Tag: Peter Obi

  • INEC endorses leadership of Peter Obi’s Labour Party faction

    INEC endorses leadership of Peter Obi’s Labour Party faction

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) says it has ratified the Labour Party’s leadership structure, recognising officials loyal to presidential candidate, Peter Obi.

    TheNewsguru.com, (TNG) reports that a faction of the Labour Party had rejected Mr Obi as the consensus presidential candidate, nominating another aspirant as the flag bearer.

    However, INEC’s official website showed that Julius Abure and Umar Farouk were recognised as the Labour Party’s national chairman and secretary; Akingbade Oyelakin as the national legal adviser.

    A former deputy national chairman of the party, Calistus Okafor, claiming to be the party’s chair, had sued Abure, Farouk and Oyelakin, declaring their leadership illegal. But the defendants insisted they were elected chairman and secretary at a party conference in Benin in March 2021.

    Last week, Okafor filed an ex parte application praying the Abuja Division of the Federal High Court to declare him the lawful chairman of the party.

    Okafor supports a presidential aspirant EJude Ezenwafor as the party’s candidate. He described him as “a man of integrity,” affirmed “to be the presidential candidate of the Labour Party come 2023.”

  • Shock as another flagbearer emerges in Peter Obi’s Labour Party

    Former Anambra Governor and Labour Party’s presidential flag bearer Peter Obi’s popularity and chances of becoming Nigeria’s president  is dwildling as another presidential candidate has emerged within the party.

    Jude Ezenwafor, a former chairman of the party in Anambra State, has been declared the winner of the presidential primary organized by a faction of the party.

    Ezenwafor’s affirmation took place in Abuja on Wednesday.

    “I am on a rescue mission to free Nigerian from social, economic and political crises currently bedevilling it.

    “Labour Party will win the general election. Our party is going to take over Nigeria and bring back the glory Nigeria needs.

    “I have been in the corridors of government for the past 20 years. We are here on a rescue mission,” NAN quoted Ezenwafor as saying.

    The development comes days after Peter Obi, was elected as the LP’s presidential candidate at a primary organized by the Julius Abure-led faction of the party.

    However, before Obi’s emergence a chieftain of Labour party Calistus Okafor had challenged the legality of the Abure-led faction before an Abuja Federal High Court .

    In a ruling on May 30, the presiding judge, Inyang Ekwo, ordered that the LP and some of its executives be served with a fresh suit challenging the party’s leadership.

    The matter was then adjourned till June 30 for further mention.

    Recall that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has given all political parties until June 9 to conclude their primaries.

  • 2023: Obi, LP and the Igbo quest for presidency – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Due to the unpredictable scheduling and rescheduling of its congresses and primaries, most Nigerians still doubt the readiness of the All Progressives Congress (APC) to hold its presidential primaries “finally” fixed for June 6 to 8, 2022, in Abuja.  The party repeatedly shifted the timelines for its political activities that culminated in the National Convention to elect party officials in March 2022, and has continued in that trajectory in the primaries to pick its presidential candidate for the 2023 general election.

    As a ruling party, the APC ought to show examples, and lead other political parties, particularly the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), in the conduct of its affairs. Rather, it’s been aping the PDP in slating its political programmes.

    The APC adopts this ploy to achieve several aims: To give the party ample time to resolve its myriad of problems, especially in the state chapters; to enable it recalibrate its strategies, and align with the PDP programmes, in order to outwit the opposition; and to perfect its alleged scheming to foist a “consensus candidate” on members, as was the case in the March 2022 convention for the post of Chairman of the National Working Committee (NWC) of the party.

    On that score, President Muhammadu Buhari, in a “you-scratch-my-back-and-I’lI-scratch-yours” gesture, reportedly pleaded with the APC governors to allow him pick his successor,” as he’s given them the free hand to choose theirs. What a revelation by a president kowtowing to the whims and caprices of state governors!

    Time is running out for the APC shenanigans, as the PDP that’s mocked the shifty nature of its political activities has chosen former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as its candidate for the 2023 polls.

    The die is cast for the APC to either hold transparent and credible primaries, or manipulate the system to achieve “consensus” and trump other aspirants’ ambition to be President of Nigeria.

    The APC and its powers-behind-the-scenes would be unplaying their hands to assume that the “disenfranchised” aspirants would swallow their bait without a fight. It’s the last card the party may play before its predicted implosion en route 2023.

    Meanwhile, amid the cacaphonous agitation for the presidency to go South, and therefrom to the South-East, comes a subtle but persistent call for power to shift to the North-East, which similarly remains marginalised presidential.

    Thus, in the lead-up to the presidential primaries of the PDP, the North-East and South-East presented serious aspirants in Atiku and former Anambra State Governor Peter Obi, to vie for the sole party ticket.

    As the respective presidential and vice presidential candidate of the PDP in the 2019 general election, pundits, and some in the Atiku campaign had yearned for a repeat pairing of Atiku and Obi in the contest for the 2023 presidency.

    But the handlers in the Obi campaign, perhaps taking a cue from the aspirant, were unequivocal that their principal wouldn’t settle for the vice presidential slot of the PDP, or any other party, again.

    It’s no surprise that days before the PDP primaries, Obi, who reportedly “read correctly” that the intrigues at play were unfavourable to his securing the party ticket, decamped to the Labour Party (LP), which then picked him as its presidential flagbearer in the February polls.

    Based on a couple of factors, polity watchers had no doubt about the PDP ticket going to Atiku. First, Atiku, who’d been a member and candidate of several parties, has the political influence, the reach, the structure and the resources to prosecute the crucial and critical 2023 presidential election.

    Second, the facts on ground indicate that Northern “power brokers and kingmakers” want the presidency to remain in the North. Hence, the party also juggled the timeline for its primaries.

    In the foregoing scenarios, Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike, a more formidable aspirant than Obi that could match Atiku grit-for-grit, currency-for-currency and vote-for-vote, was defeated in the alleged Northern scheming for the PDP ticket at the primaries.

    Now, the South-easterners have nothing to cheer, but to rue their missed opportunity to produce the presidential candidate of the PDP, even as the chances of the zone seem slimmer on the platform of the APC, which they’ve pinned much hopes on.

    Yet, a silver lining beckons on the South-East in the Labour Party that’s chosen Obi as its presidential candidate, with his emergence looking good to answer the zone’s quest to produce a Nigerian president of Igbo extraction.

    A popular Yoruba adage says, “What you are looking for in Sokoto is right here in your sokoto.” In other words, the presidency the Igbo have fruitlessly struggled to achieve in the PDP and APC is in their domain, and attainable under the LP.

    But this is on one condition: Ahead of the 2023 elections, the South-East should adopt, and rally behind Obi and the LP, as representing the political interest of the Igbo at the make-or-mar polls.

    The South-East boasts of having tens of millions of Igbo outside of its zone across Nigeria, and the Ohanaeze Ndigbo Worldwide has pledged to “punish the PDP” for picking Atiku as its candidate. The Igbo can translate that “punishment” into massive votes for the LP.

    With the millions of votes it’s unstingily handed the PDP in each election cycle since 1999, Obi and the LP could give the PDP and APC a run for their money and votes in 2023.

    It’s over for complaints and lamentations about being schemed out of the political equation. It’s time to seize the bull by the horns and articulate, plan, strategise and execute programmes and processes to rally Igbo nationwide, to vote for Obi and the LP.

    If Igbo, and their supporters and sympathisers across party lines answer the cry for political emancipation, Obi could sweep the five South-East states, score majority votes in three of the South-South states, one or two of the South-West states, three of the Middle Belt states, two of the North-East states and one of the North-West states.

    That would amount to the LP securing majority votes in 15 or 16 of the 36 states of the federation, leaving the APC, PDP, New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) and other registered political parties to scramble for votes in 21 or 20 states, in some of which the LP could garner the mandatory 25 per cent of votes.

    Well-executed, Obi and the LP would be home and dry on Election Day! But will the Igbo vote for an Igbo? Without going into history, the Igbo have never voted for their own since 1999. The Hausa/Fulani vote for Northerners, the Yoruba vote for Westerners, why can’t the Igbo vote for Easterners for Nigeria’s presidency?

    The 2023 general election is a watershed that provides the Igbo an opportunity to change, with their “overwhelming votes,” the narrative of “marginalisation of the South-East” in national governance.

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

  • 2023: Peter Obi can only win presidency on social media – Pastor Giwa

    2023: Peter Obi can only win presidency on social media – Pastor Giwa

    A popular Nigerian cleric, Pastor Adewale Giwa has said Peter Obi, presidential flagbearer of the Labour Party (LP) can only win the 2023 presidential election on social media.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Pastor Giwa, who is the Senior Pastor of the Awaiting the Second Coming of Jesus Christ Ministry, Akure, Ondo State made this known on Friday.

    Giwa stressed that Obi does not have the strength to win the 2023 presidential election, while emphasising that the Labour Party presidential candidate only has followers on social media platforms, hence his capability of winning on social media.

    Obi who was a top presidential aspirant under the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had a few weeks ago moved to the Labor Party following what he described as issues that are at variance with his persona and principles.

    While stressing that Nigerian politics had been heavily monetized, the Pastor said the LP standard-bearer does not have the financial resources to pull an upset within the country’s political space.

    Speaking on Friday, Giwa who said Obi is only dreaming, maintained that many factors will work against Obi at the polls.

    “Peter Obi cannot do anything, he does not have the capacity, energy and strength. He is also not financially buoyant.

    “In Nigeria, if you don’t have money, you cannot become the president. Even if you have popularity without money, you can’t become the president. Everything about Nigerian politics is money.

    “Nigeria is not like America where politics is not monetized.

    “The primary election where he was picked is the final destination for Peter Obi. He is the president of social media and elections are not won on social media. So media users will always vote for him on that platform. He is dreaming.

    “Even the region where he is from is already widely divided politically. How will Obi be able to win,” the Pastor said.

  • Peter Obi likens 2023 presidential election to battle of Thermopylae

    Peter Obi likens 2023 presidential election to battle of Thermopylae

    Presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Peter Obi has likened the 2023 presidential election to the ancient battle of Thermopylae.

    According to Obi, the ancient battle of Thermopylae is when Greek forces, conscious of fighting for the life of Greece, held on against great odds in the defence of their country.

    The former Anambra State Governor stressed that the odds are great and seemingly insurmountable in the battle to retake Nigeria, but that with commitment, patriotism and understanding what ought to be would eventually be enthroned.

    Obi, who made this known in a series of tweets on his official Twitter profile on Tuesday, noted that “the journey is going to be a collective one that will certainly require the cooperation of critical stakeholders in our country, especially the youth, whose future has been thoroughly degraded”.

    He further stated that those responsible for the mess that Nigeria is in and those elected to take care of them have abandoned the national currency and are living in opulence and like kings, spend dollars to buy delegates as well as houses all over the world.

    Obi tweets read: I thank Nigerians; especially members of the Labour Party who gathered to partake in the primaries to choose the person that will fly Labour flag in the forthcoming National election to choose the President of Nigeria. I am honored to have emerged the candidate.

    “History beckons. Nigerians remain hopeful for a national rebirth, which implies returning Nigeria to Nigerians, farmers, teachers and students, lecturers, artisans, workers, pensioners & over a hundred million poor Nigerians who are not sure where their next meal will come from.

    “Painfully, our current dysfunctional system rewards unearned income and conspicuous consumption; allows university lecturers to remain on strike for months; keep our youths at home; & owe pensioners, who gave their patriotic sweat and their youthful energy to serve this country.

    “The despicable contrast is that those responsible for the mess and those elected to take care of them have abandoned the national currency and are living in opulence and like kings, spend dollars to buy delegates as well as houses all over the world.

    “Meanwhile, they owe most workers, lecturers and retirees. Yes, our country stands hijacked by forces of retrogression. We are almost zero in all indices of development. As a result, our future, especially those of the youth and generations unborn is in ruins.

    “We have become a laughing stock among other nations, including African countries where we were once revered. As a party that represents the workers and masses of this great nation, we are people organised and working for our economic rebirth.

    “As I have thereby been nominated, I humbly proclaim that the journey towards the emancipation of the country has begun. I note with humility that the journey is going to be a collective one that will certainly require the cooperation of critical stakeholders in our country, especially the youth, whose future has been thoroughly degraded.

    “I therefore thank all of you and call for your sustained support towards returning Nigeria to Nigerians from forces of bad leadership and retrogression. Such a noble tasks brooks no conscientious objectors.

    “I hardly use war metaphors for political analysis due to my belief that politics is not adversarial and not war. However permit me a little indulgence here, to relate what we are embarking on to the ancient battle of Thermopylae, where the Greek forces, conscious of fighting for the life of Greece held on against great odds in the defence of their country.

    “In the battle to re-take Nigerian, the odds are great and seemingly insurmountable, but with our commitment, patriotism and understanding that we are doing, what we are supposed to do for our country, lest she shall die, we shall move on discontent with what is and focused on enthroning what ought to be. In doing this, our battle cry shall remain: get your PVC and become part of this great libration!

    “Our governance mission will be twin-tracked. Secure Nigeria in every ramification: national security, human security, food security and tackling insecurity created by unemployment.

    “We will also seek to unite our nation by pulling our people out of poverty, and creating a new sense of nationalism and patriotism. Nigeria shall rise again: and her people will be proud to claim ownership of her patrimony. Doing so is in our collective national interest.

    “As I earnestly thank Nigerians for their faith in me. In the days ahead I will publish our governance manifesto, which will spell out our top governance priorities.  I assure you that no region; state, local government or communities will be left behind.

    “I also assure you all that the struggle continues and that victory is certainly in sight towards the guarantee of a meaningful future for our youths and making this country a respected & viable member of a 21st century world, that places high value on production over consumption. God bless you all and God bless Nigeria”.

  • 2023: What Peter Obi said after clinching Labour Party presidential ticket

    Former Governor of Anambra State, Mr Peter Obi has said Nigeria is in a dire need of effective leadership that could remove the country from a consuming to a productive nation.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Mr Obi made this known shortly after clinching the presidential ticket of the Labour Party to emerge the presidential flag bearer of the party for the 2023 elections.

    According to him, the only way to fight insecurity is to pull people out of poverty. He said that under his administration, education, power generation and the economy would be the priority if given the mandate as president.

    Obi said that having secured the mandate as the presidential candidate of the Labour Party, the journey to the presidency had begun.

    He said he would mobilise to harness votes from all nooks and crannies of the country to win the 2023 presidential election.

    TNG reports the former Anambra State Governor was elected unopposed as the presidential candidate of the Labour Party.

    He emerged the winner after all other aspirants stepped down for him and in the interest of the party in the presidential primary election that was held on Monday in Asaba, Delta.

    According to Chairman, Electoral Committee, Usman Abdullahi, five presidential aspirants were cleared to contest the election.

    Abdullahi disclosed that a total of 104 delegates from the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory(FCT), were accredited for the election.

    However, in the unfolding event, the presidential aspirants; Prof. Pat Utomi, Mr Joseph Faduri and Mrs Olubusola Emmanuel-Tella stepped down while Mr Charles Uchenna withdrew from the election

    Obi, at the end of the voting, polled a total of 96 votes to clinch the party ticket for the 2023 presidential election.

    While declaring the result, Abdullahi declared Obi winner and presidential candidate of the LP for the 2023 general election for having polled a total of 96 votes out of the 97 valid votes with one invalid vote.

    He described the process as free, fair, transparent and credible.

    TNG reports the process was monitored by the Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC) amidst tight security.

    The media, Nigeria Labour Congress and Trade Union Congress were represented.

  • BREAKING: Peter Obi emerges presidential candidate of Labour Party

    BREAKING: Peter Obi emerges presidential candidate of Labour Party

    Former Governor of Anambra State, Peter Obi has emerged as the presidential candidate of the Labour Party for the 2023 presidential election.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Obi emerged as the candidate of the Labour Party after Professor of political economy and co-convener of the National Consultative Front (NCFront), Pat Utomi stepped down from the race.

    The National Youth Leader of the party, Comr. Mr Eragbe Anslem, who was also vying for the office of the president, had earlier withdrawn from the race and declared support for Obi as well.

    Obi, who was the 2019 vice presidential candidate to Atiku Abubakar on the platform of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), emerged as the candidate of Labour Party at the ongoing National Convention of the party in Asaba, Delta State.

    TNG reports Mrs Olushola Emmanuel-Tella also stepped down midway into the State by State voting process for Obi to emerge winner of the Labour Party presidential primary election.

     

    Details shortly…

  • BREAKING: Pat Utomi steps down from Labour Party presidential race

    Professor of political economy and co-convener of the National Consultative Front (NCFront), Pat Utomi has stepped down from the presidential race of the Labour Party.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Pat Utomi stepped down from the presidential race of the Labour Party for Peter Obi, former Governor of Anambra.

    Details shortly…

  • Peter Obi, Pat Utomi, 3rd Force bigwigs storm Asaba for Labour Party Presidential Primaries

    …describe APC, PDP Delegates as Political Bandits ask EFCC to go after them

    …calls on more Progressives, Leaders of Conscience to join Labour Party Ballot Revolution

    The 3rd Force Movement under the aegis of the National Consultative Front, NCFront has called on more leaders of conscience in the country to quickly join the moving train of the Ballot Revolution of the working People crystalizing in the Labour Party, following its adoption by the 3rd Force Movement as the alternative ‘Big Tent’ for the 2023 elections.

    This call was made by Head of Public Affairs of the NCFront, Mallam Dr Tanko Yunusa in Asaba, Delta State, while addressing teeming supporters and delegates of the Labour Party, who have come to attend the Presidential Primaries of the Party, holding on Monday at the Orchid Hotels, GRA, Asaba, Delta

    Tanko Yunusa, in company of other Party Chieftains and bigwigs also used the occasion to carpet the ‘cash and carry’ Party Primaries of the APC and PDP, describing it as corruptive and criminal, calling on the EFCC to immediately go after the candidates and delegates of the APC and PDP for destroying Nigeria’s electoral system and moral fabric.

    The Front, while also applauding the bubbling political synergy between two leading Presidential Aspirants of the Party, Peter Obi and Pat Utomi in the Labour Party, also condemned the activities of some disgruntled elements and sponsored agents by APC and PDP in the Press, trying to create a false picture of incohesion in the Party

    The Movement, in the light of the crystalizing rainbow coalition in Labour Party, also invited all well meaning Nigerians, including Women, Youths, Physically Challenged, the Poor and the well to do, among others to immediately join forces with the Labour Party to rescue Nigeria from the heightening insecurity and imminent collapse foisted by incompetent rulers of the country, currently trading in Delegates all over the country.

  • 2023 presidency: My integrity is intact -Peter Obi replies Wike

    Former Governor of Anambra State and a 2023 presidential aspirant, Peter Obi, has reacted to the comments made by Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike over his integrity following Obi’s resignation from the Peoples Democratic Party, (PDP) earlier in the week.

    Recall that Peter Obi had on Wednesday through a letter sent to the party secretariat posited that  recent developments within the PDP made it practically impossible for him to continue participating and making constructive contributions.

    Obi who later joined the Labour party has hinted that he would continue to pursue his ambition in his new party.

    Wike had earlier granted an interview on Channels Television where he stated  that the former Anambra State Governor lacks integrity and that he left PDP because he knew he would not win the presidential ticket.

    Appearing on  same platform, Channels Television on Friday evening, Obi was asked to respond to the claims put forward by Wike and the former Vice presidential candidate, said his integrity at PDP was intact.

    “Wike mentioned the issue of integrity. He said that my leaving questioned my integrity. I don’t know how that one came about.

    “But I think when you talk about integrity, you talk about the management of public resources. That is what we should be talking about in this country. And when such things are mentioned about me, I feel something is missing somehow.

    “Go and check my record as a governor, I was impeached for three reasons: 1, my office was approved to be renovated for N298 million but I renovated everything with N43.3 million. 2. My lodge was approved to be renovated for N486m but I did everything with N81m.

    “The number 3 item was that I was saving money without the authority of the House. From [my] day one[in office], we started saving money and went through the eight years that I was governor.

    “Go and ask any contractor that served with me, to talk about what I’m entitled to, inflated any contract, any supplier, anybody. And when I left office, I left behind $500m at that time because it was public money. I was managing public trust.

    “So for me, when you talk about integrity it questions your management of public trust and resources. Go to Anambra today, I have no land given to me by the State government.

    “My managing Director of my Housing Authority, Mike Nwafor, gave me land and two houses and I told him, ‘I’m not entitled to it’. Nobody has ever seen me, in my political life, sharing money,” Obi said.