Tag: Peter Obi

  • Nigerians react to Peter Obi’s birthday message to Gov Soludo

    Nigerians react to Peter Obi’s birthday message to Gov Soludo

    The presidential candidate of the Labour Party(LP) in the 2023 general elections, Peter Obi, has caused a stir while felicitating with the Anambra State Governor, Chukwuma Soludo, on his 65th birth anniversary.

    Obi took to his Facebook on Monday to express warm wishes to the governor.

    “Your Excellency, My dear elder brother, My family and I join other men and women of goodwill in rejoicing with you as you mark another year today.

    “May God continue to bless you with strength, wisdom, and good health as you serve our dear state and nation. Happy Birthday, Your Excellency,” Obi said.

    However, Obi’s decision to publicly celebrate the governor sparked reactions among some Nigerians, who noted Soludo’s silence on Obi’s birthday earlier in July.

    Below are some of the reactions on Facebook:

    Eroh Erohdaking said, “You see, wisdom can never be bought with money. You can be a professor, but you don’t have wisdom.”

    Hrh Igwe Nnaemeka Omemgbeoji said, “…Even when Charles Chukwuma Soludo didn’t wish you happy birthday on your day, you still took time to wish him. Your charisma needs to be studied.”

    Tochukwu Paschal said, “I will wait until the day you will mistakenly wish Reno a happy birthday in the name of ‘he’s my well-respected junior brother’ and all that gentleman talk. Na that day we go show you say no be only you get yourself again.”

    Anukanti Vigilius Chukwuka said, “This man is very different from African politicians. This is the man we need to reset Nigeria.”

    Ferdinand Ohalee said, “His Excellency, when you go low you go high. In the new Nigeria of our dream, there won’t be any iota of bitterness rather love, compassion and dedication to service to humanity. Happy birthday Prof Charles Soludo.”

  • President Tinubu now overfeeding Nigerians with wrong statistics, after berating me – Peter Obi

    President Tinubu now overfeeding Nigerians with wrong statistics, after berating me – Peter Obi

    The presidential candidate of the Labour Party(LP) in the 2023 general elections, Peter Obi, has berated  President Bola Tinubu for disseminating incorrect statistics about the economic situation in Nigeria as a way to cover up his failures as President.

    The former Anambra governor via the microblogging platform, X on Monday, said under Tinubu’s watch, Nigeria is now classified as one of the hungriest nations in the world.

    The Labour Party chieftain recalled how Tinubu, as a presidential candidate during the 2023 election campaigns, mocked him for frequently quoting statistics.

    Obi who accused Tinubu of plunging Nigeria and its citizens further into poverty, noted that governance is not rocket science as he urged the president  to rule with purpose, character, competence, capacity and compassion.

    He wrote: “In November 2022, while campaigning in Delta State, the then APC Presidential Candidate, Bola Tinubu, now the President, berated the other Presidential Candidate (Peter Obi), he was ashamed to call his name, saying “Na statistics we go chop all I want is to put food on the table of Nigerians”.

    “Now 2 years into his 4-year tenure, Nigeria is classified as one of the hungriest nations in the world with millions of Nigerians not knowing where their next meal will come from.

    “President Tinubu is now overfeeding Nigerians with wrong Statistics from wrong unemployment figures, wrong inflation figures, and now GDP debasing, all to put a positive spin on our deteriorating economic and household conditions.

    “Governance is not rocket science, it’s not a gamble, like I have always reiterated, it requires sincerity of purpose, character, competence, capacity and compassion.

    “A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO”

  • Peter Obi: A judgement on Nigerians’ love for hypocrisy – By Ikeddy Isiguzo

    By Ikeddy ISIGUZO

    TIME to throw all the pretences away. What to do with Peter Obi is still among major challenges Nigerians face as the presidential race revs on reckless gears heading for 2027. He was in 2023. He will continue to raise questions on what Nigerians want. And what we intend to do about it.

    Obi is daring, deft, and deaf to the din of traditional political practices. His bravery troubles opponents endlessly.

    What do we do with Obi? What do we do without him? Are we ready for Obi and his proposals?

    The answers are cures to the hyped hypocrisies masquerading as competence to manage Nigeria. The most intriguing of these nagging issues is the displacement of competence with entitlement.

    Obi does not preach. He simply shares in crisp citations evidential proof of what he did in Anambra State as Governor. He intends to replicate them as President of Nigeria when elected. We applaud. Will the matter end there?

    Nigerians claim their country is at the brinks. The same Nigerians want someone to pull the country back from the proclivity to accelerating demise. Obi has offered himself. His proposals are clear.

    No Governor in his era left the hefty sums, and investments he bequeathed his successor. None of his mates compiled his handover note, revealing cheques that had been left to pay teachers, pensioners, contractors, other obligations. His records in other areas are indisputable.

    He then swore an affidavit to authenticate the details of his tenure at a High Court.

    The savings he made in local and foreign bonds were worth $156m in March 2014. Nobody has done a fraction of that. He never borrowed; he left no debts.

    Obi lifted Anambra State out of the chaos it was. He ignored the fat cats that dubbed themselves godfathers. He rescued a State that had adopted rambunctiousness as its alias.

    He is not earning any pension from Anambra State, at a time Governors across Nigeria approved hefty pensions for themselves – there are few exceptions.

    Alas, other things impress Nigerians, chiefly, how much someone is willing to give them to get into office. The season of harvests for political merchants is already near.

    Many aspirants have lined up seemingly for the same mission. Many words are being tossed about in line with the season. What stands Obi out is the clarity of his thoughts, exampled by his works as Governor, and his understandable positions on every issue.

    Obi has built on his competence to court a nationwide following that is not procured through a heavy pocket. There are more differences.

    He is frugal. He lives it. People mock him for his simplicity that abhors the pomp of office. He reminds Nigerians that the country is in dire straits and needed to be cured of its wastefulness.

    Parts of the wastes are repeated with dedicated choice of leaders that take us to booming doom.

    President Muhammadu Buhari remains a sterling example. Those who chose him to feed their selfishness spent the years defending his bumblings. They blame everyone except the man and themselves for his serial failures. They continue praising him to feed their future.

    Nigeria is bound for further doldrums if measures that can redeem it are mixed up with choices that eat our tomorrow, today.

    Obi is ready to offer innovative service that would strip Nigeria of the huge baggage she lugs around as it tries to make progress. Obi is that opportunity.

    He is not a saint. If he were, he probably would not be in the race. His demonstrated abilities to turn around situations should count for something beyond annoying opponents as his charity does.

    Do the heights he expects Nigeria to attain matter? What are others offering? What did they do with past opportunities? How are they managing Nigeria’s resources?

    If we ignore Obi, we would have chosen to continue with the next level of nothingness. We can change for better when we join Obi to make a difference in our lives as a people, and a country.

    The choice remains the same as in 2023 when Nigerians decided. Were we not aware then? What has changed?

    Nigeria has worsened. The divisions have widened. We can no longer agree on what a crime is though laws define it. Hardly anything makes meaning any more.

    Obi stands distinct from the distractions that are thrown at Nigeria’s flimsy chances of making any meaningful progress under the guises of party squabbles, insecurity, hunger and a poverty that tempts even saints to be perfidious.

    Obi is a judgement on who majority of Nigerians are – lovers of hypocrisy.

    Finally…

    IF we are what we eat, what are those who have nothing to eat? Food prices are still soaring. The determination of our leaders to nurture poverty is disturbing.

    WHO will be the next President? Political profiteers, prophets, plain thieves, who live on the gullible, are whispering names, making millions in the process. Some claim the Almighty has told them!

    SENATE President Obong Godswill Akpabio has assured Plateau State that the killings would end soon. “As the President of the 10th Senate, I hear you loud and clear, and be rest assured that your travails will be given the needed attention and response from the relevant agencies,” Akpabio said at a funeral in Jos. Can we start a countdown to peace in Plateau? Only Plateau?

    ISIGUZO is a major commentator on minor issues

  • Who is scared of Peter Obi? – By Chidi Amuta

    Who is scared of Peter Obi? – By Chidi Amuta

    There is a novelty in today’s political landscape in Nigeria. Real hard power is in the hands of President Bola Tinubu, an elected leader. On the other hand, soft populist power is in the hands of an unelected aspirant to the throne, Mr. Peter Obi.

    For good or for ill, President Bola Tinubu is ruling Nigeria. But Peter Obi is reigning all over the country. The name on nearly every lip on the Nigerian urban street or village bush path  is that of Mr. Peter Obi, a man who has come to personify the dreams and longings of most ordinary Nigerians for the ideal leadership model for a nation tormented for so long by an embarrassing lack of purposeful and sincere leadership.

    As it were, we have a ruler put in place by the mechanics of the democratic process and his antithesis erected by popular acclaim in the minds of the urban street and village people. The elected leader lives, rent -free, in the stifling opulence of the Presidential Villa in Abuja. The other man lives everywhere in the hearts and minds of the people who call this land their home.

    To a large extent, the whole drama of the 2027 presidential election will play out as a vicious referendum to choose between the two men as the future president of the country after 2027.

    Over two years ahead of 2027, the political landscape has donned the garb of active electioneering and festive campaigning. Wherever Mr. Peter Obi goes in the country, a certain celebratory air follows him. The crowds gather in nearly uncontrollable throngs. People scramble to catch a glimpse of the man dressed mostly in black.

    Even if he does nothing, the people are happy that the man visits their area and reaches out to touch their points of pain wherever they may be. At IDP camps, in villages newly razed by the fire of misguided anger, in poor homes newly bereaved by irate violence and in markets razed and looted by the anger of frustration. In prayer on Fridays or supplication on Sundays, Mr. Peter Obi joins us.

    He was only a presidential candidate back in 2023. Today, he is not anybody’s presidential candidate. In a nation fiercely divided between those empowered to rule and the majority condemned to sigh everyday, Peter Obi is merely aligned with the emergent undigested opposition alliance, uncertain where to finally pitch his political tent.

    But for now in every way, Peter Obi is the happening thing in our national politics. His presence makes the people happy but makes fellow politicians uneasy.

    Rightly or wrongly, Peter Obi has touched a vital node among ordinary Nigerians. He addresses their worries; promises to reduce their burdens and reconnects them with their national heritage. Though a comfortable and successful entrepreneur, Obi eschews the arrogance of the moneyed oligarchy. His tastes are modest just as he supports good causes all over the country with his hard earned resources.

    On the other hand, his fellow politicians and rich elite are uncomfortable with Obi. They fear that he will upturn their gravy train. Huge imported SUVs will go out of fashion to be replaced by ordinary people movers.

    Palaces and mansions paid for with public money will go out of vogue. Free endless nightly champagne orgies will not be a benefit for those who rule us. Obi has promised to reverse these privileges and reduce their excessive perquisites. He will end the entitlement state and put Nigerians back to work for the prosperity we desire.

    No more white elephants. No further phantom projects. No Alaskan highways running from Sokoto to Badagry to be completed centuries after we have all died. An end to endless borrowing to fund government as showmanship.

    The prosperity of the nation will no longer be measured in statistical publications and Power Point projections but in health clinics where people go to seek life and cure, schools where learning takes place and real lives of real people that inch away from poverty with each passing day.  Peter Obi’s vision of development and the future of Nigeria is frightening to the business and political elite.

    Something even more curious has now happened. By the logic of the present state of our political discourse, Peter Obi can as well be said to have hired President Tinubu as his 2027 campaign manager. Each step, each statement Tinubu makes reinforces an Obi argument. Every misfortune that befalls the nation under Tinubu’s watch is  weaponized by the Peter Obi squad.

    Every policy that punishes the people is debited from Tinubu’s account and its opposite credited to Obi’s looming paradise. Every bandit attack, every armed robbery, each kidnapping and abduction, every company that shuts down because power is too costly under Tinubu’s watch is yet another  reason why Tinubu is no good for the job he got and why Peter Obi should come and assume the office in 2027.

    In everyday real life, in the legacy media and overwhelmingly in the social media, we now seem to be living in the Age of Peter Obi. Fear has gripped the political space. Some incumbents can hardly hide their fear. That is why some governors are fretting and shaking. And politicians too are frightened that something in the horizon is a threat to their good life.

    Edo state’s semi illiterate governor cannot stand the Obi frenzy anymore. He has issued a decree that Obi can only visit the state after due ‘security’ clearance. An earlier decree had been issued by the Benue governor along the same lines. It does not matter if the man is coming to commiserate either the bereaved or donate money to the many displaced. Just don’t come! Keep your money and compassion!

    And these are duly elected governors who claim overwhelming INEC fabricated mandates. And yet they are afraid of a lone citizen with no INEC result sheet, no armed goons, no authorized state funded hooligans. Just an ordinary man not surrounded by government goons or masked hooligans; merely an ordinary man wearing cheap clothes and throw- away shoes armed with an alternative truth.

    Voices of sensible Nigerians have entered the fray. The basic freedom of a Nigerian to move around freely, to visit the people in their places of joy or pain is being abridged and threatened by elected or appointed officialdom . Femi Falana had threatened to press charges of human rights violations. Ohanaeze has warned against profiling Obi. The Obidients have threatened reprisals if any harm should come to Obi.

    Earlier in the week, it was Obi’s 64th birthday. A coalition of Kaduna state youth had organized a rally and street march to celebrate the man. But the Kaduna state police command will not hear of it. It proscribed a rally it knew nothing about, citing the usual fear of hijack by hoodlums and criminals.

    Obi’s name in the streets will cause insecurity in a state that has been a hotbed of reql insecurity for more thqn a decade! Ordinary innocent Nigerians just joining a birthday street procession will cause an insecurity that has become a permanent feature of our national reality. Ordinary innocent Nigerians intent on celebrating another citizen’s birthday were branded by the police before they left their homes!

    For the first time in our national politics, a fear factor has been activated in our political unconscious. Prefects and captains of the criminal state are frightened. I am not sure whether frightening the gangster state is good politics. But Obi is not a usual politician. He shoots straight. He is not in the business of doublespeak.

    The people love him for the truth he tells and stands for. But political truth is different from religious truth. Reality is more complex than Peter Obi’s utopian vision. The crises that have humbled and shredded our nation come from diverse sources and have taken time to entrench. They need time and rigor to address and surmount. Obi says he is ready to work so that Nigeria can be made to work for us all. That is the difference I see him bringing to the table. Populism is helped when it is armed with realism.

    Those afraid of the Obi factor like the governors in Edo and Benue are wide off the mark. Their utterances and actions are in fact treasonous. How can a democratically elected governor of the federal republic of Nigeria threaten to prevent a fellow Nigerian from moving freely into and out of any part of the country. The man is not a criminal.

    He is not coming to your state to kidnap, abduct, steal or incite. He may be coming to donate money or food items to the distressed or show solidarity with those afflicted by our present myriad of adversity. Persons who lack a basic understanding of basic freedoms and  liberties have no business  assuming the lofty office and fancy titles of governor let alone presiding over the life and death of entire states.

    But Nigerians are not detracted or distracted. Institutions and organizations are latching on to the Peter Obi brand magic and pull. A little known Dominion University in Ibadan has just appointed Obi its pro-Chancellor. Within 24 hours, its Instagram followers grew from 530 to over 4,000! If Obi attends your event, your public rating skyrockets and your political rating also shoots up.

    Peter is my friend and brother. Two years ago when I turned 70, my children organised a dinner at the Ikeja Marriott . I asked them to invite my friends including Peter to join us at dinner. I didn’t hear from him. But midway in the dinner, all hell was let loose. Peter emerged. The music changed. My private dinner became a political jamboree.

    But he enjoyed the food and the atmosphere of light hearted recollections and jokes. The crowd saw a messiah in making. Peter saw companionship and a chance to be among friends to honour me! Obis presence is now a requirement. He was vastly blamed for not being at Buhari’s burial. His presence at the Awujale’s condolences was hailed. Obis presence at nearly every event all over Nigeria is as important as his absence. Hardly any other political figure other than the President commands such significance in today’s Nigeria.

    While the major political parties may yet await their ritual conventions to decide their flag bearers, the public mind seems to have settled the matter. Incumbent president Tinubu is digging in, using incumbency power to expand his political reach and using patronage to widen electoral possibilities for his party. His ruling APC has rejigged its structure. It has chosen a party man from Plateau with a Vietnamese sounding name as replacement Chairman after chasing away the dollar loving Ganduje who has been appointed to collect tolls at all airports.

    On its part, the new ADC coalition is gearing up as an opposition fountain head. It is on a nationwide shopping spree for credible and politically influential members who are sufficiently hungry to frighten off the sitting APC people. It is a scramble for the keys of the rent free presidential accommodation at Aso Rock as well as the combination for the vault of the Central Bank and the money safes of the NNPCL.

    The stakes to snatch apex power from a Nigerian incumbent are as high as the pile of cash in either the CBN or the NNPCL. They are even more grave and dangerous. But democratic change demands that those who seek to topple the pinnacle of power cannot afford to be afraid of even the most deadly of Macchiavelli’s rough tools and tactics.   Those same very tools are available in the open market for all power seekers.

    Hidden beneath the national excitement about the prospect of an Obi presidency is that Obi has touched Nigeria in  sensitive places. Obi is an Igbo man. There is a contradiction here. Peter Obi has come to  Nigeria seeking an opportunity to rule the nation differently not because he is Igbo.

    Many Nigerians see him for what he is; a sincere advocate of good governance.  But many insist on seeing him as an Igbo politician. Peter is many things rolled into one. He is an exemplary Nigerian. He is a politician. He is a business man. He is of Igbo extraction. Understanding him requires a mixture of these understandings.

    There is none of these attributes that should make Peter any less qualified to seek Nigeria’s presidency. And there is nothing in the Nigerian air, land or sea that should exclude Mr. Obi or anyone else who honestly seeks to posit an alterantive to Mr. Tinubu’s rule. Democracy permits that imperative.

    The imperative that has created the Peter Obi populist movement is available to any other member of the budding opposition.  But in order for another voice of opposition to arise and gain competing dominance with the incumbent to the extent of threatening it as widely as the Peter Obi movement, it must find its own original voice and find the consistency of messaging that has produced Mr. Obi.

    Unlike in 2023, Peter has found his solid ground. He should accord to fellow Nigerian citizens their due respect.  But he must stand up never to be intimidated by anyone or group. His Igbo identity should be only an added benefit. Nigeria owes the Igbos arrears of justice.

    That added advantage should embolden his quest but he must come to Nigeria with courage and boldness, not a beggarly meekness. He must have at the back of his mind the wisdom that a lion never gives birth to a coward.

  • Oshiomhole backs Okpebholo, says it is a matter of decency for Obi to Inform authorities before visiting Edo

    Oshiomhole backs Okpebholo, says it is a matter of decency for Obi to Inform authorities before visiting Edo

    The lawmaker representing Edo North, Adams Oshiomhole, has supported Governor Monday Okpebholo for insisting that former presidential candidate, Peter Obi must seek security clearance before visiting Edo State.

    TheNewsGuru reports that Okpebholo had warned Obi against visiting the state without prior security clearance, linking a recent trip by the former presidential candidate to a security breach that allegedly resulted in the deaths of three people.

    Sharing his thoughts on the governor’s warning on Prime Time, an Arise Television programme, on Friday, Oshiomhole opined that it is a matter of decency and self-respect for Obi to notify Okpebholo ahead of his visit.

    He argued that it is important to inform authorities when personalities like Obi plan to visit a state.

    The former governor of Edo pointed out that the school in question, which Obi is expected to visit, is fully funded and maintained by the state government.

    Let’s face it; the property of the Edo state government is entrusted in the hands of the Edo state governor. If anyone, myself included, goes to Enugu or Anambra when Obi was governor and I want to visit a government-owned facility, like a nursing institution, it is a matter of decency and self-respect to inform the authorities.

    Peter Obi was my colleague, and we knew each other very well. I liked him then, and I still do, but politically, we don’t agree. I do not subscribe to his views on certain matters,” Oshiomhole said.

  • Peter Obi storms UniCal Dentistry department, donates 20M

    Peter Obi storms UniCal Dentistry department, donates 20M

    The former presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP), Peter Obi  on Friday visited the University of Calabar this morning and donated N20 million to the Faculty of Dentistry to support 400 dental students who are being threåtenéd with expulsion and withdrawal from the university.

    The donation, which was made in Calabar in the presence of some of the students of the department, is expected to be utilised for the procurement of more dental chairs.

    According to Obi, I am interested in creating awareness that will aid the development of the people, and not discussing politics.

    “N20 million will buy five dental chairs. We cannot have a society where we spend millions to buy cars for politicians while young people lack tools to be educated with.

    “Our schools lack laboratories, classroom chairs, but politicians are living like stars; this shouldn’t be.

    “We must dismantle it and invest in the critical areas of development which are measurable, like education, health and pulling people out of poverty.”

    He also noted that governance was about the people, adding that he was struggling to build a society where the child of a nobody could be somebody.

    He added that rather than talking about 2027, the nation’s leaders should be talking about the average Nigerian who could not put food on their tables, send their children to school or go to hospitals to get adequate care.

    “I was once like these students; that is why I am pushing for us to build a proper society. As for 2027, I will be there, I assure you, and I will contest,” he said.

  • Peter Obi’s dangerous game – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Peter Obi’s dangerous game – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Peter Obi has the best chance against President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in 2027 of all opposition candidates. Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar’s People’s Democratic Party (PDP) may have received a slightly higher percentage of the votes (6.9 million or 29.1 percent) in the last presidential election; still, that was poor for Atiku, a sixth-timer in the presidential race.

    Obi had less than one year to prepare after his former party, the PDP, shafted him, followed by the bitter struggle for control between Atiku and the former Governor of Rivers State, Nyesom Wike, which left the party in ruins.

    Outside the wreckage, Obi scored 6.1 million or 25.4 percent of the votes, toppling the All Progressives Congress (APC) in its traditional Lagos stronghold, energising young voters, and causing a stir amongst the complacent political elite.

    Born to survive

    After coming a solid third, the question was whether he could keep the momentum, strengthen the LP and manage his vibrant, sometimes fiercely unruly crowd of “Obidient” followers until the next election cycle.

    He has, so far. To have survived the tumult in the Labour Party (LP), which now has three rival claimants to its leadership, and watch from the outside, what could be the final burial rites of his former party, the PDP, Obi has done well.

    Yet, as surely as success invites its perils, he is entering what may prove to be the most delicate phase of his political journey, two years before the next presidential election. Obi is confused, and dangerously so, when he needs clarity the most.

    Adventure to ADC

    He is flirting with the African Democratic Congress (ADC), the party former President Olusegun Obasanjo vowed in 2019 would unseat the APC, but which failed disastrously to do so. The ADC’s past failure is not necessarily a bad thing. Nor is the renewed crisis in the party; they all have problems, only different in severity.

    The problem is that Obi is unsure whether to join the ADC, which, like the bat, neither resembles a political rodent nor a coalition bird, or to stand firm and try to repair a fractured LP before the next election. Although he says he is not desperate, pinching himself while saying so, he believes this might be his best chance to become president, which is a fair ambition.

    After being governor for eight years, running mate to Atiku in 2019, and his own man in 2023, Obi is qualified for the number one spot. His prospects are brighter, in my view, than Atiku’s, who is exhausted from chasing a marabout’s prophecy or Governor Rotimi Amaechi’s, who is in this race to entertain.

    A coalition to nowhere

    The problem is that, for reasons best known to him, instead of focusing on repairing the LP, broadening his base and appeal, Obi has fallen for the seduction that his salvation lies with joining Atiku, Amaechi, and former Governor Nasir El-Rufai in a coalition to nowhere. I’m shocked.

    Obi has forgotten what brought him this far. It was certainly not the political dinosaurs he is now in love with. Polls showed his strongest support was with women aged 18 to 24, who comprised 82 percent of the cohort that voted for him. Others included the largely urban middle class and social-savvy Nigerians, across regions and age groups, apart from disaffected voters. Instead of cultivating and expanding his hold on these demographics, he has been infected by the obsession that his salvation is with the group he turned his back against.

    In a political system that requires the winner to secure no less than 25 percent of the votes in at least two-thirds of all the states, Obi’s main challenge is bridging this divide, especially across the North, where he is very weak. But his approach to solving this problem is dangerously flawed.

    Chasing a phantom

    His misjudgment is that he needs assistance from two prominent Northern politicians, Atiku, El-Rufai or any of the vagrants from the legacy CPC. They cannot and will not help him because their broken dreams have consumed them. NNPP leader Rabiu Kwankwaso might have been, by far, a more valuable ally, but he will not accept a subordinate role.

    The obsession with relying on the “tripod” or any single region, claiming that it’s the sole determinant of the pathway to power, has been shattered more than once since 1999, with Obasanjo’s election being one and Muhammadu Buhari’s another.

    In what he has framed as possibly his most consequential attempt at the presidency in 2027, it is tragic that Obi either doesn’t believe or is too confused to give it a shot without using the coattails of some exhausted Northern politicians.

    Under the sheets

    I know that politics indulges strange bedfellows, even actively encouraging intimacy amongst them under the sheets. Still, it came to me as a stunning surprise that Obi should so easily find accommodation with El-Rufai, who has called him some of the most horrendous names in the book, the most flattering of which was an ethnic bigot, a tyrant, a joke and a Nollywood actor.

    As for Amaechi, the man who doesn’t like money except when it comes in the form of a Rolls-Royce, Obi should know him better.

    But these are Obi’s new friends and associates – political wanderers, united mainly by ambition to seize power and have it for themselves for its own sake. He’s perfectly entitled to his new company, but I wish he would pause, reflect, and perhaps watch his back.

    Trouble at home

    In his Southeast home base, Anambra Governor Charles Soludo thinks he’s superior and that “Obidients” are a nuisance. In Imo State, where Governor Hope Uzodinma thinks himself the only highway to Abuja, the governor would mount a tollgate against any perceived threat to his franchise. Of course, there’s no love lost between Obi and the only LP, Governor Alex Otti of Abia State.

    There’s nothing for him in any coalition of the disaffected, and his running mate Datti Baba-Ahmed said so bluntly. To paraphrase him, a coalition with Atiku, El-Rufai, Amaechi, and other internally displaced politicians is a coalition of the second fiddle.

    As things stand, Obi is neither here nor there. After being with Atiku all these years, and despite the wreckage the former vice president made of the PDP, which is now survived only by his ambition to become president, it’s surprising that Obi thinks that ADC or any other coalition with Atiku will work for him.

    Long memories

    Politicians from the Southeast face a double jeopardy of ruinously expensive election costs, and after the Civil War, deep mistrust amongst the political elite, especially in the North. Despite fervent claims of no victor, no vanquished, nothing is forgotten or forgiven, and appeasement will fail.

    Obi is with the wrong crowd, and worst of all, faces a serious risk of losing his party’s support. He should cultivate and use help wherever he can find it, but not at the expense of what he has built, especially in the last two years. He is now doing precisely what desperados do.

    Except, of course, if he was lying about not being desperate for power.

    Ishiekwene, Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP, is the author of the new book Writing for Media and Monetising It. 

    This column goes on a two-week recess.

  • What will happen to Peter Obi If he accepts Vice Presidency

    What will happen to Peter Obi If he accepts Vice Presidency

    Katchy Ononuju, a former Special Adviser on Public Affairs to Peter Obi, the Labour Party’s 2023 presidential candidate, has warned that accepting a running mate position with former Vice President Atiku Abubakar or any other politician would signify the end of Obi’s political relevance.

    In an interview with Daily Post, Ononuju emphasized that such a decision would alienate Obi from the youth movement that served as the foundation of his 2023 campaign.

    He stated that Obi’s popularity was rooted in the trust and hopes of millions of Nigerian youths, who viewed him as a symbol of a new political order. Ononuju cautioned that accepting the Vice Presidential slot would likely be seen as a betrayal by those supporters..

    He said, “We have given them a condition which is simple: accept zoning. We are not fighting for today. We are fighting for the future. I am confessing to you the reason why I started the youth movement. I spoke to Omoba, Doyin Okupe, and said let us do southern campaign president. If it does not work, history will remember what we have done. I am grateful to Okupe for agreeing, and we started asking candidates. Peter Obi never agreed. He told us that he would never go against Atiku. But I called people like Okwadike. I even organised a meeting at Nnabuenyi’s house. He asked me, ‘Katchy, what are you doing? Has Peter Obi told you he will run for president?’ He told me that he is loyal to Atiku. I said do not worry, I am working. After that, Peter agreed to run.

    “The moment Obi becomes Vice President to anybody, the youths will walk away, and I do not want this creation to die. Peter Obi, as a political creation, will die if he abandons the youths. Obi will die as a political icon if he abandons the youth, and they will not accept it. In every single administration, the voice of the Vice President does not matter; it is muted, and if he complains, he is degraded. Check with Osinbajo; check currently with Shettima; check with Jonathan; check also with Obasanjo and Atiku. After they degrade you, you will not be able to recover. As a student and teacher of history, I know this for sure. It is difficult to recover after you have been smashed as the Vice President.”

  • Ohanaeze Ndigbo sends strong message to Peter Obi ahead of 2027 elections

    Ohanaeze Ndigbo sends strong message to Peter Obi ahead of 2027 elections

    A faction of Ohanaeze Ndigbo has urged the presidential candidate  of the Labour Party (LP) in the 2023 general election, Peter Obi to allow President Bola Tinubu to serve his full second term.

    In a statement released on Wednesday by the factional Deputy President-General, Okechukwu Isiguzoro, the group cautioned Obi that the South-East region cannot support his bid for the presidency.

    He expressed concern that the joint Atiku–Obi ticket in 2019 cost the South-East a potential sixth state, which former President Muhammadu Buhari had promised to Igbo leaders in exchange for their support.

    The statement further noted that, although the South-East has been a stronghold for the Labour Party in 2023, President Tinubu’s administration has made significant progress in addressing the region’s infrastructural deficits.

    The appointment of Engr. David Umahi, as the Minister of Works, tasked with the critical mandate of rehabilitating the South-East’s dilapidated federal road projects, exemplifies this commitment. Furthermore, under President Tinubu’s leadership, federal allocations to the South-East have tripled, benefiting all five South-East governors, irrespective of their diverse political affiliations,” the statement read.

    It continued: “In light of these uncomfortable realities, Ohanaeze passionately urges Mr Obi to reconsider his aspirations for the presidency in 2027. The current political dynamics, exacerbated by Atiku Abubakar’s relentless pursuit of an octogenarian presidency at the age of 81, coupled with his ambiguous support for Mr Obi, suggest that their candidacies may ultimately divide the votes of the opposition, thereby facilitating a triumphant re-election for President Tinubu. Such a scenario would undoubtedly have adverse repercussions for the South-East.

    “This candid truth may be a bitter pill for Mr Obi to swallow, yet it is essential for him to engage in a profound reassessment of his ambitions. We implore him to relinquish his presidential aspirations in favour of negotiating for the pressing needs of the South-East. It is in the best interest of our region that Mr Obi summon his righteous resolve to support President Tinubu’s re-election campaign in 2027, particularly in light of the infrastructural developments spearheaded by Umahi and the collective bargaining efforts of the South-East.”

    Isiguzoro, in the statement, urged Obi to prioritise the interests of the South-East above personal ambition, recognising that unity and collaboration are paramount for the collective advancement of the region.

    He said it was imperative to convey a candid and unembellished truth to the former Governor of Anambra State.

    We must assert that the path to victory for President Bola Tinubu in the upcoming 2027 elections is fraught with challenges, particularly when considering the formidable influence of incumbency and the disunity that currently plagues the opposition coalition,” he noted.

    The factional Ohanaeze, while acknowledging Obi’s constitutional right to contest for the presidency in 2027, said it felt compelled to express grave concerns regarding the viability of such a candidacy.

    The stark reality is that Obi may face betrayal in his quest for the presidency, which could yield dire consequences for the Igbo people,” it noted.

  • I didn’t threaten Peter Obi – Gov Okpebholo

    I didn’t threaten Peter Obi – Gov Okpebholo

    Governor Monday Okpebholo of Edo State has said his directive to former Governor Peter Obi of Anambra was advice and should not be misinterpreted or taken out of context as a threat.

    Governor Okpebholo made this statement on Tuesday in Benin, stressing that he has no regrets about asking the former Anambra Governor to notify him before visiting the State.

    Speaking at the official inauguration of the new Edo Line, a transport company owned by the state government, Okpebholo noted that his own failure to heed such advice from the Commissioner of Police in 2024 led to the death of his police orderly.

    “Because of the rain, I won’t say much. Even when I said just one word, people were already crying. What I said was a simple advice. I told him not to visit Edo without informing me. As chief security officer, it’s a basic protocol.

    “If asking him to notify me is considered a crime, so be it. I have no regrets. Let me not dwell on irrelevant matters. This is not important. To the people of Edo, our message and intention have already been made clear.

    “I don’t understand their pain. Is it because I said they don’t have ‘shishi’? Didn’t they say they don’t have ‘shishi’?” Okpebholo asked .

    He recalled being similarly advised by the commissioner of police in 2024, when he arrived at Benin Airport, under former governor Godwin Obaseki’s administration.

    “The commissioner saw me and asked me to remain at the airport. I ignored him. At the gate, my police orderly was shot dead.

    “Inspector Akor Onu was killed before my very eyes. That painful experience still guides how I view security warnings and protocols to this very day.”

    “I’ve seen security reports. I’ve advised Obi. If he listens, good. If not, it’s his choice. It doesn’t concern me,” he added.

    Okpebholo, however, attributed the launch of the new Edo Line to the state’s improved federal allocation, which he said made the project possible.

    He also credited the success to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, saying that without a father like him, the dream of reviving Edo line would never have been possible.

    “This dream could never come true without a father like the President. He truly cares about Edo and the entire South-South region.

    “In Edo, we must always thank the President. He has shown genuine love, funding us, monitoring us, and helping transform our vision into visible reality.

    “President Tinubu brought practical governance to Edo. His Renewed Hope Agenda is transforming the country,” he stated.

    He expressed appreciation to the people of Edo for voting for him, saying that their support was a clear sign that progress was truly underway.

    “What we’re witnessing today is a dream fulfilled. The people of Edo have been in the wilderness for years. Now, change has finally arrived,” he added.

    Also speaking, the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, guest of honour at the event, supported Governor Okpebholo’s stance on security protocols for high-profile Nigerians.

    Wike emphasised that high-profile Nigerians, including Peter Obi, must inform a state governor before visiting to ensure that adequate security measures were provided for their safety.

    He explained that when Peter Obi visited him in Rivers during his tenure, Obi secured official clearance beforehand, respecting security protocols and standard procedures accordingly.

    Wike expressed surprise that Obi failed to follow similar protocols when he visited Edo, questioning why such a crucial step was skipped.

    “I thank God for Edo people for standing firm during Monday Okpebholo’s election. As far as I’m concerned, the governor is focused and prepared.

    “I do not identify with failure. I identify with people who mean well for their people.

    “You have also resolved the problem of students, women, and men travelling.

    “You have actually shown your support for our President in practical terms by your performance,” he said.

    According to him, your performance will give you the confidence to always come home even after your tenure as governor.