Tag: Oshiomhole

  • What’s Gov. Obaseki doing to get Re-elected? – Lexzy Ochibejivwie

    What’s Gov. Obaseki doing to get Re-elected? – Lexzy Ochibejivwie

    By Lexzy Ochibejivwie

    Recently, I stumbled on a still picture in one of the social media platforms that initially really cracked me up. On seeing the picture, I took steps to verify its label and to see whether it was photo-manipulated. You know in this age, anything is possible. But I got all doubts cleared. The picture was real after all. The weird picture and the figure at the centre of it all also made me cringed.

    I really laughed uncontrollably at first on seeing the picture. But the laugher snapped away and soon gave way to disdain. Mixed feelings, innit? But I was sure that of the contrastive feelings, one became dominant – the one I didn’t initially have on seeing the picture. Would you blame me? In the recent days, ordinary Nigerians have been treated to so many funny-sad episodes, especially by powerful state officials. Really, I was sombre and sober, when I saw the quaint picture. The thought of it made me feel funny on the inside and triggered the circumspective spirit in me. I was sure a desperado is again on the prowl.

    So much for the talk. Let me now tell you about the figure in the picture. It was Mr. Adams Oshiomhole, former governor of Nigeria’s state of Edo and immediate past National Chairman of the ruling All Progressive Party (APC) in Nigeria, practically grovelling before some Enigies in a recent public function, apologizing for backing a supposed wrong candidate in 2016 and seeking their support for his now supposed right candidate in the forthcoming election in Edo.

    I had known Mr. Oshiomhole as an extreme go-getter. I had known him as daring. I had known him as fiercely fearless and capable of dismantling political establishment.

    I had known him as a smooth talker, a person even with a sweet tongue for licking bitter things. I had even known him to be someone who is double-mouthed. Most importantly, I know him as uncompromising in political principle (for me, he has since lost this trait though). But for all that Oshio Baba (as he is widely regarded) is worth, I could not think that he could be like a poor school boy kneeling to beg his teacher, just to escape punishment. Yet, the picture, as widely circulated, was a wonder in and of itself. Wonder, it is said, shall never end. But beyond this, there seems to be a suspicious effect to what Oshiomhole did. Do not get me wrong, as a cultured African; I am not against kneeling down and asking for forgiveness from elders (though some Christian denominations may not agree with me on this). But that of Oshiomhole was really quaint, considering his history of being daring and audacious, even to some political elders. Here, I do not want to engage in name-calling. But you do know that the records of the former Nigerian labour leader, now turned real Nigerian politician, in calling the bluff are compelling.

    In the 2016 Edo governorship election, Mr. Oshiomhole campaigned for his protégé, incumbent Governor Godwin Obaseki. They have since fallen apart, as you may well know. All manner of tainted interests have played into their relationship and things between the duo are no longer decent. I should think that as it is typical among godfathers in Nigerian politics, meddlesomeness tried to laud it over assertiveness. The result of this in the Edo politics of recent years is in the public domain. In the last governorship election in the state, Oshiomhole assembled a team that turned out to be indomitable. He made an unapologetic choice and executed a deft campaign. Against all odds and with subtlety, he compelled Edo people to accept his choice. The campaign was in fact executed, as if his body, soul and spirit depended on it.

    Nowhere in the history of politics in the state, did I experience a campaign as resolute and sure. The campaign too was extreme, calling then-PDP candidate Pastor Ize-Iyamu all kinds of unprintable names, including a specialist in mismanagement. At the time he did all of this, the maverick Iyamu strongman thought he was de-marketing a bad product. But events in the recent years show that by de-marketing Ize-Iyamu in 2016 and now marketing him in 2020, Oshiomhole has succeeded in de-marketing his political career. If Oshiomhole has confessed openly to Edo people he didn’t judge correctly then, how does he hope to convince Edo people he will be right this time? His interest appears now to be predominantly go-getting than corrective.

    If this is true, then Oshiomhole is not truly repentant. The question to really ask: has Oshiomhole cured himself of his error of judgment? The show of shame and prodigal son-like attitude he displayed in the picture is enough proof that Oshiomhole desperation is a suspect. A man who could do this in public must really have done worse in the private. What is really at the core of Oshiomole’s action is not in the act, but a testament to the fact that he always goes to the extreme to ensure that his stooges win an election. Why Oshiomhole will go to such extent is a matter for another day. But in all of this, I am interested in what Governor Obaseki does to get re-elected – seeing the extreme efforts of his estranged leader.

    I recall the Ambode example in Lagos, and the humiliation that the former Lagos governor faced. I am aware that there are opinions that what happened to Ambode is likely to happen to Obaseki. I have also heard people say that Edo is not Lagos. They may be right, they may also be wrong. But the only person who should prove the otherwise of these extreme views is Godwin Obaseki, of course, with the support of Edo people. Governor Obaseki has shown tenacity, worthy of a public character of his stature.

    That he is still on the ballot to contest the September 19 election and a candidate of a leading opposition party is enough proof that Edo is not Lagos.

    Now that Oshiomhole has grovelled just to get his stooge elected, Obaseki must have to do something really decent. He must remind Edo people of why Oshiomhole went to that length of kneeling down in public before he passes his point across. He must remind his people of what Oshiomhole (not Edo people) stand to gain should Ize-Iyamu become governor. Governor Obaseki must remind the people of the major progress that Edo has recorded since becoming governor.

    I am aware that he has made one or two mistakes in the course of governance. I know Governor Obaseki has not really been stable ideologically – he is a typical Nigerian politician anyway. Now is the time to decently acknowledge his fault and let his people know how he can decently make amends. No governor is utterly bad, and, none so good. In the end, it is the people that matter.

    Ochibejivwie wrote in from Warri, Delta state.

  • Oshiomhole begs for forgiveness over Obaseki error

    Oshiomhole begs for forgiveness over Obaseki error

    The former National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Mr. Adams Oshiomhole, said he regretted supporting Mr Godwin Obaseki to become the governor of Edo in 2016.

    Oshiomhole said this on Sunday in Benin while addressing some members of the APC.

    He said he supported the governorship aspiration of Obaseki in 2016 to ensure the continuity of his projects and programmes.

    “I have made my honest mistakes. Only God is perfect. I am now 68 years. I have come to apologise for the mistake of supporting Obaseki in 2016.

    “I am in Edo to repair my mistakes. God had a reason for what happened to Ize-Iyamu in 2016. Leaving as the National Chairman of APC is to give me enough time to correct my errors.

    “Obaseki pretended for almost eight years, while he did not believe in what I was doing as the governor.

    “In 2007, Ize-Iyamu stepped down for me. In 2012, he was the Director-General of my re-election campaign organisation and we won in all the 18 local government areas of Edo. I will work for the election of Ize-Iyamu.

    The former governor urged the governorship candidate of the APC in Edo to keep to his promises.

    He expressed optimism that Ize-Iyamu would emerge victorious in the September 19 governorship election in the state.

    Ize-Iyamu, while earlier speaking, stated that the incumbent governor has not done well in almost four years and has lost focus.

    He urged the people of the state to massively vote for him on September 19.

  • PDP leaders supplied documents that nailed Obaseki – Oshiomhole

    The immediate past National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Comrade Adams Oshiomhole has disclosed leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), in 2016, provided documents, which disqualified Governor Godwin Obaseki from the APC governorship contest.

    He said the APC screening committee relied on the documents to disqualify Obaseki from the party’s primary in 2020.

    He spoke in his residence at the Government Reservation Area (GRA) near Government House, Benin while addressing supporters who followed him from Aduwawa on Auchi Road in the state capital.

    Oshiomhole, a former Edo Governor, reiterated that the PDP’s suit in 2016 against Obaseki, then of APC, was struck out because it was filed out of time.

    The ex-President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) noted that APC leaders had learnt from the mistake in Bayelsa State and decided to stick to the rules.

    Read Also: Obaseki misleading Edo people to get votes, says group
    He said: “In 2016, PDP took Obaseki to court that he forged certificates. Now, you remember one governor (PDP’s Nyesom Wike of Rivers State) that said there are tax collectors, when something moved, they collected the taxes and the certificates became okay.

    “But let me tell you, members of APC’s screening committee knew that the man who forged documents, even if you vote for him, you know what happened to us in Bayelsa State.

  • Why Oshiomhole supported me in 2016, hates me in 2020 – Obaseki

    Why Oshiomhole supported me in 2016, hates me in 2020 – Obaseki

    Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo state has alleged that suspended national chairman of the All Progressives Congress(APC), Adams Oshiomhole is angry with him because he didn’t allow him become his godfather.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that Oshiomhole nominated and supported Obaseki against his then opponent and candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu in the 2016 Edo governorship election.

    However, the table is now turned as Obaseki who was elected governor on the APC platform with massive support from Oshiomhole who was the then incumbent has now defected to the PDP to battle his rival (Ize-Iyamu) who has now defected to the PDP and enjoys Oshiomhole’s support.

    In a statement released by his special adviser on media and communication strategy Crusoe Osagie, Obaseki alleged that Oshiomhole wanted him as a pawn in the gam

    According to him, Oshiomhole supported him in 2016 because he had a hidden motive of using him to defraud the people of Edo state.

    He also alleged that his refusal to “mortgage the interest of the majority of Edo people for the satisfaction of Oshiomhole and his handful of greedy followers is the cause of the APC chieftain’s bitterness towards him.”

    The statement partly read;

    “In 2016 when Oshiomhole nominated and supported Obaseki, his hidden motive was to use Governor Obaseki. who he thought would be a pawn in his game to defraud Edo people and enthrone himself as the ultimate godfather of Edo politics at the expense of the will and wishes of Edo people.

    “However, Obaseki’s refusal to mortgage the interest of the majority of Edo people for the satisfaction of Oshiomhole and his handful of greedy followers is the cause of Oshiomhole’s bitterness which has led him to bury himself in pursuit of an innocent governor who is trying to do the right thing for his people.

  • I’m set to reclaim Edo state as God chased family snake away – Oshiomhole

    I’m set to reclaim Edo state as God chased family snake away – Oshiomhole

    Immediate past National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Comrade Adams Oshiomhole has stated he returned to Edo to reclaim the state for APC.

    He declared that if Edo residents say yes and God say yes, no man born of a woman could say no.

    He was apparently referring to the September 19 governorship election mainly between APC’s Governorship Candidate, Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu and Governor Godwin Obaseki of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Oshiomhole, an ex-governor of Edo, who backed Obaseki against Ize-Iyamu in 2016, spoke on Saturday night in his Iyamho hometown near Auchi in Etsako West Local Government Area.

    He was addressing teeming supporters, who welcomed him from Abuja in his residence.

    The enthusiastic crowd waited for Oshiomhole for many hours at the main gate of Auchi Polytechnic before moving to Iyamho for the special address by the former Labour leader.

    Oshiomhole said: “I am back and ready for the job. The snake that entered our family home, God has driven the snake to where he belongs. I have come home to join you and start the process of reclaiming the house to the family of APC.

    “I have only one mission and I know it is our common mission, which is to bring Edo back to the path of sustainable development.

    “We shall bring back the era of red roof. We want to bring back roads with drainage. We want to bring back those lofty days when we engaged our youths and we mixed with the elders.

    “We want to return to the government of the people, by the people and for the people.”

  • Edo 2020: Oshiomhole’s burden marketing Ize-Iyamu, By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Edo 2020: Oshiomhole’s burden marketing Ize-Iyamu, By Ehichioya Ezomon

    By Ehichioya Ezomon
    If politics were mathematics, in which two plus two equals four, it would have been game over for the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the September 19, 2020 governorship election in Edo State.
    But in politics, two plus two can produce a different result. That’s why barely two months and one week to the poll, and the seeming groundswell of supports for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), pundits are hesitant to call the vote for the new ruling party.
    If the PDP carries the day in September, it will have the former National Chairman of the APC, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, to thank for it. The former governor has had the APC work cut of for it, in trying to market its candidate, Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu.
    Ize-Iyamu, a foundation member of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) that merged with three political parties to form the APC in 2013, was a major player in Oshiomhole’s election in 2007. He became the director-general of his second term bid in 2012, and delivered on the assignment successfully.
    But in 2016, while campaigning for his successor, Godwin Obaseki, Oshiomhole turned against his twice electoral facilitator, Ize-Iyamu, who had decamped to the PDP, which he flew its flag at the poll.
    In the presumption that all is fair in politics, as in war, Oshiomhole, at every stop in the campaign to install Obaseki, leveled damaging, and mostly unsubstantiated allegations against Ize-Iyamu.
    The thrust of the allegations, which became Internet hits at the 2016 election cycle, is that Ize-Iyamu was unworthy of any public office where he would oversee the finances of government.
    And ahead of the September 2020 poll, those allegations have resurfaced at campaign gatherings, and particularly on social media. They’re the rave of the moment!
    It’s such that the PDP and its members have virtually abandoned the real issues about what Obaseki has done for Edo people in the past three years and seven months, and what to expect from him in next four years if given a second chance.
    Rather, the joint campaign of Obaseki and Deputy Governor Phillip Shaibu, and the PDP and its supporters are laser-focused on using Oshiomhole’s words against the APC candidate, Ize-Iyamu.
    And who wouldn’t? Why belabour yourself when Oshiomhole, who’s the major promoter of Ize-Iyamu, has done a good job of demarketing his own candidate? Simply replay those allegations and allow the voters to make up their minds!
    Oshiomhole said so many “bad things” about and against Ize-Iyamu that need no repeating, but let’s sample some of his unrestrained characterization in an undated video of Channels TV’s live coverage of a 2016 APC rally in Benin City:
    His words: “It is true we (Ize-Iyamu and I) found ourselves in the region of politics working together, but I never gave him government job. I kept him busy. Let him be holding midnight meetings, which he is used to.
    “Ask him, since he was the DG (of my campaign), why did I not appoint him into government? We kept him away, nothing near government circle; no access to public fund.”
    Oshiomhole pigeonholed Ize-Iyamu as fit only for the “dirty job” of politicking: strategizing, mobilising and campaigning for him to assume the office of governor twice. But in his reckoning, Ize-Iyamu wasn’t even qualified to be in the corridors of power, talk less of tasting the ultimate power as a governor.
    It’s Oshiomhole’s “use-and-dump” that prompted Ize-Iyamu to decamp to the PDP in 2016 for the governorship contest against Obaseki, and the reason Oshiomhole unconscionably bad-mouthed, and ran Ize-Iyamu down.
    But surprisingly at the rally (in the Channels TV video, reported by PREMIUM TIMES.online), as in other campaign stops, Oshiomhole gave testimonials about Obaseki’s stellar qualities for governor.
    Oshiomhole was to come around two years later, in 2018, to revalidate his choice of Obaseki, as a “talk-na-do” governor. On January 19, 2018, he commended his successor for achieving a lot in a harsh economic environment.
    At the inauguration in Benin City of 75 intra-city buses purchased by the Obaseki administration, Oshiomhole said he’s proud of the governor for building on his legacy. Take a look:
    “I am humbled by your accomplishments, and I am proud that we made promises on your behalf during the 2016 electioneering period and you have accomplished a lot of the promises. You are working tirelessly to industrialize the state and make life easy for the people.
    “Many governors are complaining that there is no money, and unable to pay salaries, but you have developed your own creativity to attract resources to the state. This reflects your competence and financial ability to develop the economy of the state.”
    But in the heat of the crisis in the Edo chapter of the APC that pitted them against each other, Oshiomhole has turned praises of Obaseki into recrimination, and his demagoguing of Ize-Iyamu into recommendation for governor in the September poll.
    Instructively, what Oshiomhole said in December 2019 when Ize-Iyamu returned to the APC may partially answer the PDP and its supporters’ poser for the APC and its supporters to show “any good thing that Oshiomhole has ever said about Ize-Iyamu.”
    Oshiomhole said: “If you remember, Pastor Ize-Iyamu was my DG (campaign organisation) in 2012 (for my) second term. I won in all the 18 local government areas. I won all the wards in Edo South. I scored 74.6 per cent in the total votes cast.
    “In 2016, the man left us and stood against us. We only managed to defeat him with about 50,000 votes. So, if he is bringing on board, as he has done, that his goodwill, his energy, his resourcefulness, and his own electoral base to join the APC, I am much more confident now about APC continuous hold on the governance of this state than ever before.”
    It’s like a dog coming back to its vomit, for Oshiomhole to project Ize-Iyamu’s ability to produce electoral victories, which wasn’t lost on Obaseki, and perhaps the reason he didn’t want Ize-Iyamu in the APC to battle the September poll ticket with him.
    But that’s history now, as Ize-Iyamu and Obaseki have switched positions in the APC and PDP. But the question is: Can Oshiomhole whitewash Pastor Ize-Iyamu and blacken Governor Obaseki in the run-up to the poll? What about his past condemnation of one and commendation for the other that’s shaping the campaigns?
    Well, in politics, which is not mathematics, what goes around doesn’t really come around. Karma may appear to have caught up with Oshiomhole, but he could turn things around in the barely two months before the election, and shame his vilifiers.
    One week, even 24 hours, is a long time in politics. Any eventuality could muddy the waters for the PDP and Governor Obaseki, who’s already measuring the new drapes at the Osadebey Avenue Government House in Benin City. So, it isn’t ‘Uhuru’ yet!
    * Mr. Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria.
  • Oba of Benin speaks on relationship with Buhari, Oshiomhole

    Oba of Benin speaks on relationship with Buhari, Oshiomhole

    The Secretary, Benin Traditional Council (BTC), Frank Irabor, has described as cordial, the relationship of Benin monarch, Oba Ewuare II, with President Muhammadu Buhari, and former national chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Comrade Adams Oshiomhole.

    Irabor said Oba of Benin was shocked over the viral fake video, in which he was alleged to have insulted President Buhari and Comrade Oshiomhole.

    He condemned the trending video on the social media, anchored by one Eranomigho Edegbe, which also cast aspersions on Oshiomhole and a philanthropist, Capt Hosa Okunbo, an indigene of Edo State.

    The BTC secretary noted that the relationship between the Oba of Benin and President Buhari dated back to his days as the head of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF), and is still being maintained.

    He said: “The Oba of Benin will not only continue to pray for the well- being of President Buhari, but will also continue to pray for the success of his administration.

    “His Royal Majesty wishes to make it clear that the said video and the contents therein were neither commissioned nor encouraged by the Oba of Benin.”

  • One with President Buhari is a majority. – Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa.

    A MAN, Victor Giadom, virtually unknown in the country, arose one day and declared himself the Acting National Chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC It all seemed a joke as the media tumbled on each other trying to unravel the identity of this person that appeared to be an impostor. It turned out that he was Deputy Secretary General of the party before resigning in 2019 to run as Deputy Governor of Rivers State.

    As late as a week ago, a top official in the power hierarchy, was still arguing that Giadom was a worthless, weightless joker. He argued that a party with Deputy and Vice Presidents and a Secretary General, cannot have such a low officer, made the Acting Chairman. I pointed out that apart from his seemingly outlandish claims including at the level of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Giadom had scored stunning victories at the High Court and Court of Appeal which upheld his claims. That the law is said to be an ass, and the courts interpret it as such. My argument was that analysts should not just be concerned about the masquerade; it is more important to unmask the person masquerading as Giadom. While it is true there are spirits in the political parties, they are not extra-terrestrial powers, but human beings.

     

    As to the argument that a lone Giadom cannot take on the entire National Working Committee of the party, I pointed out that with human backing, a dog can kill a monkey. So look not at Giadom as a person, but the powers backing him.

     

    It might have seemed like a joke when he summoned an emergency meeting of the APC National Executive Council, NEC, for last Thursday. But I am sure nobody still thought him a joker after the Presidency not only announced President Muhammadu Buhari’s recognition of Giadom as the party boss, but pledged to personally attend the factional NEC.

     

    Since then, the comedy has not stopped. First, the meeting took place right in the Aso Rock Presidential Villa which meant that the chief host was the President himself. As you know, only those he permitted could attend such a meeting in the Villa. It meant there can be no gate crashers or dissenting voice wanting to serve a court injunction stopping the meeting. A meeting of the APC simply became a state affair and top security matter.

     

    As expected, there was no room for debates; the APC was no longer a political party, but an agency of the Presidency. It wasn’t that it was really a party, but at least it pretended to be one. There was an oracle at the meeting; the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic whose word was law.

     

    Buhari made it clear he was not there as a party member. He told the gathering: “I stand before you today to speak as the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria…” He told them that the matter of discontinuing: “…all litigations involving members of the Party, which are connected to issues of the Party …must be made a Resolution of the Party which must be effectively enforced with dire consequences for members who choose to ignore the directive.”

     

    He then dictated the four resolutions he wanted passed: “a. approving the immediate discontinuation of all pending litigation(s) involving the Party and its members, b. ratifying the primary election conducted in Edo State; c. dissolving the current National Working Committee, and d. appointing Caretaker/Extra-ordinary Convention Planning Committee for the Party”

     

     

    Participants merely clapped and endorsed his speech as the communiqué, which interestingly, was issued by the Presidency. The APC meeting was more like a military parade where the chief spoke, issued directives and the men and women on parade saluted, even clapped to show loyalty,and the NEC stood dismissed. Otherwise busy governors were stuffed into the Caretaker Committee which was given powers to exist for the next six months, and given marching orders to organise a national convention within the stipulated time.

     

    After the ousting of the party’s elected leadership, the Caretaker members were sworn in by no less a personality than the chief law officer of the country and Attorney General of the Federation who is concurrently, the Minister of Justice, Honourable Abubakar Malami. I am sure that but for the short notice, the swearing in would have been performed by the Chief Justice of the Federation.

     

    In response to criticisms that the disabled party NEC should not have been held in the Presidential Villa as other political parties would not be allowed the same facilities for their meetings, party hailers said the President has a right to hold a meeting anywhere it pleases him. I agree, and suggest that the next meeting be held in ‘the other room’ and the national convention, in the Banquet Hall of the Villa.

     

    It is instructive that President Buhari can speedily sack elected party officials whose continuation in office has no direct bearing on the wellbeing of Nigerians, but cannot bring the same urgency to bear in sacking his appointed service chiefs whose incompetence he has attested to, and whose retention has serious implications for lives and property in the country.

     

    What happened at the so-called APC NEC meeting was not about party discipline, superiority or correctness, but the dictatorship of one man who constitutes the party majority. A lone tree that claims to make the forest; anyone Buhari supports automatically becomes the majority in the party. I do not see any principled dissent arising because many in the party are afraid of their shadows or hope to get crumbs from the Presidency. In other words, as far as the APC goes, sovereignty belongs to President Buhari from whom all power flows.

     

    Personally, I will not lose any sleep if the contraption called APC were to collapse. In the first place, it is a worn-out garb presented to Nigerians as if it were new or different from the Peoples’ Democratic Party, PDP. The APC is like a seventy-year old who because he had undergone plastic surgery, swears to an affidavit that he is 35; but nature will always reveal the difference. I do not see the usefulness of the APC to the Nigerian people; a group that cannot observe its own basic rules or be fair to its leading lights, cannot successfully lead a country. In any case, by the 2023 elections, it might have become a political liability.

     

    As for Giadom, his usefulness has expired; he has been used, and would be dumped. It is not for nothing that he allegedly summoned an emergency meeting of his party, where he is sacked and he seemed quite elated about it. May our country never lack people of integrity.

  • Toppling of Saraki Dynasty in Kwara, one of my greatest achievement as APC chair – Oshiomhole

    Toppling of Saraki Dynasty in Kwara, one of my greatest achievement as APC chair – Oshiomhole

    The immediate past National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, on Saturday identified toppling the Saraki political dynasty in Kwara State as one of his greatest achievements.

    In his first official reaction to the dissolution of the National Working Committee (NWC) of the All Progressives Congress (APC) by President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday, Oshiomhole said he was proud that the party under his chairmanship was able to take over the governance of Kwara State from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)

    “I remain proud that we were able to recover Kwara State. That was extremely important to us for reasons I need not to enumerate,” he told reporters in Abuja.

    “I am happy we were able to recover Gombe State. These are strategic states. There are a couple of other things I cannot speak about,” he added.

    Oshiomhole also said he had “accepted in good faith” Thursday’s dissolution of the party’s National Working Committee (NWC) by President Muhammadu Buhari, adding that he had no regrets for the actions he took while in office.

    He said he had also directed his lawyers to withdraw the appeal he filed at the Supreme Court over his suspension from the party by his ward in Edo State.

    This is in deference to one of the resolutions at the Thursday meeting that all legal actions against the party by members be withdrawn.

    He said he had directed his lawyers to withdraw the case in the Supreme Court as a mark of respect for President Buhari for his support during his tenure as APC Chairman.

    He recalled how Buhari “graciously invited me to run for the office of chairmanship of the party in 2018, precisely about two years ago,” and told him that “if we do not reform the APC, we can as well forget about the party.”

    He said the reforms were challenging and entailed “difficult decisions.”

    He said he put in his best serving the party.

    Oshiomhole said: “Mine has been a life of struggle and I accepted this and I believe I did my best.”

    Reeling out his achievements, he said: “I am happy that at the end of the day, 2019 elections have come and gone. Thanks to the Nigerian people, our President had more votes in 2019 than we had in 2015. We have more members in the Senate and House of Representatives.

    “Unlike 2015, we were not able to manage our victory in the two chambers such that we had an APC President in the Senate and PDP deputy Senate President.

    “This time, working hard with my colleagues in the NWC and in consultation with leaders of our party across board, we had the kind of unity expected in the governing party in the two chambers of the National Assembly.

    “I am happy that the leadership of the National Assembly is working harmoniously with Mr. President today.

    “The APC under my chairmanship has done its best and the results are there. Of course we have now been dissolved and I have accepted that dissolution in good faith.

    “I am not going into the question of legality or illegality. The bottom line is that the President who invited me to lead the party and who mobilised all the support for my emergence as chairman also presided over the meeting where the NWC has now been dissolved.

    “As a demonstration of my loyalty to Mr. President, loyalty to our party and loyalty to the Nigerian nation, I have decided to accept the decision in good faith and to maintain my loyalty, my respect and admiration for President Muhammadu Buhari.”

    The former Edo State governor was confident that the APC would emerge from its crisis stronger.

    He said: “I want to assure everybody that APC will have peace, and by the special grace of God, President Buhari will achieve his three key principal promises he made to Nigerians, and I will give him all the support that I can give as a Nigerian and as a member of APC and, number three, as a loyalist of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    In keeping with the admonition of the President during the Thursday meeting that all suits against the party by members be withdrawn, Oshiomole said he had instructed his lawyers to discontinue the appeal he filed at the Supreme Court over his suspension by his ward in Edo State.

    He said: “I have instructed my lawyers to withdraw my case that is currently pending at the Supreme Court, which has to do with the issue of my suspension.

    “Sustaining the legal action would be tantamount to disobeying one of the decisions that the President has made, namely, all cases should be withdrawn from court.

    “I believe as a member of APC, I have a duty to live by example. I have taken a bow and accepted the decision of the NEC (National Executive Committee) in good faith, and I want to reassure Mr. President that my confidence in his leadership remains unshaken. My commitment to our party as a member remains unshaken.”

    Responding to a question on his suspension, he said the dissolved NWC had ratified the lifting of the suspension, adding: “I am at peace with my people at home.”

    Asked if he had regrets, Oshiomole was vehement. “I have no regrets. You cannot lead a party as large as APC in a country as diverse as Nigeria and expect that everybody would be happy with you. I have no regrets.

    “At the end of the day, how do you judge the performance of a party? You judge it by its electoral outcome.

    “I believe it is convenient for people to point at a few areas where we had challenges, few states that we lost. But also, there were states that we won.

    “For example, it does not matter what anybody wants to say, I remain proud that we were able to recover Kwara State. That was extremely important to us for reasons I need not enumerate.

    “In life, for every one thing that some people are clapping, there must be those who are not happy.

    “Just look at a football match: when you score a goal, you will see some players almost crying and yet you see some other people jubilant as if that is the end of the world.

    “That is the way life is. You cannot have it both ways. I assure you I do not regret anything.”

  • Taming the rowdiness – Chidi Amuta

    Chidi Amuta

    The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) may have paused on its way to compulsive self –liquidation and timed unraveling. In the interim, direct intervention by President Buhari may have only put the crisis in the party on slow motion while driving the cross-currents underground to rehearse for the foretold future night of jagged long knives.

    In less than a fortnight, the party has experienced half a dozen acting Chairmen and has become the subject of nearly the same number of litigations in various courts. Claims and counter claims of ownership and leadership of the rowdy party have acquired an entertainment value for hapless Nigerians. The leadership crisis in degenerated to the possibility of open fracas by unruly contenders and their thugs. The police moved in to occupy the party’s Abuja headquarters with obvious instructions not to allow some party leaders especially members of Mr. Oshiomole’s dissolved Central Working Committee (CWC) and their followers access to the premises.

    President Buhari has intervened ostensibly to stem what is a growing embarrassment for his presidency and the party in power. The president first called a hurried meeting of party leaders and state governors and ended up endorsing the interim leadership of Mr. Victor Giadom, one of the contenders for the troubled soul of the party for the purpose of convening a meeting of the National Executive Committee of the party at the end of which a caretaker committee led by Yobe State Governor, Mr. Mai Mala Buni and populated by an assortment of illustrious political citizens was set up to oversee the affairs of the party pending a future convention. The Adams Oshiomole –led Central Working Committee of the party was summarily sacked.

    Quite significantly, for the first time in our national history, the National Executive Committee of a political party took place in the council chambers of the Aso Rock Presidential Villa. Also, the hurriedly assembled Caretaker Committee of the party was sworn in by the Attorney General of the federation.

    It is safe to assume that a presidential intervention would be on the side of fairness and order. It should whip the party leadership and members into line and ensure the restoration of some sanity. But I am afraid that Mr. Buhari’s intervention may hasten the demise of the beleaguered party unless sanity and common sense prevails. At best, the intervention of the president could slow down the haste of the ambitious contenders who may have forgotten that we still have three years before Mr. Buhari’s tenancy of Aso Rock Villa expires.

    It is however convenient to hinge his decisive intervention on adherence to internal party democracy, with an implicit indication that as president he can only be on the side of the party constitution. The trouble with that position is of course that in a political contest among partisans, even a pretension to non- partisanship is itself a form of partisanship. Mr. Buhari can hardly be a disinterested party in a contest, legal or otherwise, involving factions of a political party that he leads and on whose ticket he holds office as president. And yet he can ill afford to be indifferent while his house of cards is on fire.

    Opposition to the president’s present stance may not be as muffled as some might think. Some party leaders are already crying wolf. The dissolved Oshiomole led Central Working Committee has served notice that it might challenge its dissolution in court. Some other party leaders have charged that Buhari merely handed down ready made decisions to the National Executive Committee without any democratic debate. Some others have pointed to the incongruity of the venue and the role of the Attorney General of the federation in swearing in a Caretaker committee of a party. These cries are likely to increase and get so noisy as to disturb the peace of the party in the months ahead.

    I am not so sure how effective the president’s power and influence will be in containing the impending blaze in the party. Mr. Buhari has not quite been the most ebullient political leader so far. In Africa, a political leader ensures compliance to his diktat either by the fear he inspires or the deftness of his political moves to rein in deviant forces. Neither of these factors is applicable to Buhari so far. So, the possibility that he could be defied by some elements in the party without dire consequences is clear and present.

    The major reason why Buhari may not be able to resolve the crisis in his political household is that he and his political career are an interested party. Let us not equivocate about it. The crisis in the APC is not about legality or party constitutionality. It is not about internal democracy either. It is not even about the quality of Mr. Oshiomole’s rowdy leadership style either. The legalistic posturing is a mere disguise for a contest of naked ambitions and a plain power struggle for pre-eminence and vantage positioning in a transition season.

    At this initial stage, the tribes positioning for ascendancy are the ones that were present at the christening of the party. While the factions in the original coalition were presumptive political equals, they each brought to table their respective strengths and advantages. Of the collaborating tribes, perhaps the most strategic is that led by former Lagos governor and prime political entrepreneur of the South West, Mr. Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Of all the groups that coalesced to bring about the APC, it was perhaps Mr. Tinubu’s ACN that was most instrumental in realising the Buhari presidency. Mr. Buhari’s cult followership among the mobs of the northern section of the country would have amounted to nothing without the demographic and strategic support of the South West.

    To that extent, the biggest political debt that Mr. Buhari incurred on his way to the presidency is owed to Mr. Tinubu. Forget about the token appointments to South West elements and whatever other chunks of patronage and pork that may have been apportioned to Tinubu surrogates in the last five years. Nothing in all those gestures is sufficient recompense for the original debt. To that extent, Mr. Tinubu is right to feel a sense of political entitlement to the throne in 2023. It is healthy politics and enlightened self interest in any democracy.

    In the course of being in power over the last five years, however, Mr. Buhari has vicariously created other factions and power tribes that feel equally entitled to a place of prominence in the coming succession bazaar. First is a disparate crop of highly placed devotees in positions of power at the national level who see their power, authority and implicit wealth as deriving directly from Mr. Buhari’s incumbency. It is only natural for these elements to feel entitled to the Buhari succession bazaar if only to protect, defend and extend their interests which they can conveniently couch as devotion to a Buhari legacy. At least, a certain commitment to that ‘legacy’ can serve as an effective marketing tool to cloak obvious private ambitions and interests.

    The next obvious faction is the tribe of APC governors. In our type of presidential arrangement, state governors elected on a common party platform have a natural tendency to see themselves as a natural power block with a common interest to protect. They flock together and quickly form a powerful interest group. This sense of strategic political importance is fed by the nature of our federation.

    The governor of a state is the immediate symbol of government in the lives of the people. He is the leader of his party in the state. By that token, he often controls the state house of assembly, decides on who leads each local government as chairman. He decides delegates to national conventions of the party, indirectly controls senators and members of the house of representatives elected on his party’s platform. The governor’s signature controls the flow of state funds in a system that is essentially a feudal oligarchy sanctioned by an absent minded constitution. There is a sense in which Nigerian state governors wield more unchecked powers than even the president of the federation. The checks and balances are there on paper. But in our clime, the governor who controls the treasury is both the check and the balance. So, in the impending stampede about the Buhari succession, it would be foolish to discount the weight of APC state governors. The Obasanjo succession is testimony to this reality.

    In the course of being president for the last five years, Mr. Buhari has also deepened the crises that will haunt his retreat from power. We have had easily the most divisive presidency in our national history. The lopsidedness in the leadership of major national institutions is common knowledge. The relative free rein given to Fulani herdsmen turned killers and sundry criminals is also well known and copiously documented. A north-south divide has only been complemented by a pervasive perception of a Muslim-Christian divide which has attracted international concern and national nervousness.

    Clearly therefore, there is going to be a geo ethnic and religious dimension to the Buhari succession politics both within and outside the APC. There is an undercurrent of opinion in the northern wing of the APC which is pushing the meritocratic argument that what the nation needs is a good president irrespective of geo-political origins. That argument is of course an attempt to repudiate the North-South balance of power on which political leadership succession in the two dominant parties is predicated. As the APC rehearses for its festival of succession politics, the matter of geo political stake will come into play as the northern elements in the party either stake a direct claim to the presidency or jostle to play a decisive role in who from the south succeeds Mr. Buhari.

    With all these factions and tribes fully gearing up as active factors in the Buhari succession, the APC crisis has begun where it should, in the party’s national leadership. The quest for control of the party machinery is central to the determination of who succeeds Buhari. As founding Chairman of the party, Mr. John Oyegun’s role was clear. His assignment was to shepherd the party into power after the 2015 elections and guide it with a basic bureaucratic structure up to the eve of the 2019 elections.

    In the run up to the second term 2019 elections, the task of party leadership acquired a more militant urgency. The opposition PDP was gathering momentum and could cause Mr. Buhari and the party sleepless nights. The APC needed a fairly activist party leadership to counter the rampaging assault of the PDP. That is the decisive factor behind the emergence of Mr. Adams Oshiomole, a trade union activist who was just concluding a two term governorship of Edo state. Oshiomole was Buhari’s personal choice, to the discomfiture of some of the president’s ambitious staunch loyalists. Once assured that Mr. Bola Tinubu was still on his side, it did not matter to Buhari that Mr. Oshiomole is a known Tinubu political friend.

    Ordinarily, Mr. Oshiomole would have held sway till the critical moments of the Buhari succession when a different type of chairman would have been needed by the APC. But Mr. Oshiomole’s fraternity with Tinubu signaled a clear and present danger to his ambitious adversaries in the scramble for the soul of the party and the possibilities in the post Buhari APC. The frequent political fisticuffs with Edo Governor, Godwin Obaseki, only served to weaken Mr. Oshiomole by distracting him from the more existential battle to retain his APC chairmanship. Now the judiciary has catalyzed the political ferment in the APC and forced the hands of the president to hint at who he does NOT want to succeed him. I recall when in the midst of his own political transition programme my friend, Ibrahim Babangida, was harassed as to his possible choice of successor. He made the memorable statement: ‘We may not know who will succeed us but we know those who WILL NOT succeed us”. By taking a position that seems targeted at Mr. Oshiomole and his factional interests, could Buhari have indicated whom he would rather NOT allow to succeed him?

    This backdrop should prepare us for the outcomes that will unfold in the next three years. No matter how the current crisis in the party is resolved, it is clearly irresponsible for the ruling APC to preoccupy the nation with its internal wrangling three years ahead of 2023. More so, it smacks of cynical insensitivity for a ruling party elite to preoccupy itself with a parade of towering ambitions in the midst of very grave existential national problems.

    The crisis in the leadership of the APC has raised some rather serious issues and concerns about the plight and future of our democracy. These are questions which touch on the relationship between a party in power, the state apparatus over which it presides and ultimately the people whose expectations of law, order and general well being are contingent on the health of the political infrastructure of parties. What happens when a basically dysfunctional state is presided over by operatives of a party in chaos and perennial crisis? Can a democratic culture be built on the foundation of seasonal parties that come into existence on the eve of elections and then self-destruct when their tenure in power either fizzles out expires by default? Can a ruling party with deficient internal democracy issues be trusted to ensure a credible democratic process for the rest of the polity? I am not so sure that the leadership of the warring APC has the presence of mind to reflect on these larger issues either now or in the future.

    In the present circumstances, the urgent imperative is that of how to sustain governance of the country while politicians jostle for power vantage positions. To that extent, President Buhari has taken a reasonable course of action. The hope is that his intervention will restore sanity to the party for long enough to enable him govern the country up to his exit and hopefully ensure a credible transition of power. The hope is that his intervention in the crisis does not prepare the ground for more vicious conflicts that could precede and trail his retreat from power. As a combat general, I presume that president Buhari understands the full implications of retreating from a battlefield with your men in stampede.