Tag: General Elections

  • 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.

  • Senate approves independent candidacy for Nigerian elections

    Senate approves independent candidacy for Nigerian elections

    The Nigerian Senate has approved independent candidacy for elections in Nigeria.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports this means that candidates can now contest elections in the country without belonging to a political party.

    Independent candidates can, therefore, contest for president, governorship, National Assembly, State Houses of Assembly and Local Government Councils Elections without belonging to a political party.

    Senators on Tuesday voted in support of the Bill for an Act to Alter the Provisions of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 to Provide for Independent Candidacy in Presidential, Governorship, National Assembly, State Houses of Assembly & Local Government Councils Elections; & for Related Matters.

    During deliberations, 89 lawmakers voted in support of the bill, while 5 voted against the bill.

     

     

    Details shortly…

  • Senate denies Nigerians in diaspora right to vote during elections

    Senate denies Nigerians in diaspora right to vote during elections

    The Nigerian Senate has denied Nigerians in the diaspora right to vote during elections in the country.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Senate rejected the Bill for an Act to Alter the Provisions of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 to Provide for Diaspora Voting, and for Related Matters.

    During deliberations on Tuesday, 62 lawmakers voted against the bill, 29 voted in support, while one Senator abstained from voting.

     

    Details shortly…

  • 2023 General Election: INEC publishes notice of election

    2023 General Election: INEC publishes notice of election

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), has published the Notice of Election for 2023 general elections, in compliance with extant provisions of the law.

    The commission disclosed this in it daily bulletin issued by the Director of Voter Education, Victor Aluko, in Abuja on Monday.

    The commission stated that the official Notice on Monday, published in INEC offices in each state of the Federation and the FCT, contains the date for the election, and the place where the nomination papers are to be delivered.

    “As contained in the Notice, the date for the Presidential and National Assembly elections will hold on Feb. 25, 2023, while the election for Governorship and State Houses of Assembly will hold on Saturday March 11, 2023.”

    The Commission also advised political parties to take note that the place for delivery of nomination papers for the elective offices would be at the INEC Headquarters Maitama, Abuja, via the online portal established for the purpose.

    Recall that there INEC unveiled the Timetable and Schedule of activities for the 2023 general election in Abuja on Friday.

    This was sequel to the signing into law, the Amendment to the Electoral Bill by President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday, Feb.25.

  • INEC fixes new dates for 2023 election

    INEC fixes new dates for 2023 election

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has adjusted the dates for the 2023 general elections, following Friday’s signing of the Electoral Act Amendment Bill into law by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, the INEC Chairman, said this at a news conference on the release of the timetable and schedule of activities for the 2023 General Elections in Abuja on Saturday.

    Yakubu said that the Presidential and National Assembly elections, earlier slated for Feb. 18, 2023, have been shifted to Feb.25, 2023, while Governorship and State Houses of Assembly elections have been adjusted from March 4, 2023 to March 8, 2023.
    According to him, with the adjustment, the 2023 General Election is now 363 days away.

    “President Muhammadu Buhari having signed the Electoral Bill 2022 into law made history by making it the fourth time since the restoration of democracy in Nigeria in May 1999 that the Electoral Act was repealed and re-enacted,” Yakubu said.

    This , he said gave INEC the leeway to begin 2023 general elections activities.
    “You may recall that in 2017, the commission decided to fix dates for general elections in Nigeria. This decision was based on our determination to create certainty in the electoral calendar.

    “It is to also enable all stakeholders in the electoral process ,the electoral commission, political parties and candidates, security agencies, observers, the media among others to prepare adequately for elections.

    “By that decision, Presidential and National Assembly election shall hold on the third Saturday of the month of February of each general election year, while governorship and state Houses of Assembly election shall follow two weeks later.

    “Consequently, the 2023 General Election was scheduled to commence on Feb. 18, 2023 with the Presidential and National Assembly elections, followed by the governorship and state Houses of Assembly election on March 4, 2023,” Yakubu said.

    He added: “However, the commission could not release the detailed timetable and schedule of activities for the General Election, as it normally would, because of the pending enactment of the Electoral Act, 2022 which has now been signed into law.”

    Yakubu said that the Electoral Act 2022, together with the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 as amended, formed the legal basis for conducting all elections in Nigeria.

    He said that in particular, the Electoral Act provided strict timelines for the implementation of electoral activities based on the date of the General Election.

    He added that one of the significant timelines was the publication of Notice of Election not later than 360 days before the day appointed for holding an election which has now lapsed for the 2023 General Election.

    Yakubu said that consequently, the commission had decided to adjust the dates for the 2023 General Election to ensure compliance with the provisions of the new law.

    He said that under the law, there were critical time-bound activities from the publication of Notice of Election to the Conduct of Poll which formed the Timetable and Schedule of Activities for elections.

    “Some of the critical activities and their dates of implementation are as follows:Publication of Notice of Election – Monday, Feb. 28.

    “Conduct of party primaries, including the resolution of disputes arising from them – Monday, April 4, to Friday, June 3.

    “Submission of nomination forms to INEC via the online portal for Presidential and National Assembly election – 9.00a.m.,on Friday June 10 to 6.00p.m.,on Friday June 17,” he said.

    The Chairman said that submission of nomination forms to INEC via the online nomination portal for governorship and states Houses for Assembly election would start as from 9.00a.m.,on Friday, July,1 to 6.00p.m.,on Friday, July 15.

    He added that the commencement of campaign by political parties for presidential and national assembly election would begin on Wednesday, Sept.28.

    Yakubu said that the commencement of campaign by political parties for governorship and state houses of assembly election was Wednesday, Oct. 12.

    He added that the last day forbcampaign by political parties for Presidential and National Assembly election would be midnight of Thursday, Feb. 23,2023.

    He said that the last day for campaign by political parties for governorship and state houses of assembly election was midnight of Thursday, March 9, 2023.

    Yakubu said that the detailed soft copy of the Timetable and Schedule of Activities for the 2023 General Election would be uploaded to the INEC website and social media platforms.

    He said that in addition, the Notice of Election would be published at INEC’s offices in all the states of the Ffderation as required by law on Monday, Feb. 28.

    He said that with the coming into force of the Electoral Act 2022, the commission would work assiduously to conclude and publish new Regulations and Guidelines for the Conduct of Elections that in consistent with the Act.

    He said that these Regulations and Guidelines as well as Manuals issued by the commission were all part of the legal regulatory framework for elections.

    Yakubu added that their timely publication would enable all stakeholders in the electoral process to become conversant with their provisions as they prepared for the 2023 General Election.

    “On this note, I wish to remind stakeholders, especially the political parties, of their responsibility to adhere strictly to the timelines in this Timetable and Schedule of Activities, as well as all other timelines established by the commission.

    “It is necessary that all political parties comply with the extant legal framework, ensure proper organisation and management of party primaries and the nomination of qualified candidates in order to prevent unnecessary litigations and rancour.”

  • 2023: Miyetti Allah gives conditions to support southern candidate

    2023: Miyetti Allah gives conditions to support southern candidate

    Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore (MAKH), a Fulani socio-cultural association, has given conditions to support a southern presidential candidate in the 2023 general elections.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Bello Abdullahi Bodejo, National President of the association gave the conditions while reacting to assertions by some Southern and Middle Belt leaders.

    The leaders had after a meeting earlier in the month declared that they would not support any presidential candidate from the North, reason being that power should rotate to the south in 2003.

    However, Bodejo in an interview with Sun stressed that no Southern presidential aspirant would get the support of the Fulani people unless they pledge to repeal laws banning open grazing and bring back the controversial grazing routes that had been outlawed in many states in the South.

    He said: “Even though Nigeria is one, we are not going to support a Southerner as president. A president from the North is better because northerners are better managers of the nation than Southerners. The North has demonstrated that there is no difference among them in the region; they don’t show this is Fulani, this is Hausa, and this is this and that, unlike in the South. Northern people have managed the country better than southerners.

    “If your enemy asks you to join him to scatter your father’s house, can you support him to break your father’s house? You shouldn’t do that, but if he overshadows you and you help him to accomplish that, you would cry later. It will be very difficult for a southerner to manage Nigeria the way a northerner would.

    “The northerners that are ruling or governing were trained by our leaders that ruled the country before. The Afenifere and others that are jumping up and down should know that political power is not collected by force. If you know that your mind is clean, you meet others to get power and not be talking tough. The #EndSARS that happened and the Biafra issue will affect the South in asking for power.

    “The southern governors and other political leaders have said that they don’t need Fulani in their land, so if they come to seek our support to be the president, we are not and we cannot support them. We cannot support any person from that region because they have shown hatred towards Fulani. If you hate Fulani in your state, you hate yourself, you hate your family and you hate your politics.

    “I have not seen anybody from there who can come boldly and say that we should support him. Maybe, before I see the person I would have been convinced by northern leaders, who can explain to me or give me reasons my organisation should support such person.

    “But, I’m yet to see up till this moment. When electricity is taken, darkness descends, and you won’t see anything until light is restored. So, we are still inside darkness, especially how everybody over there hates Fulani”.

  • OPINION: Reflections on disruptive leadership thinking, citizens’ consensus and the 2023 general elections

    OPINION: Reflections on disruptive leadership thinking, citizens’ consensus and the 2023 general elections

    By Samuel Akpobome Orovwuje

    “Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope … which can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.” – Robert F. Kennedy

    As the build-up to the 2023 general elections heightens, we must interrogate the ethno-centric and parochial leadership selection patterns of the treacherous political class and the usual game of empty promises.

    This article aims at provoking an understanding of the contemporary disruptive leadership thinking ecosystem and to reflect on the critical milestones for emancipatory and normative citizens’ consensus for democratic reform and national cohesion. Citizens’ engagement is required for the turnaround of the republic, where equity and justice are a common denominator for nation building.

    Undeniably, the political geography of chaos and leadership mismatch is already dominating newspaper headlines and television shows today – whether it be the abysmal APC, jesting opposition party (the PDP), or the irrational and treacherous 9th national assembly (vis-à-vis the 2021 Electoral Bill conundrum). These are all besides the challenges of insecurity, fuel subsidy quagmire, Igbo presidency, which are further proofs of symptoms of the fragility of the Nigerian state.

    Genuine citizens’ consensus is germane; so, too, is disruptive leadership thinking, which not only shapes whether a new set of purpose-driven leaders will emerge but is also intentional about paradigm and sustainable mind shift. A challenger leadership attitude is required to recalibrate the state capture of power and resources for meaningful development and progress. Disruptive leadership thinking begins with a strong, emancipatory and national dialogue project which seeks to challenge and recapture the Nigerian state from the ludicrousness of unrepentant political jobbers and their collaborators.

    Remarkably, the leadership skills set of character, competence and capacity can guarantee the best outcomes for the 2023 general elections. More importantly, we must move away from the primordial turn-by-turn disposition that has deprived us as a people of genuine representation and authentic nation building dialogue.

    The citizens’ consensus framework and mindset shift must interrogate past actions and current political office holders’ aspirations beyond ethnic, religious and political party lines and declarations of intent. The debate must begin with the forensic audit of sources of wealth and campaign funding. What do the presidential candidates have to offer? What do the national development strategy and manifesto of each candidate look like? What do they include? Are the strategies evidence-based? Does each candidate have a strategy? What are the indicators of project deliverables, activities, milestones and means of verification of each year outside bureaucratic channels? What are the interconnections between state revenue and expenditure framework? What are the candidates’ credentials for global political engineering and international diplomacy?

    Citizens’ spotlights and questions on agenda-setting for the 2023 general elections should be based on strong leadership, stakeholder engagement knowledge, sound people and management experience, and technical skills on public and digital diplomacy with various ethnic nationalities, civil society, media, local and state governments, the private sector, and other genuine stakeholders in the Nigerian project. Furthermore, making debates key to electioneering and ensuring parties re-orient candidates’ selection and recruitment processes help to safeguard democracy and social justice.

    Consequently, presidential candidates must have an independent and clear frame of mind. This is necessary to manage diversity and shape transformational national programmes, ensure national healing and forgiveness mechanisms by leveraging on international governance best practices.

    As citizens, it is imperative that we canvass for and support a presidential candidate that can ensure openness, listen to businesses, invest in education and skills, import ideas and talent, and learn from the other progressive jurisdictions, particularly the East Asian experience, in order to leapfrog development and governance. It is instructive to note that East Asian countries had, similar to ours, trajectories of natural resources endowments, ethnic disunity, frail institutions, weak democracy, subsistence agriculture and the negative legacy of commodity and colonial exploitation, but they were able to overcome the challenges to build a virile nation.

    Overall, the most significant approach that should shape citizens’ conversations for the 2023 general elections is a strategy of clear guiding principles, with focus on truth telling for the reconciliation of the country.

    Ceaselessly, the Office of the Citizen has become commanding in the disruptive leadership thinking ecosystem and it is the pathway forward to a sustainable social contract, transparency and accountability. Moreover, underpinning the seriousness of a national agenda and mind shift is that citizens should make social justice a key pillar in their engagements with the presidential candidates and act as accountability partners in the governance process whilst the president is in office.

    While paid publicists and other media strategists are selling their candidates through the media (traditional and social), the relevance of the press in the emergence of a credible leader cannot be over-emphasised. The media must take up the obligation of self-censorship, social responsibility and accountability to the people. They must act as strategic gate-keepers by examining those offering themselves for the office of the president. Journalists and media handlers must remain independent of political interferences. Finding the balance between generating revenue from politicians while holding onto the well-established journalistic standards and maintaining editorial independence has become imperative for credible leadership recruitment for the general elections.

    Sadly, the media scan and content analyses of those for and against some of the candidates in the last few weeks are provokingly worrisome. The power of media owners and editorial slants must also be interrogated to determine what is factual in this era of fake news and misinformation.

    The political class must respect the rule of law and the electoral process. The national assembly should speed up on their deliberations on the electoral bill and the president must speedily assent to it in the interest of the common good.

    As citizens, we must join hands to exchange ideas on the current political climate ahead of the 2023 general elections, and help promote free, fair and credible elections by prioritising disruptive leadership thinking to reset the country on the path of progress. Let a new age dawn!

     

    Orovwuje is Founder Humanitarian Care for Displaced Persons, Lagos. Nigeria. He can be reached via orovwuje@yahoo.com and on 08034745325.

  • BREAKING: INEC Chairman reveals total cost of 2023 general elections

    BREAKING: INEC Chairman reveals total cost of 2023 general elections

    Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu has revealed the total cost of the 2023 general elections.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the INEC Chairman as saying the 2023 general elections will gulp a total sum of N305 billion.

    Prof Yakubu said the amount will enable the Commission to prepare for the election and purchase all the election materials needed.

    Speaking during a meeting with Senate Committee on Appropriation at the National Assembly on Monday, Yakubu said the Commission had already received N100 billion out of the required amount.

    He also said the total figure will cover the several bye-elections across the country.

  • Interesting times ahead for Bola Tinubu and his 2023 presidential conquest – By Mideno Bayagbon

    Interesting times ahead for Bola Tinubu and his 2023 presidential conquest – By Mideno Bayagbon

    By Mideno Bayagbon

    Email: mideno@thenewsguru.ng

    Understandably, the return of the medical tourist, the Jagaban of South West politics and acclaimed leader of the All Progressive Congress (APC), Alhaji Bola Ahmed Tinubu to Nigeria has dominated the news for two weeks.

    A master of media ‘puppetry’, the well orchestrated, manicured return and the attendant media deployment is quintessentially Tinubu! How his political opponents must be green with envy.

    Apart from former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, no other politician in Nigeria has mastered the act of tailoring the media to enhance their image, like the current lord of South West political space. His tentacles are spread wide; and deep. And this is not just because he owns his own media empire, which cuts across the full traditional media spectra of newspapers, radio and television. It predates his foray into media entrepreneurship.

    As Governor, and subsequently as the grandmaster of Lagos, Tinubu made sure he had media helmsmen in his corner. At a time, what used to be called the Lagos Ibadan media were all fully at his beck and call, especially during the bruising fight he had with the federal might of a President Olusegun Obasanjo. Oftentimes the media is always on the side of the weak. In this fight Tinubu was the victim and the weak. He had lots of people on his corner of the ring.​

    In every medium, he had his men, from the middle to the topmost ranks. And he was and is good to them. He positions himself as a friend of the media. And a lot of friends he has among the retired and serving journalists.

    The online media space, where anyone with a phone and N100 data is an emergency journalist is of course a different kettle of fish.

    That does not mean some of the mega online stars are not within the nodding gaze of Tinubu. This perhaps informed the unjust vitriol of some of his opponents, in the aftermath of the EndSars protests last year where they insinuated that Bola Tinubu knew a thing or two about the massive youth protest. Even the protesters turning against Tinubu’s media empire did little to assuage the hardliners.

    But then, has anyone noticed the conspiratorial silence of the media when it comes to the Pandora box exposures consigning Tinubu?

    The allegation was that Bola Tinubu’s nephew, the Governor of Osun state, Gboyega Oyetola, used shell companies to buy the Jagaban’s current London home for him from an ally of Dieziani Madueke, an alleged fugitive who has since fled Nigeria to avoid corruption charges by this administration.

    It is in this same house Bola Tinubu received President Muhammadu Buhari and all those who flooded London to visit him recently when he was recuperating from an undisclosed surgical operation.

    Tinubu’s romance with them is perhaps why he is likely going to ride on the cushion of the media to bamboozle his way into pole position among the aspirants who want to succeed President Mohammadu Buhari in the APC.

    This, nevertheless, is in spite of the major handicaps ahead of him. It is taken for granted, for example, that he has enough financial dunlop to water the pockets of the deciding APC delegates across the 36 states and Abuja.

    Like one of his opponents recently noted, with a N1 billion budget per state and Abuja, which is considered chicken feed for the Jagaban, some of the perceived hurdles ahead of the man, who created for himself the position of National Leader of the APC, a strange appellation to the party’s constitution, might be easily crushed. None of his assumed opponents have the financial fire power to rival him.

    We have to wait to see, however, how he will confront the few remaining hurdles. The first of these is the Aso Rock mafia, the kitchen cabinet of President Buhari, who want to do one of two things. They want to retain the Presidency in the north and they want one of their own to be the one to succeed President Buhari.

    There is also the little problem of the feeling among some top northern leaders that a Tinubu as President might not serve the interest of these leaders. He is considered by some of them to be too strong-willed, too independent, too crafty, too corrupt, to be trusted to serve their interest.

    Add to this the fact that the current lords of northern politics are of the moslem faith who definitely are not willing to have Tinubu, a fellow moslem as President, and his northern vice president, a Christian.

    They would rather, if the presidency must shift to the south, have one of their own as a strong vice president to a Southern Christian as President.

    Though the Tinubu camp are telling all that care to listen, that the Abiola and Kingibe fomula of a moslem-moslem ticket can still sail through in the turbulent religious landscape that the government of President Buhari has foistered on the country.

    The palpable fear among the strategic thinkers is that today’s Nigeria is too troubled, too divided, to accept such a coupling.

    More troubling to the Tinubu camp is the fact that those close to Buhari and his style, know of his seeming indifference and aloofness, his seeming unwillingness to assist those who might expect him to play the deciding card on who succeeds him. The Tinubu camp knows this and fear that his opponents can use the EFCC to truncate his ambition.

    Buhari cannot be relied on to push for a Tinubu presidency and stand by it. While he is not expected to be against Tinubu vying for the position, insiders already know that the new “born again democratic” Buhari will not lift a finger to help Tinubu or any other contestant before the primaries. Which leaves the field open for the Jagaban to roam and possibly conquer. But then, there are other formidable roadblocks.

    For example, there is the seeming irritant, the problem of those prodding Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo, to jump into the race and transit from number two to number one citizen of Nigeria.

    Not a few groups have sprung up, and are springing up, to canvas for an Osinbajo presidency. Surprisingly, most of them are fronted by northerners.

    Osinbajo’s recent body language and public posturing seems to suggest he might be interested in throwing his hat into the ring. But observers are consigned that the loyal Osinbajo, a protege of Bola Tinubu political group, cannot go against and contest the APC primaries if Tinubu is in the race.

    But should the contrary be the case, how will his godfather, Tinubu, who himself has been preparing for this day, for years now, for enthronement as President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, handle it?

    Though the vice president cannot be said to have any significant political base, either in the South West or nationally, can he galvanise some of the disenchanted but mute voices in the South West to his side?

    Also, who, for example, will people like Raji Fashola, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, Arakunrin Rotimi Akeredolu, Dr Kayode Fayemi, (also nursing a presidential or vice presidential ambition); loud, empty mouth Femi Fani-Kayode and a host of others support? Who between them will the Afenifere, the Yoruba Social Cultural group, for example, support?

    Tinubu’s cup is further compounded by the perceived ambition of Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi, the gadfly with a shaky home base but solid national tentacles, to contend with.

    As most political pundits speculate, in the final analysis, Tinubu’s main opponent for the decisive vote for the candidature of the APC will be Amaechi who has more support base among the northern political leaders, especially those who were speakers of the houses of assembly, members of the governors forum and the strategic groups, who all pulled their strengths to bring about the Buhari presidency.

    Close watchers already know that the turmoil in the APC, which threw out the pro-Tinubu Adams Oshiomhole national leadership, was an in-fighting among groups loyal to Tinubu and those seemingly loyal to Amaechi. Situate this too with last weekend’s imbroglio which engulfed the APC state congresses mostly in the southern states.

    But then, Amaechi, who is the two term Transportation Minister under the Buhari government also comes with his own basket load of hurdles which will come under the microscope next.

    Interesting times are truly ahead.

     

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  • Aside general elections: Here are some major events to happen on 18 Feb 2023

    Aside general elections: Here are some major events to happen on 18 Feb 2023

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Wednesday reaffirmed 18 February 2023 as the date to hold general elections in Nigeria, barring any unforeseen circumstances.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports INEC Chairman, Prof Mahmood Yakubu reaffirmed the date at a one-day public hearing on the National Electoral Offences Commission (Establishment) Bill 2021.

    The public hearing, which was held at the Senate Conference room 022 of the new Senate building, was organized by the Senate Committee on INEC.

    However, aside from the general elections to be held on 18 Feb 2023, barring any unforeseen circumstances, as announced by the INEC Chairman, other known events also fell on that day.

    First off, 18 Feb 2023 is the third Saturday of February 2023. It is exactly one year, nine months, two weeks and six days or 660 days from today.

    That Saturday is Drink Wine Day and also Eat Ice Cream For Breakfast Day. 18 February 2023 is also Battery Day and Pluto Day.

    February 18, 2023 is the 49th day of the year and 7th Saturday of 2023. There are then 316 days left in 2023.

    Anyone born on February 18th, 2023, will have the star sign Aquarius and anyone born during the month of February will have the birthstone Amethyst.

    While Yoko Ono (John Lennon’s widow) will turn 90 on this day in 2023, John Travolta (Actor) will turn 69 on this day in 2023, and Dr. Dre (Rapper) will turn 58 on this day in 2023.

    If your baby is due on February 18th, 2023, then the date of conception was probably around the 11th of May, 2022.

    A baby that is conceived on February 18th, 2023, will be due around the 28th of November, 2023.

    Here are some fun facts about 18 Feb 2023

    • 661 days will pass between now and then.
    • 57,114,000 seconds will pass between now and February 18th, 2023.
    • Between now and then, your heart will beat 66,633,000 times.
    • Between now and February 18th, 2023, earth will travel approximately 29,470,824,000 miles through space.
    • Between now and then, your eyes will blink 9,519,000 times.
    • Between now and then, you will take 4,911,804 steps. That’s about 2,183 miles!
    • 685,368 meteors will enter the earth’s atmosphere between now and then!

    Below is the calendar of February 2023:

    Below is the calendar of February 2023: