Tag: Primary Elections

  • Nigerian Politicians And 2023 Primary Elections Hangovers – By Magnus onyibe

    Nigerian Politicians And 2023 Primary Elections Hangovers – By Magnus onyibe

    If the hangovers were the type that one feels after a revelry, or binge with friends after which one is reluctant to go back to work the next day ,it would not have mattered much .

    That is because, excessive alcoholic intake can be taken care of by engaging in quick detoxification. And being not keen to return to work can be cured by a reality check of the fear of being fired from the job or suffering income loss , if one’s boss is fair enough to make absence from work a loss of pay for only the period of absence.

    But the hangover being suffered by Nigerian politicians after the party primaries for the 2023 general elections that were held mostly during the end of the month of May and first week of June is much more than that.

    That is especially so for the presidential candidates of the two main political parties- ruling APC and main opposition, PDP that are now grappling with the dilemmas which their emergence have triggered via the actions of both parties in choosing their presidential candidates against the run of play.

    By now, it must be clear to most Nigerians that the two personalities – Bola Ahmed Tinubu, BAT in the case of APC and Atiku Abubakar, AA in the case of PDP are two powerful politicians whose political sagacity and ingenuity defied all logic to emerge as the candidates of their respective parties.

    In light of the above , they are irksome to some members even in the parties in which they are presidential flag bearers, simply because  their candidacy is fraught with technicalities that are disruptive to the traditional political settings , and therefore represent a major paradigm shift in the annals of Nigeria’s political office contestation at the presidential levels.

    Traditionally, if a presidential candidate is from the north,usually Hausa/Fulani and a Muslim , the running mate is often someone from the south , lgbo,ljaw or Yoruba. That has been the case since 1979 with Alhaji Shehu Shagari , a Muslim and Hausa/Fulani from Sokoto state who paired with Dr Alex Ekwueme, a Christian and an lgbo from Anambra state as presidential and vice presidential candidates respectively.

    Ditto for Olusegun Obasanjo, a Yoruba Christian from Owu in Ogun state and Atiku Abubakar , from Jada, Yola in Adamwa state , that were bestriding the Presidency and Vice Presidency , from 1999 to 2007. How can we  forget Umaru Yar’adua , a Muslim Hausa /Fulani from katsina state and Goodluck Jonathan Christian from Otuoke in  Bayelsa state presidency and Vice Presidency , 2007-2010 , as well as Jonathan and Namadi Sambo , a Muslim Fulani from Kaduna state presidency and Vice Presidency , 2011-2015.

    Even under military rule , pre and post 1979 return to democracy with Shagari and Ekwueme at the helm of affairs as President and Vice President, the military dictators were sensitive enough to observe and respect the delicate ethnic and religious lines by balancing the ethnic and religious fault lines required to keep our country on even keel.

    Having set the stage by putting things in context , it is proper that l dissect the hangovers that are being suffered by both BAT and AA , who are clearly the presidential front runners in 2023 and dwell a little bit on the threats posed by the fringe parties and the chances or otherwise of their candidates in having a shot at calling the shots in Aso Rock Villa next year.

    Beginning with the APC , where the apparent political miscalculations during the June 6-7th APC presidential convention, presumably careened out of control, following the underestimation of APC national leader, Bola Tinubu ,to pull a chestnut out of fire by becoming the presidential candidate of APC , against all odds , and which is one of the causes of the debilitating hangover now being suffered by the party . It is as a consequence of that unforeseen development of which the APC was clearly unprepared, that it is now contending with the hangover of swimming against the tide of finding a running mate that would compliment its candidate rather than threatening the chances of the party and worse still , endangering the unity of our country.

    That is basically because,a Muslim -Muslim ticket which appears to be the best option open to BAT, by all measures seems to be an anathema in light of the current high dissonance level between Muslims and Christians in Nigeria .

    That point is driven home by the media statements being issued by various Christian groups and even a Muslim interest platform that have expressed aversion to such an arrangement at the presidential level,which is significant.

    In a media report currently making the rounds , over the weekend, a group known as Nigeria Democracy Defense Watch ,(NDDW) led by the Ahmed Ibrahim Adamu and Otunba Adeniji Adegoke wrote a letter to president Buhari suggesting that ”a Muslim-Muslim ticket May portray Nigeria as an Islamic and sectarian nation”

    It may be argued that the late Moshood Kashimawo Okikiola, MKO Abiola, a Yoruba Muslim like BAT, contested for the presidency under the SDP in 1993 by pairing with Ambassador Babagana Kingibe, another Muslim from Borno state and won. But the level of ethnic and religious animosity now prevailing in our country manifesting in extreme hostility was absent in 1993.

    In fact , the oddity of a Muslim-Muslim presidency may be the critical,but unannounced reason that the June 12, 1993 election believed to the fairest of political party elections in Nigeria was annulled by then head of state general Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida,IBB.

    As it may be recalled,lBB had indicated in the numerous media interviews that he has granted in nearly 30 years after the sad event of June 12 1993 election annulment, that it was done to assuage the anger of members of the military- perhaps his kitchen cabinet who were opposed to the development.Hopefully, IBB would reveal exactly the identity of the officers that were opposed to his allowing MKO Abiola’s victory to be upheld and their reason for being so resolute about it in his memoir, if he eventually writes it or authorizes one.

    Before then, it needs being brought to the fore that in uncanny ways, the June 1993 annulment of the presidential elections won by MKO Abiola by IBB echoes or bears similarity to the January 6 ,2020 attempted annulment of Joe Biden’s victory as president of the United States of America, USA, by then president Donald Trump and which is currently being investigated by the congress of that country.The parallel lies in the fact that then incumbent president Trump tried unsuccessfully to get congress to upturn the election victory of Biden via pressure on Vice President Mike Pence and members of the parliament to deny Biden’s victory by using the occasion of the statutory endorsement and validation by parliament to invalidate the result. But for the existence of robust institutions of democracy in the USA ,Trump would have had his way in the manner that Babangida successfully annulled June 12, 1993 presidential elections of which MKO

    Abiola, who was the adjudged winner, but was denied the crown.

    As a country that believes in engaging in post mortem of events in order to avert future occurrence, the congress of the USA is investigating the June 6, 2020 invasion of The Capitol, by pro-Trump insurgents who besieged the Congress hall and unleashed mayhem on congress men and women while in the process of endorsing Biden’s victory. Right now, the inquisition is being carried out in the full glare of Americans via live television broadcast . Unsurprisingly, that was not the case with June 12, 1993 annulment in Nigeria and one of the reasons, Africa is referred to as a dark continent, and why,indeed Nigeria is still in the doldrums and even deemed as an basket case  in the comity of civilized countries.

    That being the case , how June 12 , 1993 happened has remained a mystery, and subject of conjecture as l have just done by speculating that non-acceptance of Muslim-Muslim presidency by some influential military high command members may be an unsung reason.

    For the sake of emphasis, had we as a nation known what informed the decision by lBB and his kitchen cabinet to annul June 12th presidential election via a public enquiry whose report is made public , perhaps it would have been legislated against and maybe Bola Ahmed Tinubu would not be caught in a similar web today.

    And our country’s leaders lack of interest in looking at the past experience with June 12th 1993 debacle to enable it chart a better future in our presidential elections may be attributable to the fact that the sad event occurred under a military dictatorship that is opaque, as opposed to a democracy where transparency is a sine qua non.

    Worse still, even where a panel of inquiry were to be  set up to examine the cause of such an aberration, the reports are likely to be swept under the carpet. Take Oputa Panel Report for instance. It is an investigative panel set up by president Olusegun Obasanjo in 1999 to investigate human rights abuse from 1984 to 1999 when Nigeria was ruled by the quartet of generals, Abdulsalami Abubakar, Sani Abacha,  Ibrahim Babangida, and then general Muhammadu Buhari , military head of state ,1983-85 and 1985-1993 ,1993 -1998 and 1998-1999 respectively.

    The panel of enquiry headed by late justice Chukwudifu Oputa,with bishop Hasan Kukah as secretary wrote a report that never saw the light of day,hence our country failed to under go a reset in the manner that Rwanda has witnessed a rebirth after its ethnic cleansing tragedy in 1994.

    Apart from the challenge of both the president and his vice being of the same faith which appears untenable given the prevailing circumstances of religious disharmony in our country, that has been elevated to a frightening level in the past decade or so;and which is like an albatross hanging over the presidential candidate of the APC , Bola Ahmed Tinubu: the minimum educational qualifications that a Nigerian president should possess is another major cause of indigestion in Tinubu’s camp.

    Both of these factors -Muslim -Muslim ticket palava and minimum educational qualifications imbroglio are the reasons the winner of the APC presidential primaries has been unable to consummate his victory nearly one month after he won it such that instead of appointing a running mate, he opted for a place-holder .

    Evidently, his inability to appoint a substantive running mate rather than  exercising the option of nominating a place-holder in the person of lbrahim Masari from katsina state, does not augur well for his presidential ambition because it is tricky. But owing to the prevailing circumstances, he needed to beat INEC deadline by buying time while trying to figure out the intricacies of ethnic and religious realities that define our politics, and the Place-Holder concept lends itself as temporary solution .

    A Place-Holder which is an option that Tinubu exercised has thus entered into the lexicon of Nigerian political actors and it is now a popular line of action in the political space as other presidential candidates, (not the PDP) have copied the innovative concept pioneered by the inimitable Bola Tinubu who is best known for his sagacity having been the one who institutionalized deputy governors being political neophytes having leant a bitter lesson from his hard fight to fend off his first deputy, the politically savvy Kofoworaola Bucknor, that allegedly was bent on impeaching him. It was Tinubu who also changed for good the concept of Local Government Areas, LGAs to Local Council Development Authorities, LCDAs after winning a landmark legal battle against then president Olusegun Obasanjo. So, it is to his credit that the concept of creating additional local councils by states has now become standard. By contributing another feature like the Place-Holder concept that is currently a fad into the political milieu, Tinubu has by and large become another touch bearer.

    It is against that backdrop that, BAT , who has issues with the academic certificates that he submitted or did not submit to the Independent National Electoral Commission , INEC has become another source and cause of tension and talking point engaging the attention of Nigerians from the mosques , churches, barbers shops, market squares to online social media platforms dominated by the youths, as they animately and passionately debate what the future portends.

    The question now is , would Tinubu , who given the fact that he has successfully fought numerous political battles- university of Chicago certificate scandal as lagos state governor ,1999-2007 and alleged narcotics racketeering indictments in the USA during his sojourn in the Diaspora as recently reported by Bloomberg , survive the current bogeys- Muslim-Muslim ticket which is likely his last resort, at a great risk , and minimum educational qualifications quagmire of which he may be compelled to present his primary and secondary school certificates to avoid being disqualified ?

    Given his antecedents of navigating political stormy waters , his fans believe that BAT like the proverbial cat that has nine lives would prevail as they are optimistic that the current ill wind would eventually blow away.

    On the part of the main opposition, PDP and it’s presidential candidate, Turaki Atiku Abubakar , since his emergence as the flag bearer on 28th May , there has arisen more or less been an anarchic situation of a stunning proportion.

    It started with the party going against its presidency rotation policy practiced since it was birthed in 1998/99 and embedded in its constitution. In the belief that an opposition party may not be compelled so much to hinge its future on a party dogma than leveraging a winning formula and candidate with the brightest chance to win , the rotation pendulum was not allowed to swing to the south as was expected. Instead, a more pragmatic approach of building on the momentum (about 13 million votes) already gathered by her presidential candidate in the last presidential contest in 2019,Atiku Abubakar was adopted. To some extent , unlike the unforeseen circumstances that threw up Asiwaju Tinubu as the presidential candidate of the APC, the emergence of Abubakar as PDP’s standard bearer can not be said to be unanticipated.

    That is underscored by the fact that the party debated and agreed to throw its presidential candidacy open instead of rotating it exclusively to the south, as it should have, all things being equal.

    Like the quagmire afflicting the APC which looks like catch 22, by not respecting the party’s presidential rotation agreement , the PDP has left a bad taste in the mouth, not only of PDP members from the south east and south zones which are the party’s strong hold, but also of the middle belters who have been vociferous along with Ohaneze-lgbo sociopolitical group , PANDEF -Niger Delta platform of the same hue with Ohanaze and Middle Belt Forum, MBF,  a north central states political forum who are thumping their noses at the PDP presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar.

    Further muddying the water is the fact that , Nyesom Wike,the current governor of Rivers state ,who is from the south-south zone , also contested for the presidential ticket ,and ended up as the first runner up to the winner of the contest.But he has subsequently been passed over as running mate to Atiku Abubakar. Denying Nyesom Wike a consolatory price as Vice Presidential candidate in light of the fact that he has been the major pillar of support for the PDP since it lost the presidency in 2015 , has gaslighted the party which at this point in time should have been taking advantage of the cul de sac that the difficulty in choosing a Vice Presidential candidate poses to Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s presidential ambition. But instead, PDP presidential candidate, Abubakar is struggling to glue together the party which currently seems to be on tenterhooks because of the unbalanced equation of distribution of party posts whereby both the PDP presidential candidate and party chairman are from the same north, leaving the south in the lurch.

    It is rather unfortunate that a combination of the present actions and inactions of PDP leadership as well as the burden of the former president Olusegun Obasanjo, OBJ who was Atiku Abubakar’s boss , relentlessly tagging his former second-in-command as corrupt without proof,and Bloomberg’s equally excoriating report on allegations of financial malfeasance in the USA against Turaki Abubakar,of which there is also no evidence of conviction of the crime against the PDP presidential candidate, constitute significant obstacles and impediments to PDP’s return as the ruling party at the center in 2023.

    Again, there is solace in the fact that Atiku Abubakar who is a veteran of several presidential contests at both the party primaries levels and as the candidate of his party in presidential elections in 2019 , is an established and proven goal getter with an indomitable spirit and capacity to win. It is unsurprising that in a recent press statement, he has vowed to mend the broken fences within the party , just as the BOT chairman of the party, senator Walid Jibrin has recommended a high powered diplomacy shuttle involving both the presidential candidate and his running mate to Nyesom Wike who has been been let down by the party that he invested a lot in building in the past seven (7)  years. Reportedly, both the APC and Labor party are seeking his hands in political marriage.

    Hopefully, the need to forge a common front before 2023 by applying a healing balm on the wounds of those whose ox were gored during the vicious battle fought in the course of the party primaries would not be treated with levity by Atiku Abubakar in the manner that Goodluck Jonathan allowed the PDP to collapse in 2015, by engaging in foolish pride of not seeking rapprochement with aggrieved critical stakeholders before they started jumping ship.

    All things being equal, would Turaki Atiku Abubakar be luckier than he was in 2019  and prevail in the impending 2023 presidential contest ?

    Given the prevailing political dynamics in our country whereby citizens are disdainful of the horrendous level of insecurity of lives and properties, as well as the unprecedented level of hunger and starvation stalking the land , which can best be characterized as extreme state of anomie , the presidency of Nigeria is for the PDP and Atiku Abubakar to lose, if they do or do not get their acts right early enough.

    And the hand writing is already on the wall if the massive defections from

    APC to PDP in Sokoto and Katsina states as well as across the country is anything to go by. Despite the positive optics, reconciliation efforts to calm. Frayed nerves need to be afoot right now.

    Aside from the dissonances in the two major parties-the APC and PDP towards their quest for clinching the 2023 due to ethnic and religion configuration challenges -accentuated by the complexities foisted by heightened ethnic and religious rivalries , there is another threat.

    And the threat is that those that the APC and PDP should be watching from their rear mirror are the Labor Party, LP, energized by ex presidential candidate of PDP who decamped,mr Peter Obi, now a wave making presidential candidate of the LP and Nigerian National Political Party, NNPP , founder and presidential candidate , Dr Musa KWAKWANSO, a former governor of Kano state.

    On their own , both parties and candidates pose no real threat. But combined ,they can constitute a real danger to both APC and PDP mission to Aso Rock Villa in 2023.

    To be clear, while l do not see a path way to KWAKWANSO being a running mate to Obi as being speculated , it is not impossible that both parties may agree to poll resources together in a support of either of both political party’s candidates especially for the presidential election.

    An even greater threat is a combination of all the opposition parties apart from the PDP against the ruling party, APC.

    That would be reminiscent of what happened in 2013/14 when four opposition political parties collapsed their systems into one platform-the APC which they were able to leverage in ousting the PDP after 16 years of holding sway as the ruling party at the centre.

    Currently , there are activities towards making such political phenomenon happen again, and it can not be discountenanced or dismissed because there is already proof of concept evidenced by the gang up and subsequent ability of APC to kick out PDP in 2015.

    Nothing stops that positive history from being re-enacted in 2023 because it need not take another sixteen (16) years for it to materialize .

    Whilst , it is not yet known whether any of the two major parties would woo the smaller parties with a view to merging with or subsuming them into their fold in the manner that the big banks took over smaller ones in the wake of banking consolidation in Nigeria in the last decade , it is unlikely that any single party, APC or PDP would without coalition with other political parties rule over Nigeria from 2023.

    And that would be a positive development for democracy in Nigeria, since the president in 2023 would not have the sole authority to allot all the strategic positions to his kith and kins or members of same faith with him which is presently a sore point and a major reason that the unity of our country is on a precipice.

    In the event that the party that ultimately wins the presidential contest rules in partnership with one or two smaller parties such as LP,NNPP, APGA , PRP , YPP etc, strategic government positions would be shared equitably amongst the partnering party platforms .

    That is because these micro parties which are fast developing sturdy roots in their local catchment areas -ethnic or religious enclaves- would be formidable local forces, unless the behemoths like APC , PDP and to lesser extent LP and NNPP,  ahead of the 2023 presidential polls, absorb them.

    All said and done , authorities should do well to define what minimum educational qualifications to be eligible to become president of Nigeria entails. During the launch of my book , “Becoming President of Nigeria. A Citizen’s Guide “ on 10th May , the keynote speaker professor Mike Ikhariale, a constitutional lawyer noted that contrary to popular views, the minimum educational qualification for a president of Nigeria is not first school leaving certificate. But no certificate at all . All that is required is ability to comprehend and speak English language and that would be determined by INEC, not any law court.

    Making that clarification would spare Nigerians the anguish of constantly being bombarded with the question of what is the minimum educational qualifications of a presidential candidate?

    It is a challenge that the incumbent president Buhari’s candidacy also threw up in 2015 and 2019. I would not be surprised if that matter that dogged Buhari’s presidency is still in court. That the APC candidate, Bola Tinubu is also currently being wracked by that malaise,  is simply because it is a nebulous rule that the National Assembly,NASS can make clearer as it did with the lacuna created by not transmitting power to the Vice President when president Umaru Yar’adua of blessed memory suddenly passed away on active duty in 2010. Although, the challenge was temporarily solved with the enactment of the Doctrine Of Necessity, it has subsequently been corrected permanently by an act of parliament which makes it automatic the absence of a president to imply that his deputy is in charge .

    By the same token , the Muslim-Muslim presidency conundrum, is also a Tinubu nightmare. That is despite Kaduna state governor, Nasir El Rufai’s experiment of that configuration in his state where both he and his deputy are Muslims.

    And as we all know , Kaduna state is the ground zero for ethnic and religious conflicts and the leading state in death tolls or human carnage arising from violent clashes. The tragic event in that state may likely be a direct or indirect fall out of the political configuration at the governorship level.

    As an antidote to the Muslim-Muslim ticket miasma, perhaps it would help If all the strategic posts such as President, Vice President, Senate President, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Chief Justice , etc were to be laid on the bargaining table for sharing . Were that to be the case , maybe  there would not be so much hullabaloo about a Muslim-Muslim presidential ticket, if upfront , Christians also get lucrative posts that would checkmate aberrant behavior by the executive. That is assuming the current polarization of our country along religious lines does not ebb but persists.

    Similarly, if rotation of presidency that was hashed out during the 1994/5 general Sani Abacha convened constitutional conference were to have been embedded in the 1999 constitution by the various National Assemblies from 1999 till date ,it would not trigger the bad blood now roiling the rank and file of PDP.

    Curiously,  both the Nasir El-Rufai committee report on how the APC can move forward and the Bala Mohamed committee set up by the PDP to chart the future of the party made recommendations on how our beloved country can experience a rebirth .

    How and why our leaders have chosen to ignore those monumentally useful recommendations, beats me hollow.

    Then again , is that not why it is often said that politics is complex ?

     

    Magnus onyibe, an entrepreneur, public policy analyst ,author, development strategist, alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, Massachusetts, USA and a former commissioner in Delta state government, sent this piece from lagos.

    To continue with this conversation, pls visit www.magnum.ng

  • APC Primaries: Buhari assures of healing before 2023 polls

    APC Primaries: Buhari assures of healing before 2023 polls

    President Muhammadu Buhari has said the leadership of All Progressives Congress (APC) will sustain the post-primaries healing process to ensure fairness, justice and unity before the 2023 general elections.

    The president said this on Tuesday in Abuja during an audience with some APC senators on the outcome of the party primaries and its implications for the party.

    He said that complaints were received from some members and that machinery had been put in place by the National Working Committee to address their concerns.

    “In keeping with our ethos, therefore, I shall continue to address the ensuing challenges and grievances through the party machinery while paying keen attention to the outcomes.

    “I must also remind you of the primacy of justice in all our actions. If justice is denied, the outcome is usually unpleasant.

    “This is because you are the members who keep the party running. Some members of the National Working Committee visited the National Assembly recently to dialogue with our legislators.

    “The leadership of the party is currently addressing the outcomes as part of the way forward”, he said.

    Buhari encouraged all the party functionaries to adhere to the truth and to be fair to all parties in any dispute.

    He told the APC senators that the strength and victory of the party in the election would depend on unity of members and their ability to prevent injustices or heal them, perceived or real.

    “As the leader of the party, one of my primary roles is to ensure that our culture of internal democracy and dispute resolution is strengthened.

    “This is by creating the opportunity for members to ventilate their opinions, views and grievances at different levels.

    “Notwithstanding the fact that we have accomplished 23 years of uninterrupted democratic governance, our journey is still in a nascent stage and we continue to learn from our challenges and mistakes.

    “Similarly, our party is still evolving in its culture and practices and it is my expectation and hope that we shall attain a mature level in our internal conduct,’’ he said.

    The president urged party members to exercise restraint and continue to demonstrate commitment to the ideals of the party while the leadership should continue to build and develop the APC and the country.

    “I have noted your grievances, particularly as it concerns the just concluded processes, the cost to the nation, the threat to the majority position held by our party in the legislative chambers.

    “I have also noted and likely consequent cost to the electoral fortunes of our party as we approach the general elections. We must not allow these dire threats to come to pass.

    “I must acknowledge that in every contest, there must be a level playing ground just as there would be grievances at the end. That is the test of our democratic credentials, systems and practices.

    “I have since the conclusion of the processes been inundated with various reports and complaints,’’ Bahari said.

    The president assured that “justice shall prevail, aggrieved members shall be assuaged and the interest of the party and the nation shall be protected.’’

    He thanked the senators for suggesting a meeting on the issues, which include the future of the party and resolving the challenges arising from the recent election-related activities, particularly, the primaries.

    In his remarks, leader of the delegation, Chief Whip of the Senate, Sen. Orji Kalu, said at least 22 senators and members of the party were unhappy with the outcome of the primaries in their states, noting that they felt disenfranchised by the process.

    He said the legislators had made sacrifices for the growth of the party and democracy in the country and asked for the president’s intervention.

    “Mr President, in the Senate we have worked hard and consistently sold your programmes beyond party lines. Be assured always of our support,’’ he said.

  • APC Primary: Why Buhari refused to act as elected autocrat  – Presidency

    APC Primary: Why Buhari refused to act as elected autocrat – Presidency

    The Presidency on Tuesday said President Muhammadu Buhari did not suffer any form of contraints in arriving at decisions leading to the smooth conduct of the governing All Progressives Congress (APC) party’s primary.

    Asiwaju Bola Tinubu emerged winner of the party’s primary conducted between June 8 and 9. Tinubu polled 1,271 votes to defeat his closest rivals, former Minister of Transportation, Mr  Rotimi Amaechi who scored 316 votes and Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo who garnered 235 votes.

    Malam Garba Shehu, the President’s media aide, who was reacting to mixed comments on the just concluded APC primaries in a statement on Tuesday in Abuja, said the president had refused to impose a consensus candidate or act as an elected autocrat.

    According to him, by this president’s stance, people’s faith and that of the international community in nation’s democracy had received a major boost since the completion of the APC nomination.

    Shehu said: ”Luckily for Nigeria, President Buhari does not suffer from such constraints. He refuses to act as the elected autocrat.

    ”The President had a clear purpose leading up to the primary: to ensure a transparent, free and fair process that will bring back people’s faith in democracy by taking good governance up to the grassroots level.

    ”By this alone, people’s faith and that of the international community in our democracy has received a major boost since the completion of the APC nomination.

    The presidential aide, who stated that the APC presidential flagbearer  would be enjoying Buhari’s unwavering support, dismissed the speculative media reports arising from the conduct of the primary.

    He said: ”When it is election season we all expect speculation to reach fever-pitch.

    ”The press pores over every word spoken, scours every photo taken, and reports every indication suggested, seeking signs of who is supporting who like private investigators – or fiction writers.

    ”There’s no greater intrigue for this kind of speculation-journalism than a party flagbearer primary.

    ”But it only comes around once every four years – or every eight following President Buhari’s second term. Therefore, the media must make the most of it.

    ”So, what a disappointment the All Progressives Congress (APC) party flagbearer primary must have been for those who assembled to witness a catastrophe?

    ”No intrigue, no division, no disagreement, no defeated candidates rejecting the result, no splits, no third-party runs.

    ”Only determination to rally around the chosen flagbearer to deliver victory and an APC third term in February 2023.”

  • Primaries: How Buhari safeguarded APC from disintegration

    Primaries: How Buhari safeguarded APC from disintegration

    President Muhammadu Buhari in the course of the week appraised the series of consultations held so far towards getting a widely acceptable presidential standard bearer for the governing All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The president, who met with members of the National Advisory Council of the APC on June 5, rightly predicted a successful party’s convention at the Eagle Square between June 7 and 8.

    The president at the meeting with members of the Council, said: “We are on the way towards winning our third straight victory since 2015.”

    Buhari also met behind closed doors with Northern governors elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the State House, Abuja, on June 6.

    Malam Garba Shehu, the president’s spokesman, in a statement confirmed that Buhari again, cleared all doubts about his stand on the choice of a presidential candidate for the governing APC.

    Shehu quoted the president as insisting that he had “anointed no one”.

    Buhari said he had a clear mind about what he was doing and asked the APC governors to feel the same way.

    On June 7, Gov. Yahaya Bello of Kogi and presidential aspirant of APC then, had met with the president and disassociated himself from the party’s consensus plan.

    Buhari, who addressed the convention on June 8, urged members of the APC to remain united and avoid acrimony.

    He also enjoined delegates at the special convention to consider voting the presidential candidate with the best chances of securing victory in the 2023 general elections.

    He said the leadership of the party must continue to forge the unity of purpose among party members and to keep securing needed compromises in the interest of the party.

    On the same day, the president presented the All Progressives Congress Victory Flag to Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, who emerged winner of the just concluded party’s presidential primary election.

    Delegates of the APC at the convention elected the former Lagos State governor as APC  presidential flagbearer for the 2023 presidential election.

    Tinubu polled 1,271 votes to defeat his closest rivals, former Minister of Transportation, Mr  Rotimi Amaechi, who scored 316 votes, and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, who garnered 235 votes.

    Buhari later congratulated Tinubu, the APC presidential flagbearer in the 2023 elections.

    The president declared: “Having emerged victorious he has our full and unwavering support.”

    Similarly, the president on June 9, described the just-concluded presidential primary of the APC as one of the most competitive and peaceful in the history of Nigeria’s democracy.

    Buhari stated this in a letter addressed to Gov. Atiku Bagudu of Kebbi State and Chairman, Progressives Governors Forum.

    The president commended the role played by Bagudu in the success of the primary that produced the standard-bearer of the party in the 2023 elections, Tinubu.

    On June 9, the Nigerian leader hosted the outgoing Ambassador of South Sudan to Nigeria, Paul Molong, who paid him a farewell visit at the State House, Abuja.

    Buhari expressed satisfaction over the cordial relations between Nigeria and South Sudan.

    Also on Thursday night, the president hosted the APC presidential flagbearer, who was on Thank-You visit to the State House, Abuja.

    Speaking to State House correspondents after the meeting, Tinubu pledged to sustain Buhari’s legacies when he wins the election and is sworn in as his successor.

    He commended the president for providing a level-playing field for the process of selecting the party’s presidential candidate.

    The president concluded his official engagements for the week on Friday with the inauguration of the Presidential Council on Digital Economy and e-Government, promising that his administration will continue to take advantage of digital technologies to transform every sector of the economy.

    He directed the Minister of Communications and Digital Economy, Prof. Isa Pantami, to chair the council on his behalf and give regular updates.

    He tasked members of the council to work towards further strengthening the capacity of government to develop, adopt and deploy digital technologies to make government more efficient and transparent, thereby improving Nigeria’s global standing in the ease of doing business index.

  • Take aways from the presidential nominations – By Dakuku Peterside

    Take aways from the presidential nominations – By Dakuku Peterside

    After a long voyage , all the political parties have concluded their special conventions and primaries, and they now have presidential flag bearers representing the parties at the polls next year. The past two weeks have been an endless season of tension, permutations, and intrigues. The drama that brought the two presidential candidates to victory is captivating and pulsating. There were no apparent upsets as the two presidential candidates from APC and PDP are political heavyweights and represent the culmination of what Nigerian politics have been in the past two decades.

    The symbolism of their candidature is not lost on us – the triumph of the political godfathers, the super rich and high-powered stakeholders in our political firmament . Whether their candidacy is what Nigerians expected or not, whether the process of choosing them is “dollarised” or not, whether their age is a factor in their efficiency in the presidential job or not, one of them would likely become the president come May 2023, barring any miracles.

    The theatre of presidential politics offers us the rare opportunity to reflect on our politics, our stunted development, and the future of our country. Like most Nigerians, I have conducted a post-mortem on the presidential primaries of the two major political parties in Nigeria borne out of my critical and sober reflection on all the political theatricals, actions and inactions of significant actors and institutions involved in the primaries. I want to share my five takeaways from the special convention of the two major political parties.

    First, I believe that Nigerians were interested in the primaries because they wanted the parties to choose a candidate who deeply understood the  myriads of Nigerian problems and could articulate solutions to them whilst galvanising all Nigerians to realise our collective aspiration as a people . Most people were disappointed because the primaries did not adequately showcase any candidate so that Nigerians could start making sense of who he is and what he represents. The profiles, service records, programmes and manifesto speeches of the aspirants did not count for much for the delegates who decided the presidential nomination.

    These attributes mattered to the public but not to delegates in their world. It was all about schemes, scams, and personal interest. A negligible number of delegates voted based on conviction of the competence and service record of the aspirants. Throughout the consultation and nomination process, except for an insignificant number of aspirants, nobody talked about how to solve our most pressing socio-economic  problems.

    Second, the primaries were auctions of some sort. What was at stake was who would be the highest bidder of an estate worth more than 411 billion US Dollars – the size of the Nigerian economy in 2019-2020. The leading aspirants going by what transpired at both conventions were ready to offer a paltry 100m USD for this piece of estate, making it the cheapest auction ever anywhere in the world. If we go by stories of some delegates that alleged that some aspirants offered between 5,000 and 20,000 USD each, a quick calculation will give you a vivid idea of the bid by leading aspirants in both political parties. Similar things happened on a smaller scale in the fringe parties.

    A lot has been said and written about the “dollarisation “of the presidential nomination process. It baggers belief that the presidency is for sale to the highest bidder at this stage of our political development. We discuss in and outside the venue of the primaries (social media, traditional media, and public sphere) about offering Dollars as an inducement  to delegates to vote for a candidate as if it is a normal behaviour.

    This action is a crime and, if proven, should have severe consequences on both the givers and the receivers. But not in Nigeria, where anything goes. Where is our collective conscience and morality? How do we want to be taken seriously as a country by other nations when the most important political office in the country is bought or sold to the highest bidder? How do we expect good leadership from a foundation of corruption and crass hedonism? Why must we be mercantile about our national leadership and development?

    Third, these primaries showcased elitism and elite dominance of the political system and structures. Major stakeholders, including the delegates, are of the elite class  or their cronies, and were there to do the bidding of the privileged class. It was a gathering of the political elite to struggle to control state power. We noticed different factions jostling for control. The gang of the governors was prominent in both PDP and APC primaries. Governors who controlled fiefdoms were directly or indirectly in control of delegates from their states, barring a few renegades who refused to be directed by the governors and must vote either based on personal conviction or dictates of the candidates that had paid Dollars.

    In these primaries, we saw the political elite’s insensitivity, manipulation  and greed displayed in gargantuan proportion, and even state  governors were not exempted. The level of personal greed was embarrassing, and there was no room for principles or conviction. Only a handful of the elite political class could restrain their greed even for money they do not need.

    Fourth, loyalty, morality  and friendship are meaningless in  Nigerian politics. The only thing that mattered was shifting interest. We saw politicians who have been long-time allies work at cross purposes and those who have been at each other’s throats for ages collaborate for personal gain and unfounded promises. Alliances and counter alliances were formed and broken. Politicians slaughtered personal relationships at the altar of political expediencies. Primordial sentiments and attachments led to friends and counterparts betraying each other.

    At long last, we saw ethnic feelings dictating choices made by some without considering what is best for Nigeria and the public the delegates are representing. Advocates of zoning felt hard done and cried wolf in both primaries, though Northern Governors Forum of APC  in a heroic act displayed unusual patriotism when the group insisted on presidential ticket of the party going south  . It may take time for the wounds created during these primaries to heal, and it may take time to rebuild trust and harmony among party members who felt betrayed and used by the system.

    Fifth, delegates did not vote for aspirants based on the issues of interest to the people they were supposed to represent. The welfare, interest and progress of the ordinary persons did not matter. Everything was purely transactional enterprise. Most Nigerians watching the primaries from home felt betrayed by the lack of sincerity of some aspirants who, at the last minute, when it mattered the most for them to sell their presidential aspirations to Nigerians, jettisoned the aspiration altogether and “en mass”, in some instances engage in the endorsement  of other aspirants thereby changing the equation of the selection process.

    These primaries illustrate the dire state of our politics and the need for a review of the whole democratic  process. The monetisation and dollarization of our politics leave a sour taste in the mouth of every democratic person. Although we have faulted the process, only time will tell whether the products of these processes will deliver Nigeria from this quagmire state and raise the hopes and aspirations of many hopeless Nigerians who have given up on Nigeria. The  candidates of the two major political parties, who  are wealthy political juggernauts, have been part of the orthodoxy, have planned for the presidency for many years, and have fought hard to clinch the ticket of their parties. We sincerely hope they have the elixir to Nigeria’s problems.

    At the end of my review, this convention or presidential nomination process revealed everything wrong with our politics – weak ideological foundation of the parties,the attitude of our people to democratic culture, the influence of poverty or lack of economic empowerment on political choices, the absence of citizenship rights and responsibilities in our politics, vanishing moral values and the desperation of the elite to hang on to power as the only means of survival and wealth in an economy that is very hard to create wealth privately.

    The whole charade  and shenanigans of the political class and their  desperation to grab power at all costs are linked to poverty and hopelessness in the land -poor people pay little or no attention to issues. Most ordinary Nigerians suffer from physical and material deprivation, whilst our political elites suffer from moral and mental poverty, as seen in their attitude and behaviours in the presidential nomination of two major  parties.

    We cannot continue this  way as a nation, and I hope subsequent primaries will see significant improvements in the identified areas. It is time to rethink our politics, party nomination process, the basis of our choices as individuals and the future of our country. I congratulate the presidential candidates of all the parties for winning the slot of their parties.

    I look forward to an issue-based campaign devoid of sleaze, mudslinging, ethnic and religious chauvinism, and campaign monetisation. We must get it right this time because we cannot afford to gamble with our collective destiny.

  • BREAKING: Tinubu wins APC presidential ticket

    Asiwaju Bola Tinubu has won the presidential ticket of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) for the 2023 general elections.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Tinubu defeated 13 other contenders to emerge as the presidential candidate of the APC at the Special National Convention of the party in Abuja on Wednesday.

    The report of results announced by the APC and monitored by this medium indicates that the former Lagos State Governor won the APC presidential primary election by a wide margin.

    At the time of filing this report, the results of votes scored by the former Minister of Transport, Rotimi Amaechi and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, top contenders in the race had been announced.

    TNG reports Amaechi polled a total of 316 votes, Osinbajo polled a total of 235 votes and President of the Nigerian Senate, Ahmad Lawan polled a total of 152 votes.

    Tinubu polled a total of 1,271 votes from delegates to emerge as the presidential candidate of the APC for the 2023 presidential election.

    More than 2,300 delegates voted in the contest that produced Tinubu as the presidential flagbearer of the ruling party.

    He is now scheduled to face the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar and others in the February 25, 2023 presidential election.

  • UPDATE: Amaechi, Tinubu, Osinbajo, others battle for APC presidential ticket

    Immediate past Minister of Transport, Rotimi Amaechi; former Governor of Lagos State, Bola Tinubu, and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo are among 14 aspirants currently slugging it out for who emerges as the winner of the presidential primary election of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports voting is currently ongoing at the Eagles Square, the venue of the special national convention of the APC, where the presidential flagbearer of the party is being decided.

    At the time of filing this report, 14 aspirants, including former Minister of State for Education, Emeka Nwajiuba, were still in the race. However, Nwajiuba was visibly absent from the venue of the APC special national convention.Nwajiuba’s younger brother has, however, given reasons why the Minister was absent.

    Other aspirants still in the race are Pastor Tunde Bakare, Mr Ahmed Rufai, Sen. Rochas Okorocha, Mr Jack Rich, Gov. Ben Ayade, Gov. David Umahi, Sen. Ahmed Yarima, Dr Ahmed Lawal, Gov. Yahaya Bello and Mr Ogbonnaya Onu.

    Nine aspirants had earlier withdrawn from the race including Mrs Uju Kennedy-Ohnenye, Dr Felix Nicholas, former Gov. Godswill Akpabio, former Gov. Ibikunle Amosun, former Speaker Dimeji Bankole, Sen. Ajayi Boroffice, Gov. Muhammad Badaru, Sen. Ken Nnamani and Gov. Kayode Fayemi.

    Only female aspirant, Kennedy-Ohnenye withdraws from APC presidential race

    Mrs Uju Kennedy-Ohnenye has withdrawn from the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential race.

    Nicholas announced his withdrawal while addressing delegates at APC Special National Convention on Tuesday in Abuja.

    He directed his supporters to vote for Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo at the convention.

    Former Gov. Godswill Akpabio and former Gov. Ibikunle Amosun had earlier withdrawn from the race urging his supporters to vote for Tinubu.

    Felix Nicholas withdraws from APC presidential race

    Dr Felix Nicholas has withdrawn from the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential race.

    Nicholas announced his withdrawal while addressing delegates at APC Special National Convention on Tuesday in Abuja.

    He directed his supporters to vote for Vice President Yemi Osinbajo at the convention.

    Former Gov. Godswill Akpabio, former Gov. Ibikunle Amosun and former Gov. Ibikunle Amosun had earlier withdrawn from the race urging his supporters to vote for Tinubu.

    Dimeji Bankole withdraws from APC presidential race

    Former Speaker of the House of Representative, Mr Dimeji Bankole, has withdrawn from the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential race.

    Bankole announced his withdrawal while addressing delegates at APC Special National Convention on Tuesday in Abuja.

    He directed his supporters to vote for Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    He was the fourth aspirant to withdraw from the race.

    Former Gov. Godswill Akpabio, former Gov. Kayode Fayemi and former Gov. Ibikunle Amosun had earlier withdrawn from the race, all urging their supporters to vote for Tinubu.

    Boroffice, Badaru, withdraw from APC presidential race

    Sen. Ajayi Boroffice (APC-Ondo) and Gov. Mohammed Badaru of Jigawa have withdrawn from the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential race.

    They announced their withdrawal while addressing delegates at APC Special National Convention on Tuesday in Abuja.
    They directed his supporters to vote for Asiwaju Bola Tinubu at the convention.

    Former Gov. Godswill Akpabio, former Gov. Ibikunle Amosun and former Gov. Ibikunle Amosun had earlier withdrawn from the race urging his supporters to vote for Tinubu.

    Fayemi withdraws from APC presidential race, asks supporters to vote Tinubu

    Gov. Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti, one of the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential aspirants, has withdrawn from the race.

    Fayemi announced his withdrawal while addressing delegates at the APC Special National Convention on Tuesday in Abuja.

    He directed his supporters to vote for Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu instead.

    Former Gov. Godswill Akpabio and former Gov. Ibikunle Amosun had earlier withdrawn from the race urging their supporters also to vote for Tinubu.

    Amosun withdraws from APC presidential race

    Former Governor of Ogun, Ibikunle Amosu, one of the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential aspirants, has withdrawn from the race.

    Amosun announced his withdrawal while addressing delegates at APC Special National Convention on Tuesday in Abuja.

    He directed his supporters to vote for Asiwaju Bola Tinubu at the convention.

    Former Governor of Akwa Ibom, Godswill Akpabio, had earlier withdrawn from the race urging his supporters to vote for Tinubu.

    Akpabio withdraws from APC presidential race

    Sen. Godswill Akpabio, one of the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential aspirants, has withdrawn from the race.

    Akpabio, also a former Akwa Ibom governor, announced his withdrawal while addressing delegates at APC Special National Convention on Tuesday in Abuja.

    He directed his supporters to vote for Asiwaju Bola Tinubu at the convention.

  • Timi Dakolo slams APC for using his song without permission

    Singer, Timi Dakolo has slammed the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) for using his song without his permission.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Dakolo’s hit song, Great Nation was played at a point during the presidential primary election of the APC on Tuesday.

    Great Nation was played when the party paraded an array of Nollywood actors, actresses and musicians.

    However, Dakolo was visibly absent from the list.

    Reacting to the use of his song, he tweeted: “Why use an artist song without their permission in a rally or campaign?

    “The things people get away with in this country called Nigeria. Actually this is the second time”.

     

  • Why Nwajiuba was absent from APC presidential primary election

    Prof Chinedu Nwajiuba, younger brother to former Minister of State for Education, Emeka Nwajiuba has explained why his elder brother did not attend the special national convention of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) at the Eagle Square in Abuja.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Uwajiuba, who was regarded as one of the key contestants, was visibly absent at the convention, where the presidential flagbearer of the party for the 2023 presidential election is decided.

    His name was called several times to come out to address the APC convention but he was not available.

    In a statement, he issued last night, the younger Nwajiuba who is the immediate past Vice chancellor of Federal University Ndufu Ebonyi State said his brother was betrayed by the leadership of the party.

    The statement reads: “Many friends are calling to find out why my brother, Dr. Hon. Chukwuemeka Nwajiuba did not come out to address the APC convention.

    “Simple: The understanding from the highest levels prior to his involvement, and considering his role in the founding of the APC, was that of consensus as was with the National Chairmanship a few months ago.

    “With that understanding, the Presidential ticket was to come to the South, and the southeast.

    “This has been the hope till the end of the negotiations. He, not wanting to be part of the Dollar and Naira bazaar, is convinced that what Nigeria needs now is no more of the same thing that has kept Nigeria at the low level it has been.

    “Our challenges as a country cannot be addressed at the same energy level by which they were created

    “God order our footsteps towards a better life for all Nigerians. God bless you”.

  • APC National Chairman preaches unity at party’s special convention

    APC National Chairman preaches unity at party’s special convention

    Sen. Abdullahi Adamu, the All Progressives Congress (APC) National Chairman on Tuesday in Abuja, said unity was the only glue that could hold the party together.

    He said this at the party’s special convention and presidential primary election, adding that it could not afford to go into the 2023 general elections divided.

    “It doesn’t take rocket science to unite a party. It takes sincerity of purpose, commitment and determination to sacrifice our individual interest and ambitions for the larger interest of the party,” he said.

    Adamu expressed grateful to the party’s members for standing by him and members of the National Working Committee (NWC) since he assumed office.

    He stressed the need for reconciliation in all the party’s state’s chapters that, according to him, are held: “hostage by avoidable grievances.

    “Efforts are required to work, perfecting electoral processes in our country, this feat would not have been attained without the cooperation of everyone concerned.

    “It is a clear indication that our party has emerged stronger from the grievances, we are united and we are speaking with one voice once more.

    “At the end of the current exercise, we shall begin a steady march towards the 2023 elections, going by our resolute, commitment to win and win big in all levels of elective offices up for contest.”

    Adamu described the convention as the final lap towards the 2023 general elections, adding that the contest of the party’s flag in the coming presidential elections had been robust and statesman-like.

    “We welcome all those who threw their hats in the ring, they are patriots. It is a seal to build in the foundation of comprehensive national development laid by President Muhammadu Buhari,” he said.

    He noted that the contest of president in all political parties usually heated up the polity, adding that it was particularly so with parties that paraded the largest number of aspirants.

    “It is said that in all serious socio political contest, truth is the first casualty. It is so in this contest,” he said.

    He decried unsubstantiated negative media reports against the party in some section, saying that there was need for the media to ensure factual reporting.

    “We recognise the people’s right to freedom of speech and of the press, but all freedoms impose a major responsibility on those who exercise them and how they are exercised.

    “The reckless exercise of that freedom from the high and the low impinges on the rights and responsibilities of all citizens,” Adamu said.

    He, however, added that the struggle of attaining political power was a personal and legitimate aspiration which must not be used to divide the party or tear its members apart.

    The APC national chairman stressed that those who seek the mandate of the people must submit themselves to their judgement and the electoral process.

    He emphasised the need for discipline among members of the party, adding that a political party such as the APC, must show good example and fidelity in its core values.

    “Washing our dirty linen in the public is not a mark of courage, it is a mark of irresponsibility, indiscipline,” he said.