whether the presidency is zoned to the South or not, however said if the presidency is zoned to South East, it will satisfy the just demand of equity and fairness.

    “If it is not zoned to the South East, it will remain a burden on the conscience of the nation.

    “Let me therefore at this point join all wellmeaning Nigerians to appeal to all the political parties to take the fair, just and equitable decision to zone their presidential slots to the South particularly the South East.”

    Present at the meeting were all the zonal and state executives of the PDP, Senator T.A. Orji, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, Dr. Ali Odefa, PDP National Vice Chairman, Southeast, Iyom Josephine Anenih, Senator Obinna Ogba, Dr. Frank Nweke, Prof. Elochukwu Amucheazi, Nze Ozichukwu Chukwu, Senator Emma Nwaka, Senator Chuka Utazi, among others.

  • 2023: I have no anointed candidate – Buhari

    2023: I have no anointed candidate – Buhari

    …if I do, it’s going to be a secret

    President Muhammadu Buhari has said he has no anointed candidate for the 2023 presidential election.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Buhari stated this on Wednesday in a recorded interview aired on Channels TV.

    However, the President said if he did has an anointed candidate, it would be a secret for now.

    Buhari, who refused to reveal his choice candidate for the 2023 presidential election even when prodded, said: “even if I have it has to be a secret for now”.

    Meanwhile, President Buhari also addressed salient issues bothering the nation.

    On Chinese loans, Buhari said Nigeria has to welcome anybody willing to help the country in the areas of rail, power and roads.

    “The Chinese have been doing that for us,” Buhari said.

  • 2023: Shelve your ambition, don’t waste your money – Primate Ayodele tells Osinbajo

    2023: Shelve your ambition, don’t waste your money – Primate Ayodele tells Osinbajo

    The Leader Of INRI Evangelical Spiritual Church, Primate Elijah Ayodele has warned Vice President Yemi Osinbajo to shelve his presidential ambition.

    The fiery prophetic man of God told Osinbajo not to spend money to contest the 2023 presidential election, stressing that if he should do so, it will amount to waste of money and effort.

    Ayodele made this known in a statement released on Wednesday by his media aide, Osho Oluwatosin, saying that God has not anointed him to rule Nigeria.

    He warned Osinbajo should not mismanage his money because he will face crises and scandals, and that several documents would be used against him.

    He noted that his ambition will cause issues between him and his superior, President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “I want to advise the Vice President of Nigeria, Yemi Osinbajo not to mismanage his money on his presidential ambition. He will face several crises and lots of documents will be used against him.

    “He has not consulted God, He shouldn’t deceive himself with Babangida’s endorsement, God did not anoint him to rule Nigeria.

    “God has honoured him already and instead of wasting resources, he should consult God well but at the moment, VP Osinbajo isn’t who God has in plan for Nigeria.

    “President Buhari doesn’t want him there including some of his subordinates, they will use scandals to finish him,” the statement quotes Ayodele to have said.

  • 2023: Pushing for Jonathan to run under APC is a signal we’ve failed – APC chieftain, Hon Kawu

    2023: Pushing for Jonathan to run under APC is a signal we’ve failed – APC chieftain, Hon Kawu

    ..says those moving for Jonathan as APC candidate enemies of our party

    …insists Amaechi, Osinbajo, Nwajiuba better candidates

    Those clamouring for the candidature of a former president, Goodluck Jonathan, for the 2023 presidential elections under the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) is a clear signal that we have failed as a party, a chieftain of the party, Suleiman Abdulrahman Kawu Sumaila, has said.

    Kawu, a frontline politician from Kano State, former three-term member of the House of Representatives, said in a statement on Wednesday that Jonathan had played his role and should be left alone, noting that APC has candidates with better credentials from the southern part of the country.

    The former lawmaker, who also served as the Senior Special Assistant to the President on House of Reps Matters, said pushing for Jonathan to become APC’s candidate would automatically mean the party has failed.

    Describing the Jonathan backers as “enemies within,” Kawu said APC has qualified and credible candidates from the southern part who can eminently contest for the APC presidential ticket in 2023.

    “I don’t think those pushing for Jonathan to succeed President Muhammadu Buhari under our great party wish the APC well. Yes, Jonathan is a reformed democrat who deserves our commendation.

    “But he had played his own role under the PDP. Nobody will take away the credit of conceding defeat as a sitting president and handing over power to the opposition peacefully from Jonathan. As a matter of fact, he is better than some of the people in our party.

    “However, we cannot as a party say Jonathan should come and pick our presidential ticket when we have better candidates in our midst. That will mean we have failed,” he said.

    Kawu said if APC is interested in giving his presidential ticket to the southern part of the country, there are stalwarts of the party that contributed immensely to the success of the party.

    For example, he said, from the South South, the likes of Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, who served as the Director General of the APC presidential campaign twice should be considered.

    He said Amaechi is a team player that has demonstrated good leadership during his assignment as the DG twice, noting that he has all it takes to lead the country better than Jonathan.

    Also, Kawu said from the South West, Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, who has proved to be a worthy deputy to President Buhari since 2015 is eminently qualified to succeed his principal.

    He noted that Osinbajo has good knowledge of how to lead the country having worked closely with President Buhari.

    From the South East, Kawu said the Minister of State for Education, Chief Chukwuemeka Nwajiuba, who has made a lot of sacrifices and made significant contributions to make the APC gain acceptance in his region has the credentials to be nominated as APC presidential candidate.

    He said apart from having the age on his side, Chief Nwajiuba is a silent achiever as a politician of repute.

    Kawu added that the era of imposition has gone forever, hence the few people calling for Jonathan’s candidature should be careful.

    “We cannot be talking about Jonathan when we have these people in our midst. Let them know that Nigerians know what they are doing” Kawu said.