Tag: 2023 Presidency

  • 2023 Presidency: How I got APC nomination form – Ex-Minister

    Mr Chukwuemeka Nwajiuba, former Minister of State for Education, says about 3,150 Nigerians contributed money to purchase his N100 million All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential nomination form.

    Nwajiuba, who left the Buhari administration on May 10 to join the presidential race, said this when he spoke with newsmen in Abuja.
    “I must agree with you that we have a monetised politics, but I can assure you that we have a President Muhammadu Buhari elected who didn’t have money.

    “I am only presenting myself to serve, I am not sponsored by the oil industry, so the only people who can sponsor me are Nigerians. 3,150 people made contributions and we bought these forms.

    “I have members of the House of Representatives from 1992 who endorsed me, even before they contributed money.

    “Some have paid N1,000 each, one man from Nasarawa gave me 150 yams from his farm to sell, people are investing with hope that there may be a new Nigeria,” he said. He said his aspiration was about Nigerians contributing to a future they wanted.

    On the possiblity of the party coming up with a consensus candidate, Nwajiuba said he would abide by whatever decision the party took.
    He said that the recent meeting of pesidential aspirants from the South-East failed to adopt a consensus candidate for the region.

    “The South-East does not want to arrive at a consensus. South-East wants to work with Nigerians.
    “We have only seven presidential aspirants from the South-East in the APC and that is very small, but I am sure out of this seven, we have those in their 70s and in their 60s.

    “We have those in their 50s, we have every type you need. Nigeria must have the full breadth of Igbo diversity.
    “Any type you need, Igbo people has it, so what we said yesterday was that anyone that is choosen, we are going to back him or her,”Nwajiuba said.
    H stressed the need for Nigerians to believe in the country and to work toward make it great.

  • North East, only alternative to South East presidency – Orji Kalu

    North East, only alternative to South East presidency – Orji Kalu

    The Chief Whip of the Senate, Sen. Orji Kalu, says the North East remains the only alternative to the South East presidency.

    Kalu, in a statement on Sunday in Abuja, reaffirmed his support to the North East in the absence of the Presidency being zoned to the South East by political parties.

    Kalu said his position was because no Igbo man loved the Igbo people than he does.

    A foremost nationalist, Chief Mbazuluike Amechi, had criticised Kalu for seemingly abandoning the quest for South East presidency and throwing his weight behind Senate President Ahmed Lawan.

    Newsmen reports that Kalu who had been advocating for a South East presidency in 2023, had also in January announced his personal interest in the office.

    However, in a recent statement, the former governor of Abia said he decided to withdraw from the race since there was “no zoning in APC’’.

    “I have known Chief Mbazuluike Amaechi for the past 30 years and I have great respect for him.

    “However, I totally disagree with him and his opinion about my support for the Senate President, Dr Ahmad Lawan.

    “If we should stick to every of the expectations enumerated in the statement he allegedly signed, we would be making similar mistakes we made in the past.

    “There is no Igbo man that loves Igbo people more than I do,’’ Kalu said.

    Describing himself as a detribalised Nigerian, Kalu added that he remained a very realistic and optimistic Igbo man.

    According to the former governor of Abia, people easily forgot the too many prices I have paid in defence of Ndigbo.

    “Good politicians win elections before the elections take place and I genuinely want the South East to win.

    “I expected that the president, after President Buhari, will emerge from the South East.

    “That was why I was constantly urging all the political parties to be fair to every region of this country.

    “The fairness which I talked about was about the South East and the North East, the two zones that are yet to produce the President of Nigeria.

    “Unless the two parties zone their tickets to the South East, there is no fairness. I believe the zoning was the best means a South Easterner could become president,’’ Kalu said.

    According to him, the South East supported the South West in 1999 and also supported the South South in 2011 and 2015.

    “Former President Olusegun Obasanjo became President in 1999 because the South East and the South South supported the South West.

    “Former President Goodluck Jonathan became president in 2011 because the South East and the South West supported the South South.

    “So, what stops South West and South South aspirants from withdrawing from the race to support only the South East aspirants?

    “In my previous statements, I applauded a couple of South West and South South elders who extended their support to our region and also called on other regions to consider the South East for President.

    “However, we cannot continue to rely on oral support and mere statements when what is needed most is practical action.

    “And what is this action? persuading and stopping your sons and kinsmen to drop their presidential ambition for the South East. Anything less than that is hypocritical and we cannot fall for it again.

    “If all we do is to rely on statements and speeches of elder statesmen without taking decisive steps, we would be left behind politically again and we don’t want that to happen.

    “If I am right, let posterity applaud me, if I am wrong, let it judge me,’’ Kalu said.

  • 2023 presidency: Tinubu can’t preside over Nigeria – Prof. Adeyeye

    2023 presidency: Tinubu can’t preside over Nigeria – Prof. Adeyeye

    Professor Olusola Adeyeye has disclosed that former Lagos state Governor and current national leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Bola Ahmed Tinubu does not have the capacity to preside over the country.

    The two-term senator who represented Osun Central Senatorial District between 2011 to 2019 under the auspices of All Progressive Congress (APC) made his position known while being featured on a radio programme in Ibadan on Saturday.

    Adeyeye, who was the chairman of the Rauf Aregbesola second term re-election campaign in 2014, posited that anyone seeing Tinubu as a messiah is missing it.

    “I am making bold to say anyone still looking at Tinubu as the candidate to beat isn’t reading the tea leaves properly.

    “Tinubu is already unravelling publicly and even a lot of those who ordinarily would have loved to support him are right now having a rethink the more of him they see. He has proved to be gaffe-prone and certainly unhealthy.

    “The Southern electorate is very sophisticated and none more so than the section of the electorate in the South-West. There is a reason he has been christened ‘Baba Alagbado’ and it is not for political sagacity!

    “Time catches up with everybody and it has caught up with Tinubu. It takes those who truly love him, not sycophants, to tell him that it’s time to go stretch out on some lush lawns and play with his grandchildren.

    “The Presidency of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is not for his type.

  • 2023 presidency: Amaechi blasts Kalu for supporting Ahmed Lawan

    2023 presidency: Amaechi blasts Kalu for supporting Ahmed Lawan

    Presidential aspirant under the auspices of All Progressive Congress (APC) Rotimi Amaechi has blasted Senate Chief Whip, Orji Kalu, for queuing behind the Senate President, Ahmad Lawan in the presidential race.

    Reacting to Kalu’s support for Lawan, Amaechi said that the former Abia state Governor is not relevant to the 2023 Presidential aspiration of the South-East.

    Kalu withdrew from the All Progressives Congress, (APC), Presidential race and backed Lawan’s ambition.

    The former Abia State Governor said he decided to withdraw from the race because APC has no zoning arrangement.

    Amaechi further explained that the likes of Orji Kalu can’t make any difference to the pursuit of a Nigerian President of Igbo extraction.

    “Orji Uzor Kalu and his likes have the right to support anybody they want to support for the President of Nigeria in the 2023 Presidential election. They are, however, not so relevant in Igbo land; they can’t make any difference.

    “If such people who have no relevance in South-East are saying otherwise to the demand of their people, how do you blame them? They cannot make any difference and so nobody should lose sleep about their actions and utterances, you may not even know what their plans are,” He said

  • AfDB President, Adesina explains why he withdrew from the presidential race

    AfDB President, Adesina explains why he withdrew from the presidential race

    Dr Akinwumi Adesina the President of African Development Bank(AfDB) has given reasons why he withdraw from the presidential race.

    Adesina has declared he was deeply honoured, humbled and grateful for all the goodwill, kindness, and confidence by those urging him to contest the 2023 presidency.

    Read Also:

    AfDB President, Adesina, pulls out of 2023 presidential race

    He mentioned that he regrets the fact his duties at the African Development Bank( wouldn’t allow him to contest the presidency of the country in 2023.

    He added that he has a lot of assignment to attend to at this point in time and they can’t be ignored.

    Adesina, in a statement on Tuesday, said he remains fully engaged and committed to the mission that Nigeria, Africa and all the non-African shareholders of the African Development Bank have given him for Africa’s development.

    The statement reads: “I have been extremely humbled by several calls from Nigerians at home and abroad that I should consider running for the office of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. I am very touched by all who have gone to great extent, with such huge sacrifices, of their own volition, to consider me worthy to be proposed for potential consideration.

    “The coalition groups of youth, women, farmers, physically-challenged and well-meaning Nigerians that have done this have expressed their genuine free will, political right, freedom of expression and association for my consideration, with the interest of Nigeria at heart.

    “While I am deeply honored, humbled and grateful for all the incredible goodwill, kindness, and confidence, my current responsibilities at this time do not allow me to accept to be considered. I remain fully engaged and committed to the mission that Nigeria, Africa and all the non-African shareholders of the African Development Bank have given me for Africa’s development.

    “I remain fully focused on the mission of supporting the accelerated development and economic integration of Africa. May God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria. May God bless Africa.”

    A support group of Nigerians in the Diaspora bought and submitted the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential nomination form for Adesina, which he has rejected.

  • Osinbajo engages APC delegates in Jigawa, says Nigeria deserves the best

    Osinbajo engages APC delegates in Jigawa, says Nigeria deserves the best

    Stakeholders and delegates of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Jigawa State interacted with the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, yesterday in Dutse, the State Capital, in what the VP described as very fruitful conversations.

    Prof. Osinbajo’s Saturday visit to Jigawa is in continuation of his nationwide consultations with APC stakeholders and delegates, and his main message was that for the 2023 elections, decisions should be based on what is in Nigeria’s best interest.

    On arrival in the State capital, Dutse, the Vice President was received by a crowd of supporters, at the airport and on the streets, APC Chieftains and senior state government officials led by the Secretary to the State Government, Alhaji Abdulkadir Fanini Adamu, who represented Governor Badaru Abubakar who was out of town at the time of the visit.

    At the townhall style interaction with the delegates, which also featured a Questions and Answers session, the Vice President restated his view that decisions about the 2023 elections be based on what is best for the country, its destiny and future as a nation.

    According to him, ” we should make a decision based on the future of our children… We can make progress; we can move on. All I ask you to do is what is in the best interest of Nigeria; vote in the interest of our children.”

    He also restated how his training and experience in governance serving as VP under President Muhammadu Buhari, would help him to lead the country effectively as president in 2023, if given the ticket and elected under the APC platform.

    “As Vice President, the President has given me an opportunity that I do not think any other vice president has been given.”

    Later while speaking during a brief chat with the media after the meeting, Prof. Osinbajo noted that that he was happy with the interactions with the Jigawa delegates.

    “Obviously, all the issues that we discussed are issues that concern the country very significantly. We talked about agriculture, we talked about youth empowerment, education, technology and a wide variety of issues.

    “I think it was extremely fruitful, and at least we all understand where we are coming from and where we ought to be in the few years ahead. All of us are very happy that we were able to have this engagement.”

    Delegates who spoke during the interactive session, included members of the State House of Assembly, Local Government officials, grassroot leaders and women leaders.

    Many of the delegates spoke about the successes of the Social Investment Programmes, especially the National Homegrown School Feeding programme which the delegates recalled offered first time jobs for several women. They also commended the contributions of the VP in that respect, while praising other achievements of the Buhari administration including the efforts to make fertilizer available and affordable, a benefit much enjoyed in Jigawa State.

    Others at the interaction highlighted the reputation of the VP as “a man of proven integrity and fear of God,” and his “excellent track record, loyalty and support of Mr. President.”

    Generally, several delegates expressed the wish that if and when the VP becomes elected as President he should expand the SIP, ensure youth and women engagements in government while providing Federal support to Jigawa State agrarian economy.

  • I will end banditry in six months if elected president – Wike

    I will end banditry in six months if elected president – Wike

    Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike has said he will end banditry in six months if elected as the next president of Nigeria.

    TheNewsGuru reports that Wike vowed to stamp out banditry in the first six months of his presidency while speaking in a meeting at Abeokuta to the PDP delegates from Ogun State on Saturday.

    He assured that his administration will provide the logistics and gadgets necessary for the security agencies to expeditiously end banditry in the country if elected President.

    Wike said that he will prioritise the protection of lives and properties of every Nigerian.

    The governor reiterated that he remains committed to the ideals of PDP and will never leave it for another political party under any circumstances.

    In his response, Gov. Adedapo Abiodun of Ogun State urged the delegates to support Gov. Wike to actualise his Presidential aspiration.

    Abiodun expressed optimism that Gov. Wike will win PDP’s ticket and subsequently the 2023 Presidential election.

  • Alhaji Ahmed Bola Tinubu and the religion card

    Alhaji Ahmed Bola Tinubu and the religion card

    By Dan Abubakar

    Such are the ways of politicians that the uninitiated can be befuddled by the effortless ease with which, like amoeba, they contort, cringe, twist and turn and deform to fit any pattern that would appear as one with their target audience.
    It often verges on the ridiculous, provoking much mirth or scorn, depending on the prior disposition to the contortionist.
    Social media was filled last Easter with images of two presidential aspirants either carrying the cross or simulating being nailed to one to mark Good Friday. Their action, retorted not a few, appeared to be more a mockery than a representation of faith given that the politicians in question could hardly be associated with any kind of piety or godly sacrifice. But there you are.
    Former Ekiti state governor, Ayo Fayose, in his own inimitable way chose to be photographed wolfing down heavy mounds of amala at a popular buka in Abuja after he had formally registered his presidential aspiration. That image was at least befitting of the chief proponent of ‘stomach infrastructure’ and to whom the common touch comes naturally.
    There are several other examples of politicians seeking to project a particular image, no matter how ridiculous, to win the attention and support of diverse segments of the electorate. One iconic example is that of Kano State governor, Dr. Umaru Ganduje, who in a fight for his political life in 2019, was pictured not in a work man’s clothes but in a cavernous baban riga( which tailors in Kano have since made a fashion statement: they ask whether you want a Ganduje ie baban riga with pockets deep enough to stuff valuables in ) and bearing on his head a load of gravel at a building site.
    Save for the rather confounding and totally unprincipled engagement of President Goodluck Jonathan with those who demonised and betrayed him in 2015 (and which really ought to engage everyone’s attention as to whether there is a deliberate strategy using the APC to blow up the political process and sow chaos) no metamorphosis in recent times has been as remarkable as that of APC presidential aspirant, Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu, who in the past few months appears to have found religion. He was always believed to profess the Muslim faith but he never wore this on his sleeve. Not any more.
    Not long after he came back from a long medical sojourn abroad, and still in obvious discomfort, he was pictured at Juma’at sitting on a high chair and observing the necessary rituals of prayer.
    More recently he was photographed with a sizeable number of followers inside the Ka’ABA apparently to pray for divine intervention for his presidential ambition. An indication that the Umrah experience was novel for most of them was the campaign photograph of Alhaji Tinubu held aloft by some in the crowd, an action which was said to have nearly provoked a diplomatic incident since such overt political display was forbidden on that Holy ground.
    In the manipulation of faith for a religious purpose, politicians pay scant regard to the wisdom in leaving matters of faith to the individual and the fact that only Almighty Allah can judge the hearts of men or the sincerity of their beliefs.
    The way the Tinubu crowd is engaged in the intrusion of politics into faith in order to win support is quite disconcerting. It can stoke sectarian fires, or deepen religious divides in a country that is already observed to be at near tipping point of chaos. And it is a surprising ploy to engage in by anyone who seeks to win minds and hearts across the board in order to have success at the polls.
    If the calculation is to make a play for votes from the muslim majority in the APC coalition in the primaries, the candidate and his followers must know that given the fraught state of the country, engaging in such a game of divide in order to rule is to court disaster for us all.

    Tinubu’s acolytes began with a rather mischievous projection of Christian theology by seeking to paint Prof Yemi Osinbajo in the colours of Judas Iscariot because he dared to aspire to the presidency at the same time as Tinubu who he had served – by all accounts, diligently – as commissioner for justice in the government of Lagos State. They predicated their demand for a slavish fealty of Osinbajo to Tinubu on the premise of the circumstances of the former’s nomination for Vice President by the latter, the exact contours of which are still in dispute. Osinbajo’s nomination came at the last minute after Tinubu was schemed out by Buhari with the encouragement of Rotimi Amaechi and Bukola Saraki, among others, on the quite plausible ground that a Muslim-Muslim ticket was not going to fly.
    One would have thought that after the huge amount of flak Tinubu’s publicists received for the Judas Iscariot analogy they would leave religion well alone and seek other grounds to make their point. But evidently not for some of our politicians as these are desperate days and anything and everything would do to be thrown in to win an election.
    Another of those publicists under the assumed name of Biodun Ladepo has now come out with an incendiary piece that painted Nigeria in the colours of Lebanon where sectarian divisions have rendered the country practically ungovernable. He wondered how a Christian pastor could be accepted to govern by the country’s muslim population and concluded: “the optics of a practicing pastor as president of Nigeria will be unacceptable to the rest of Nigerians and will signal the beginning of the end of the country as a secular state.”
    Haba! Such abstruse reasoning is quite easily dismissed based as it is on very circumscribed understanding. It is necessary to state a few facts.
    First, Nigeria is not a secular state but a multi-religious one.
    Secondly, for the preponderant majority of ordinary Nigerians who take their faith seriously and are enamoured of those who do, their attitude is: to each according to their faith. They often humour those who play cynical games with religion at the time of politics but they are not deceived. Were they easily fooled there is no way Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, a well- known practising Christian, could have trounced Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, or General Muhammadu Buhar,i to win the 2011 presidential elections. And is it not the same Jonathan that many in the constituency Tinubu is playing to today are clamouring to have return to the presidency and even buying the APC presidential nomination form in their pursuit of this agitation?
    Thirdly, any genuine Muslim knows you really cannot separate the faith from politics. Sermons in many mosques concentrate on pure matters of faith but they are also often laced with a large dose of political matters. Where you can take exception is when such preaching is incendiary stuff that can promote inter or intra faith hatred.
    Thus those who want to make hay out of the Vice President being a pastor must be called out not just for their ignorance but the intended obvious mischief.
    If they insist on taking credit for Osinbajo’s nomination as Vice President they should now be asked why they nominated someone who they knew to be a pastor in the first instance. In the event the added attraction for Buhari who was regarded as something of an irredeemable Islamic fundamentalist was Osinbajo’s status as a pastor.That fact does not appear to have adversely affected Osinbajo’s work or his relationships, as someone of the Muslim faith who has worked closely with him over the last seven years has publicly attested.
    It is perhaps a sign of the desperation of the Tinubu camp and an acknowledgement of the credible threat which they obviously believe Osinbajo poses that they are willing to try to transform a non-issue – precisely because it is untrue – into a major point of contention. Unfortunately, the audience they seek to cultivate is not likely to be impressed, perhaps well aware that the smokescreen of Osinbajo’s faith is a ploy to draw attention away from the thick, dark cloud that surrounds their man’s history.
    Whatever happened to his previous advocacy of restructuring, devolution of power and fiscal federalism? These are areas his people could productively take up to shift the debate away from the proclivities that threaten to tear us apart. They can thus deploy their well-resourced energies to help frame the terms of discourse along healthy lines so there can be resolution of issues that would make this country survive – and work.

  • Asari Dokunbo slams Osinbajo for joining presidential race

    Asari Dokunbo slams Osinbajo for joining presidential race

    Former Niger Delta militant leader, Asari Dokubo, has blasted Vice president Yemi Osinbajo for joining the presidential race.

    Dokunbo noted that Osinbajo was not capable of ruling Nigeria owing to his bad track record, adding that his capability to do so was highly questionable.

     

    Dokunbo posited that the APC Presidential aspirant has no solid manifesto, saying if his principal, president Buhari has failed, he (Osinbajo) has failed too.

    The former militant leader berated Osinbajo for having the gut to declare his interest at the same time Bola Tinubu was doing same.

     

    According to Dokubo: “The Vice-President, Yemi Osinbajo, wants to be president. I dared him the other time. What is he going to tell us (Nigerians)?

    “Tinubu took you from your state (Ogun), made you Attorney-General, gave his slot to you to become Vice-President. What is your track record that you want to tell Nigerians?

    “Osinbajo is also collectively liable over what happens today.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that Vice president Yemi Osinbajo declared his interest to run for the presidency of the country in 2023 general elections.

  • 2023: Ohaneze threatens APC, PDP over plans to defy zoning

    2023: Ohaneze threatens APC, PDP over plans to defy zoning

    The Igbo socio-cultural organization, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, has dropped a hint it would boycott the 2023mpresidential elections if the two major political parties, the All Progressives Congress, (APC), and the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, do not zone their tickets to the Southern region.

    This is in reaction to the latest position that Arewa Consultative Forum, ACF, and the Northern Elders’ Forum, NEF that the presidency should be thrown open instead of limiting the space.

    However, Ohanaeze, through its Secretary-General, Mazi Okechukwu Isiguzoro said in a statement made available to the public states that the abolition of the gentleman agreement on power rotation would come with dire consequences.

    He said it was obvious that “the Northern Elders’ Forum has opted for absurdity in issues that will strengthen internal democracy in all political parties and in the country.”

    According to him “any attempt by northern socio-cultural groups to arm-twist the two major political parties, through their sons who are National Chairmen of both the APC and the PDP, to derail the electoral process, will lead to revolts and boycott of the 2023 presidential election in the South, especially in the East.”

    He claimed that the leadership of both political parties were under coercion from northern lobbyists and northern socio-cultural groups “to destroy the trust and confidence that bind Nigerians together through the rotational presidency between the North and the South.”

    He said those making such moves ought to have learnt from the sad experiences of the North when they frustrated President Jonathan’s administration and installed Buhari in 2015.

    “The aftermath of that betrayal is the worsening insecurity in the North,” Isiguzoro said.

    He declared that, “we will encourage the Southern Governors and socio-cultural groups to mobilize our people and boycott the 2023 presidential election in the South, especially in the South-East if the Northern candidates emerge in APC and PDP.

    “Whenever it gets to the turn of the Igbo, the narratives will always change against them.

    “Whenever it’s the time for the Igbo to attain any position, there will be gang ups and clandestine networks to fuel crisis and disasters against them, but it won’t work this time. Igbos will surely survive all these political conspiracies against them.”

    TheNewsGuru.com recalls that Ohaneze wants both major political parties to zone presidency to the South with preference to the Southeast region.