Tag: Peter Obi

  • 2023: Distractors will join LP – Primate Ayodele warns Peter Obi

    2023: Distractors will join LP – Primate Ayodele warns Peter Obi

    The leader Of INRI Evangelical Spiritual Church, Primate Elijah Ayodele, has warned the presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP), Peter Obi, to be wary of big politicians that will defect to his party to destabilize his presidential ambition.

    The Lagos-based cleric revealed that the big names that will defect to the party would never mean well for Obi.

    This piece of information was revealed by his Media Aide, Oluwatosin Osho, via a statement signed and released by him.

    The cleric noted that Peter Obi could spring a surprise in next year’s presidential election in the country by coming out tops.

    His statement reads: “For the Labour Party, the man of God warned the party to be careful of big names that will decamp into the party because some of them don’t mean well for them.

    “He mentioned that the candidate, Peter Obi can spring up surprises in the election, but his camp still has a lot to do.

    ‘’Some people will decamp to the Labour Party to destabilize the party, they must be careful of big names decamping to the party.

    “Peter Obi can bring surprises in the election if APC and PDP do not wake up. The camp of Peter Obi still has a lot to do, they are only pursuing their goals ordinarily.’’

  • Peter Obi not new to the rotten system, he didn’t build any schools – Sowore

    Peter Obi not new to the rotten system, he didn’t build any schools – Sowore

    The presidential candidate of the African Action Congress (AAC), Omoyele Sowore, has hit out at his Labour Party counterpart, Peter Obi for being corrupt and part of the rotten system.

    Sowore stated this while speaking on Channels Television’s ‘Politics Today’, Friday night.

    He said, “Peter Obi is part of the old system that I’ve always fought against. I understand where he is coming from.

    “This is 1999 repeating itself – Nigerians want change, some young people are genuinely interested in change to a different direction, and then they are presented with somebody who worked for the establishment; somebody who has been in the Peoples Democratic Party, the All Progressives Grand Alliance, came back to the PDP, and now in the Labour Party. We can be emotional about it but that’s the truth.

    “He’s not new to the rotten system. Somebody who was Anambra’s governor for eight years. He didn’t build any schools, he didn’t build any industry, he didn’t build a power station. He’s not my kind of progressive.”

  • 2023 Election: Obi is not new to the rotten system – Sowore

    2023 Election: Obi is not new to the rotten system – Sowore

    Politician and activist, Omoyele Sowore the flagbearer of the African Action Congress (AAC), has explained that his Labour Party counterpart, Peter Obi has also been part of the old and rotten system.

    Sowore made this statement while featuring on Channels Television Political  programme, Politics today which was  monitored by TheNewsGuru.com (TNG)

    The activist noted that he has always fought against the system which Obi has been part of.

    Asked to comment on the candidacy of Obi, he said , “Peter Obi is part of the old system that I’ve always fought against. I understand where he is coming from.

    “This is 1999 repeating itself – Nigerians want change, some young people are genuinely interested in change to a different direction, and then they are presented with somebody who worked for the establishment; somebody who has been in the Peoples Democratic Party, the All Progressives Grand Alliance, came back to the PDP, and now in the Labour Party. We can be emotional about it but that’s the truth.

    “He’s not new to the rotten system. Somebody who was Anambra’s governor for eight years. He didn’t build any schools, he didn’t build any industry, he didn’t build a power station. He’s not my kind of progressive.”

  • 2023 Elections: Okupe clears air on agreement between Obi, Atiku

    2023 Elections: Okupe clears air on agreement between Obi, Atiku

    A Labour Party (LP) chieftain, Doyin Okupe, has explained that the speculation flying around that there is an agreement between the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Alhaji Atiku Abubakar and the LP’s  Flagbearer Peter Obi as the wishful thinking of some distractors.

    He noted that the speculation about a deal involving the LP and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidates was false.

    Okupe said Obi enjoys massive support home and abroad and is ahead of his opponents by miles.

    The former presidential aide wonders why the former Anambra governor will negotiate “with other less popular candidates or their parties”.

    Okupe advised the public to ignore the “cheap, self-serving and distracting propaganda, which we believe is not coming from the Atiku camp”.

    The politician stressed that the Obidient movement gathers more and more electorates “on an hourly basis”.

    “It is evident that the political fortunes and followership of the other parties diminish and recede like a drying lake in the scorching heat of an arid desert.”

    The Obi-Datti Campaign Organisation, he added, remains focused to take back Nigeria and hand it over to the youths to secure their future.

    “Our compelling commitment and promise is to move Nigeria from consumption to production”, the statement concluded.

  • Peter Obi gives hint on turning “Nigeria’s brain drain into brain gain”

    Peter Obi gives hint on turning “Nigeria’s brain drain into brain gain”

    Labour Party Presidential Candidate, Peter Obi, has explained what it will take to make Nigeria great by turning its brain drain into brain gain.

     

    In a post via Twitter on Wednesday, Obi noted that even though the country’s outlook seems bleak, especially with the present state of insecurity ad parlous economy, things, he is certain that with Nigerians avid prayers and contributions in both human and material terms, Nigeria will recover.

     

    According to him, It will take only one visionary leadership and disruptive thinker for Nigeria to be put back on the right trajectory.

     

    “I know that with a robust diaspora support we can do it for Nigeria. As we explore ways and means of tapping in on technology transfer from the Diaspora, we will also explore ways of reversing the enormous brain drain that has been debilitating for our country,” he stated.

     

    Obi pointed out that like India, Nigeria, should be able to tap her huge Diaspora human resource to ensure technology transfer home.

     

    In his words: “We will trigger every known technological and knowledge transfer initiators. Nigeria’s brain drain will be turned into brain gain.”

     

    In conclusion, Obi said he feels strongly and can safely assert that the “Active Engagement by Nigeria Diaspora in Capacity Building and Civic Leadership in Nigeria” is possible and desirable.

     

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that Obi served as Governor of Anambra from March to November 2006, February to May 2007, and from June 2007 to March 2014.

     

    In May 2022, he became the Labour Party candidate for President of Nigeria in the 2023 presidential election, after defecting from the PDP.

     

    Obi’s presidential campaign has been described as populist and has been noted for its support among many young Nigerians, who have been nicknamed “Obi-dients”

     

    The LP Presidential candidate was born in Onitsha in 1961 and graduated from the University of Nigeria in 1984.

     

    Afterwards he entered business and banking, eventually rising to hold several high-ranking executive positions at banks.

     

    By the early 2000s, Obi was the chairman of Fidelity Bank before leaving the position to enter politics. Obi ran for governor in 2003, as a member of the All Progressives Grand Alliance but his main opponent was unlawfully declared victor.

     

    After three years of legal battles, Obi was declared winner in 2006 and assumed office in March, 2006.

     

    He was then impeached that November before the impeachment was overturned and he returned to office in February 2007. Again,

     

    Obi was removed when a new election was held in April 2007 but the judiciary intervened again and ruled that he should be allowed to complete a full four-year term.

     

    In 2010, he won re-election to a second term. Obi’s terms were marked by improvements in state finances, education, and healthcare.

     

    After leaving office in 2014, Obi gained new status as an advocate for good governance and national political figure after decamping to the Peoples Democratic Party in 2014.

     

    In 2019, he was selected as the vice presidential nominee in the presidential election running alongside Atiku Abubakar, but lost to incumbent president Muhammadu Buhari and vice president Yemi Osinbajo.

  • Why Obi blazes trail of 2023 polls – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Why Obi blazes trail of 2023 polls – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Barely six months to the February presidential election, contenders for the position have virtually yielded the field to candidate Peter Obi and his platform, the Labour Party.

    The candidates of other major parties: All Progressives Congress, Peoples Democratic Party and the New Nigeria Peoples Party appear to have no stake in the polls.

    What Nigerians read, watch or hear in the media is, Peter Obi’s here, Peter Obi’s there, and Peter Obi’s everywhere, as if the former Anambra State governor is ubiquitous.

    But he’s not! Unlike the rest candidates posturing for president, Obi’s seeming “ubiquity” is located in the seriousness he attaches to the processes of the election.

    Well, Obi’s an “opportunist” defined by vocabulary.com as, “One who sees a chance to gain some advantage from a situation, often at the expense of ethics or morals.”

    To urbandictionary.com, an opportunist is, “One willing to befriend any person regardless of race, creed, gender, sexuality or socioeconomic status if the relationship benefits them directly or indirectly by improving their public image.”

    What an apt description of Obi, who simply seizes on the current national discontent, disaffection, disappointment, disillusionment, dissatisfaction, dissonance, and disunity to fire up Nigerians, to join him in the race for 2023!

    Remember where Obi comes from. When he decamped from the PDP to LP in May 2022, he’s confronted with the issue of “lack of political structure” to kickstart his run.

    Other posers were: What did Obi achieve as governor (2006-2014)? What experience has he got to govern a complex country as Nigeria? As part of the old order, what new things are Obi bringing to the table?

    The answers rest on these bywords: “A toothless animal is the first to arrive to eat of the fallen fruits.” “The morning shows the day.” “If you fail to plan, you are planning to fail.” “As you make your bed, so you must lie on it.”

    Obi has risen early, to plan to succeed in the crucial 2023 elections, so that he’d have cause to lie comfortably on his well-laid bed after the polls. It’s that simple!

    Because Obi actually lacked the structure – physical and representative – to reach millions of eligible voters, he’d to first embark on an aggressive mobilisation, deploying modern tools of communication to maximum effect.

    It’s to capture the youths, to buy into, and spread his “New Nigeria” message that stresses youth engagement, empowerment and development for a 21st century society.

    Has Obi succeeded in this strategy? Absolutely! Like a wild fire, the youths have turned his (small) acorn into millions for a revolutionary change of the status quo.

    Adopting the appellation of “ObIdients” for all supporters, the drivers of his campaign have segmented their operations into two: swarm the media space, and take over the political arena of the country.

    Hence Obi leads on social media platforms, and political events and quasi-rallies, even as the Independent National Electoral Commission has yet to sanction electioneering.

    As he tweets regularly to his followers, or comments on issues of concern to the public, Obi engages in several events, some taking him to more than one state, in a day.

    He’s either attending seminars, workshops or meetings organised by political groups or professional bodies; paying homage or solidarity visits to persons or groups; or joining in worship at church services or crusades.

    Obi presents himself as a different breed of politician, who’s prepared to engage Nigerians by highlighting the issues plaguing the country, and how he’ll solve them.

    He isn’t afraid to speak to Nigeria’s economy, education and security, even as fact checkers query the alleged exaggerated or inaccurate examples, comparisons and figures he reels out to support his presentations.

    And confronted on such “inaccuracies,” Obi has a ready response: “Go and verify,” knowing the very low reading culture in Nigeria, where even truth is a scarce commodity.

    An unflattering saying is that, to hide something from a Nigerian, you put it in writing, in form of a book, as they won’t open, nor peruse it. So, with no appetite for reading, most Nigerians judge the content of a book by its cover.

    The likes of Obi make un-informed, incorrect, imprecise, outlandish or even unfounded pronouncements because the audience, mainly of their supporters, won’t question their assertions. Rather, the captive listeners applaud and ovate every anecdote, innuendo, nuance and gesture.

    The upside is that Obi controls his messaging by talking, engaging, and proffering solutions to problems. Whether the messaging makes sense is a different story. But his listeners’ enthusiastic receptions answer that poser!

    Obi enjoys a rockstar status wherever he goes. His entry into a gathering causes excitement and commotion, as the attendees mob, hug and take selfies with him. And when he’s formally announced, a standing ovation takes over.

    The other candidates only come out irregularly, or speak through surrogates – not to address the real issues at play, but to fight the fires they or their campaigns have lit.

    They hibernate – in Nigeria and overseas – waiting for the electoral umpire to blow the whistle before they show up publicly to tell Nigerians what they have for them in 2023.

    Because there’s a dearth of engagement by the other candidates, the media “rely” on Obi as their main source of “relevant” news on 2023, even from a single assignment.

    For example, within minutes of the leadership summit by the Labour Party and Coalition for Peter Obi on August 11 in Abuja, the media published four news items on Obi.

    The headlines: * How Labour Party will transform Nigeria’s economy from consumption to production – Peter Obi * 2023: We have structure, ready to save Nigeria, Obi boasts * What I’ll do after winning 2023 presidential election – Obi * Leadership deficit Nigeria’s greatest undoing – Peter Obi.

    On the same day, the candidates of the APC and PDP earned such headlines as: * Catholics blast Lalong over reference to Pope, demand apology * Tinubu/Shettima: Lalong explains his reference to Pope * 2023 polls: Imams, Pastors pray for Tinubu, Sanwa-Olu’s success. * PDP crisis: Atiku sends Adamawa gov to Wike, meeting deadlocked * Atiku should beg Wike to win 2023 election – Onwordi * PDP crisis: Please, apply brakes, before it’s too late, Dele Momodu warns Wike.

    That’s why Obi blazes the trail, leaving the other major candidates to play catch-up. But will his approach take him to the finish line in February 2023? Obi thinks so!

    Still, Ecclesiastes 9:11 admonishes: “… the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet favour to men of skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all.” (King James Version).

     

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

  • 2023: Group urge Wike to support Obi, advises him against supporting other candidates

    2023: Group urge Wike to support Obi, advises him against supporting other candidates

    Non-indigenes Association in Rivers State has called on Rivers State Governor to back the presidential candidate of Labour Party, Dr. Peter Obi, to win the presidential election in 2023.

    They advised Wike not to leave the former Anambra State governor (Obi) who is much younger than his two other main rivals.

    Chairman of the association, High Chief Felix Ogbegbor, made the call during a media briefing in Port Harcourt.

    Ogbegbor said Wike should not make the mistake of supporting the candidates of the Peoples Democratic Party, Atiku Abubakar, and that of the All Progressives Congress, Bola Tinubu, saying they have nothing to offer the country.

    They explained that as governor of Anambra State, Obi performed well and left a clean record, pointing out that he has a better agenda to reposition the country.

    Ogbegbor, noted that among the three candidates fielded by the APC, PDP, and LP, that Peter Obi stands out and is most preferred because of his record of performance and integrity, hence their call on Wike to support him.

    He said Nigeria currently doesn’t need a leader above 70 years old, saying Tinubu and Atiku cannot lead the nation out of its current economic and security challenges.

    He said, “I think Peter Obi is the best person that Wike should support. Atiku Abubakar and Bola Tinubu don’t have anything to offer.

    “If Atiku and Tinubu cannot step down, Wike should support Peter Obi. We don’t need an elderly person in that office again. The others are above 70 and we don’t need people now.

    “If Wike supports Obi, we will be right behind him,” he said, saying the association comprising non+indigenes across the country has passed a conference vote on Governor Wike.

    He said the association would only support and work for candidates backed by Wike, adding that the Governor has demonstrated competence in leadership.

    “Governor of Rivers State is a pride of the people. Wike has all it takes to be Nigeria’s president. We are here to support a young man who knows what it takes to please his people.

    “Wike for the past seven years we have not seen the kind of development he is driving before. He always attracts good things to Rivers State.

    “That is why we have decided to follow him. Whatever he (Wike) says we should do that is what we will do.

    “What person he wants to vote we will. Anywhere he goes we will go,” the association’s chairman said.

  • Peter Obi: Man in Black, Politics of ‘No!’ – By Chidi Amuta

    Peter Obi: Man in Black, Politics of ‘No!’ – By Chidi Amuta

    Politics as usual has run into trouble. Decades of political bad behavior have birthed a new and subversive urgent counter force, a movement with a momentum of its own. An unusual man in black with a husky voice and a shy mien has mounted the soap box with a message of fearsome urgency and unanimous appeal. Perennially clad in the anonymity of black outfits, Mr. Peter Obi, a modest man with a message bigger than himself is at the front door.

    Perhaps more for good than for ill, the movement in the making variously called “Obidients” or “Obi-Datti” after its man political dirvers, will likely alter the political landscape of Nigeria for a long time. What is unfolding before our eyes is mostly unintended. But it is coming at a most auspicious moment. A crucial general election offers our democracy an opportunity to renew itself peacefully through the electoral process.

    But this election season is like no other one in the history of our country. The challenges that await urgent political action are unprecedented. The Nigerian state is tottering with institutional incapacity. Fierce armed gangs of sundry identities have besieged the nation from nearly every corner. The theory of absolute sovereign control of the monopoly of force as a definition of the nation state is in today’s Nigeria untenable. The death toll from violent insecurity surpasses that in a formally declared war. Hardship and poverty are taking casualties and enrolling millions into an army of desperate survivalists. The multitudes that rowdily throng to Peter Obi’s sporadic outings are hungry for an unusual leadership with a different politics to surmount our countless woes. The note of urgency is palpable.

    In a sense, Mr. Obi is an unexpected and and gentle guest that somehow makes a rowdy entrance each time he comes calling. He can hardly be ignored. Peter Obi and the omnipresent movement building around him are everywhere and gathering momentum by the day

    Rewind to two months back. By the time the presidential conventions ended in late June/early July, no one anticipated that anything different from the predictable two- party albatross would chance. By the outcome of that largely transactional process, it was going to be either the All Progressives Congress or the Peoples Democratic Party, a choice between two rather familiar houses of mammon. Nigerians were once condemned in a binary choice between a lame and a cripple.

    Suddenly, Mr. Peter Obi shows up in gentle rebellion against his former party, the PDP. He quickly emerged as the presidential candidate of a hitherto nondescript and lack luster Labour Party. There was nothing new about either the Labour Party or even Mr. Obi himself for that matter. Both could conveniently be ignored as neither spectacular nor unusual. The last time Nigerians heard of Mr. Obi, he was Mr. Atiku Abubakar’s running mate in the 2019 contest. He made a few notable noises then that merely brought the perspectives of an Onitsha market trader into timid national focus. He highlighted the consequences of economic recklessness and leadership prodigality whenever he found an opportunity. But he was not the main masquerade. It was someone else’s show and dance. He was merely the support cast of Mr. Atiku, an all so familiar mascot of an ancient cult to whom the dance belonged.

    But now as his own man, Mr. Obi has quickly transformed into something else. He has lent his hoarse raspy voice to the expression of something that no one in the past dared name. He has spent the last few weeks stomping the nation, naming the many things that have troubled Nigerians for decades. He has shed his personal mask and assumed the mantle and face of spokesperson of every troubled Nigerian. It is not Obi but his message that has ignited an unfamiliar flame among Nigerians.

    Conversations in market places, buses, churches , mosques, board rooms, barber’s shops and campuses are no longer complete without discussions about the man in black as the embodiment of what every sensible Nigerian wants in a the next leadership of the country. He has defied animosity and any form of bitterness. He refused to embrace the usual divisions that have made our politics episodes of vicious warfare. For Obi and his followers, this hour is not the turn of any nationality, creed, section or person. It is Nigeria’s turn to become great by removing the shame of generations of its citizens.

    His message belongs to this time and this place. It also belongs to all times and all places where the politics of elite distance and greed has laid nations waste and rendered peoples destitute. It is an urgent message carrying an idea whose time has now arrived. It is the idea of Nigeria as a land of hope and possibility. It is about the urgency of a rescue mission to free Nigeria from the vice grip of what the French would call the sins of the ancien regime, the old order and its defining politics. It is a rejection of the politics of anything goes, of ‘Ghana Must Go’ bales of cash ferried around at night to purchase the conscience of those who decide the fate of many.

    It is also a generational message. The youth of our land have found a rallying cry, someone to carry the blood stained banner rescued from Lekki Toll Gate. It is something that had been simmering under the surface, ready to erupt. It briefly peeped in during the brief Endsars surge. It is the clear message from those we have been waiting for, the youth of Nigeria united by a rejection of the old order and its politics. It is the voice of those impatient to wait another day for the sweetness that was long promised and long denied.

    The message is something that defies a label or a name. It defies geography or ethnic identity. Those who have tried to pigeon hole either the message of its carrier have come against a barrage of incendiary anger from every corner of Nigeria and the world where Nigerians live. And yet the message has become a tectonic force, a moving locomotive of history that no one in their right senses can ignore. It is something beyond the cheap blackmail of ethnicity, religion, and geographical permutations. It means politics to the power of infinity.

    Yet it is not politics as usual. It is the politics of No! an open rejection of stasis, the power to say No! ‘even in thunder’ as the late poet Christopher Okigbo wrote. It is a resounding No! in the united voice of those long denied a voice. That voice has broken out and become a force. That force is growing into a movement. The force they call ‘Obidients’ is not a party. It is not a personality cult. It is the message of a movement that has found a suitable voice and convincing mascot to carry it to the arena of national attention.

    In a sense, then, we all, the common folk of long betrayed Nigerians, created the Obidients. They are not party faithfuls. They are not devotees of a cult. They are not worshippers of any hero or subscribers to any known myth. They are Nigerians eager to reclaim a decent nation from too long a political captivity. Above all, they seem poised to retake their nation as their entitlement. Mr. Obi has only just emerged to reduce the aspiration of most Nigerians into a simple message: It is time to take back our country!

    The new movement is a gathering storm; hard to ignore and tempting to embrace. It has identified the prevailing ruling class and its politics as usual as the enemy. This coincides with the common perception on the streets that the trouble with Nigeria is embedded in a political tradition that sidelines the people and consigns them to eternal poverty. In the logic of this messaging, there is no need for a detailed apportionment of blame or guilt. We are all victims of bad politics and deplorable leadership by the rulers of politics as usual.

    Even the elite of the established parties have acknowledged the logic of the new Obedients movement as a force. Those who want to keep their party affiliations want to use their PVCS for a different purpose this time around. The rhetoric of the movement coincides with the popular consensus on the streets. That consensus is simply this: it is time to say No! It is a No to the old parties. No to the old style politics and politicians. No to business and politics as usual. It is a no to the rule of aliens, a clan that rules for itself and alienates the rest. A new inclusiveness has been defined. Nigeria belongs to us all.

    But in the euphoric welcoming of this new thing, no one has asled what would replace the old order. Even Mr. Obi has only defined his alternative vision mostly by a negative signage. He has sais what is wrong. He has said what we do not want. But he has been too busiy to articulate what follows the day after the fall of Babylon. That is the urgent burden of the new song.

    Sometimes Peter Obi has denied his personal ambition and stake, insisting that he is not running for President but is running an errand for the popular sovereign. He has said that his understanding of his emerging mandate is that the masses want him to rescue and retake the government on their behalf. That is classic populist rhetoric. The rabble and the mob do not rule a country; only the power elite do.

    Mr. Obi may not have seen this coming. An ordinary man, a self- effacing trader turned politician without any ideological pretensions or megaphone could never have imagined himself a candidate for national heroism of such volcanic proportions. But that is where the logic of national history and the depressing reality of this anxious moment have placed Peter Obi.

    The personal pull of the Man in Black as a messenger of change is that he is one of us. He proudly describes himself as a trader. He is rich by most standards. He is rich because he worked hard to make an impressive amount of money. He was rich before he became governor. He did not take advantage of his privileged office to get hopelessly richer. He is not claiming messianic innocence or some immaculate conception. He is saying that Nigeria is rich and can be a happier place if it’s resources are managed better by a more honest leadership that understands the rule of economic management. He has demonstrable anecdotes to back his aspiration. His moral credentials are reasonably credible in a nation traditionally ruled by successive pageants of crooks and gangsters in costumes of decency.

    Unlike the personae of old politics, Obi’s political rhetoric is a language of facts, laced with statistics and animated by common sense. Most of all, it is rhetoric backed by a record of demonstrable transparency. The trader’s modesty and thrift are its bedrock. Onitsha market thrift and a certain Catholic simplicity and modesty are the major background inspirations of the Peter Obi Phenomenon. But Mr. Obi understands that a nation is neither a mercantile enclave nor a monastery.

    Great Questions have arisen. Can a street movement defeat the hegemony of established parties? Can the mere force of incensed mobs trounce traditional party faithful? Can a minority party with neither a state governorship or hardly any recognizable national legislative presence overwhelm long standing parties that dominate the political space? Can the Labour Party defeat the dominant organized syndicates ? Can an individual armed only with a popular message and depressing statistics overturn the entrenched fortresses of vested interest and vicious power?
    In short, can Mr. Peter Obi win the 2023 presidential election?

    Possibilities abound. First, if the popular movement around Mr. Obi assumes a clear demographic majority among voters in majority of states, then the man in black could become president with a precarious hold on power. He will have neither a legislative majority in parliament to back him nor the financial heft of some state governors to stand strong. This could breed instant instability as the entrenched parties could quickly become an opposition coalition with immense political muscle.The newly elected president could be instantly impeached and the country could dive into an instant constitutional crisis.

    Second, Obi’s movement by dint of its demographic quantum could score a majority of the popular vote but for some reasons fail to achieve the requisite 25% spread in two thirds of the states. That means there will be a run off between Mr. Obi and the second runner up. A run -off will be determined by a simple majority. So, here again, Mr. Obi and his Labour Party could win with the same constraints. The only survival kit Obi will have is an offer to set up a government of national unity with representation that reflects the voter performance of the various parties. In that event, everybody becomes an ‘Obidient’ by default. The movement becomes a national movement that kills off the two big parties and eventually also dilutes itself into anonymity.

    If the Peter Obi movement continues to get stronger as the elections approach, the 2023 presidential election could become more of a referendum on the old political order. Nigerians will troop out to choose between the new movement and the old order and its politicians. In that event, the outcome would be predictable.

    There is also a possibility that the Obidient movement loses steam over the next six months. In that case, politics as usual will prevail and the Obidients movement could fizzle out. In that case, either Mr. Atiku Abubakar or Bola Tinubu will step forward to be sworn in as president. My. Obi returns to his shop in Onitsha and slowly peters out as a lonely political totem.

    At best, either old party victor could incorporate elements of the new movement into a national unity government designed to kill the new youth surge and stifle the opposition towards a single party hegemony. This scenario is not historically viable. Political forces unleashed by economic and social realities are not easily wiped out.

    Whichever of these possibilities prevails, one thing is clear. Peter Obi has rattled the venomous rattle snake of Nigeria’s dangerous power structure. Whether or not he intends it, he and his movement have emerged as a credible threat to the existing power structure of the Nigerian state. Big money is at stake. A long standing geo political hegemony is at stake. Tremendous influence and huge power is threatened. The deep state of entrenched bureaucracy and technocracy s is threatened.

    It would be naive of Mr. Obi and his followers to assume that they can uproot this monstrous contraption without a fight. The power establishment is likely to combat the threat with everything at its disposal. A threat to the political establishment is likely to be branded a threat to the nation itself. What began as a partisan political contest could become a battle over the forces of order and those of perceived anarchy. Mr. Obi has set out on a journey whose logic we do not know. He must view himself as something beyond a pop star. When you step out to contest the power of entrenched power, you must not go in your sunday best. Maybe, Mr. Obi knows this hence his wise choice of a simple black outfit. His followers must then follow suit and become an army of warriors in black, Ninjas of the new Nigeria!

  • 2023: I don’t have any political deal with Atiku -Peter Obi

    2023: I don’t have any political deal with Atiku -Peter Obi

     

    The Obi-Datti 2023 Presidential campaign office has denied speculations that the Presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Mr. Peter Obi, has entered into a ‘political deal’ to support the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Atiku Abubakar.

    The campaign office via a statement described the speculations as the handiwork of charitable propagandists who indulge in distorting facts in the pursuit of imaginary relevance for their paymasters.

    The statement read in part, “Rather than strive to contend with the hard sell of their candidates, these mischief makers bandy about misleading accounts of the issue-based messages of our candidates just to score cheap political points and thus distract the discerning public.

    While we understand the frustration of dealing in their hard-to-sell, “expired milk” [apologies to BAT] in a competitive market, the FairPlay rule demands that you don’t associate the good with the bad product. We demand honour even among thieves!

    “We know the intention of the spin-doctors in selling an utterly false story that the highflying Labour Party candidate, Peter Obi, met with his PDP counterpart (Atiku) and reached a deal. Nothing can be further from the truth.”

    It further said, “Obi’s foreign trip, its motive, and where and who to meet are already in the public domain; his meeting in the UK with some Nigerian political leaders is visually seen by all.

    We understand why the focus is on the Obi-Datti candidacy; they are easily the front runners in this 2023 race and the tag team has irresistible messages that are resonating with the embattled Nigerian public who are anxious more than ever to reclaim and take back their country.

    “The LP candidates are on a divine mission to rescue and rebuild this country and cannot be distracted by any fabrications intended to mislead.

    Nigerian people have taken the steering from Obi and are driving him to the Aso Rock Villa; they will not look sideways for distractions,” the campaign said in further debunking a deal with Atiku.

    “Obi-Datti media office is privy to intelligence that many distorted stories will be dished to the public to create confusion in their minds of the public and notes that such a mission is dead on arrival because the people’s commitment to the Obidient assignment is total.”

    Source: Vanguard

  • Nassrawa Women backing Obi advocate peaceful polls

    Nassrawa Women backing Obi advocate peaceful polls

    Women groups backing Peter Obi, the Labour Party (LP) candidate for next year’s presidential election in Nasarawa State have appealed for peaceful elections in the country.

    Cecilia Anzaku, the women’s spokesperson stated this in her address in Lafion on Thursday during a stakeholders’ meeting in preparation for the LP National Women Leader’s visit to the state.

    She said there was the need for residents of the state to eschew all forms of violence in the 2023 general election and vote credible leaders into office.

    Mrs Anzaku said violence had affected the outcome of previous elections in the country, hence the need to advocate for peaceful elections.

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    She further narrated that the women support groups, numbering 22 with about 78,000 members across the 13 Local Government Areas of Nasarawa State, would be receiving the LP’s National Women Leader, Dudu Manuga, before the kick-off of the presidential campaigns on September 28, 2022.

    The spokesperson expressed confidence that Peter Obi and other candidates of the party would emerge victorious in the 2023 general election, saying Nigerians were tired of the All Progressives Congress and the Peoples Democratic Party.

    She said, “The leaders of the 22 women support groups are here to plan on how to receive the Labour Party National Women Leader who is supposed to be in the state before the presidential campaigns begin. Our members are about 78,000 across the state and we are ready to give her a rousing welcome.

    “Another reason for this meeting today is to urge residents of the state to avoid all forms of violence as we approach the campaign season for the 2023 general election. Violence in previous years had hindered us from electing credible leaders into office, so we do not want a repeat of such in the coming elections.

    “Nigerians are tired of the ruling political parties because they have failed us. Schools are closed due to insecurity, prices of food stuff have gone too high in the market, and so many wrong things happening in the country. We all want our country to be better, so I am confident that all Labour Party candidates will win their elections in 2023.”

    Earlier in her welcome address, the state Women Leader, Hajara Dalhatu, expressed gratitude to leaders of the support groups for the confidence reposed in Peter Obi and other candidates of the party and promised that their efforts would not be in vain.