Tag: Primary Elections

  • For Nyesom Wike, the hands of friendly friends held the knife – By Mideno Bayagbon

    For Nyesom Wike, the hands of friendly friends held the knife – By Mideno Bayagbon

    By Mideno Bayagbon
    (mideno@thenewsguru.ng)

    More than six months ago, I decided to poke nose into the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, affairs. I started scouting around to have a feel of what the thinking was concerning which zone of the country the party was likely to gift its presidential candidacy. Among those I interacted with, which happens to be some of those who behind the scene tele guide most of the things that happen in the party, it was clear the party had its eyes fully fixed on retaining the presidency in the northern part of the country. And one aspirant stood out even then. Among those who gave the game away were three former governors.

    In my quest, I chanced on a meeting, somewhere in the hilly side of Asokoro, the play ground of the political super rich. Looking at the room full of what can be described as political juggernauts and a sprinkling of job men, and gleaning the reason for their meeting so late in the day, it became clear that a particular aspirant was doing all the leg works, behind the scenes, and was gathering momentum behind veiled doors. By the time the ebullient and very politically sagacious former group chairman of DAAR Communications, Alegho Raymond Dokpesi, started doing the rounds, I knew without any iota of doubt that the game had taken on the hue of a frenetic no-going back stance. I knew then for certain, that for the South, the presidency was lost even before the game started.

    I had time to notice each and every one of the politicians, who from that meeting have shown their hands. These were a bunch of former governors, ministers and must go to political chieftains. There appeared to be more of them from the South than the north. And surprise, surprise, a whole load of them were South Easterners whose peoples agitation is that it is the turn of the Igbos to produce a Nigerian president , of Igbo origin. For those who have followed An Eye On Politics in the last one year, I have been emphatic in saying that the closest the South East will get to producing a Nigerian president of Igbo origin, will be then Transportation Minister, Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi or Rivers Governor, Nyesom Wike. I took deluge of flaks from deluded people who thought I was yarning rubbish.

    Indeed, Anyim Pius Anyim was emphatic that though he was not running as an Igbo aspirant, nonetheless, “what the Igbos are agitating for is a President of Nigeria from geographical South Eastern Nigeria”; ruling out the possibility of smart alec Wike or Amaechi running for President under the Igbo agitation cover. As a friend, I told him the blunt truth, as I saw it. He thought I was wrong. Now, however, except, perhaps, Ex Governor Peter Obi manages to cobble together a coalition strong enough to beat the two dragons in the political race for 2023 presidency, the brightest hope, for now remains the Igbo man from Ikwerre. The one his admirers call Lion of Ubima: Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi. More on Obi later.

    Like we say in Waffi, nobi today yansh day for back. For those like me who have kept a close watch on the political happenings, the schemings, the horse tradings and betrayals, shout as loud as the ordinary people of the South East can, 2023 was not likely to throw up one of them as President of Nigeria. Except like I have also always said, it is an Amaechi or a Nyesom Wike, who identify as both Igbos and South Southerners. Even the fluke aspirant, Godwin Emefiele, who thought he could capitalise on the largesse he has unconscionably been dishing out from his exalted Central Bank of Nigeria position, as Governor, to a select few power brokers around the president, is also one of the peripheral Igbos.

    You may ask, what of Anyim Pius Anyim, the former senate president and former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, who threw in his hat early enough in the race? What about Peter Obi, the prototype Obama incarnate whose huge support base is growing rapidly on social media, among the youths? In the south. Anyim’s fate is already known. He lost miserably at the just concluded PDP primaries. His fellow Igbos did not even trust him enough, or believe in their agitation enough, to coalesce their votes behind their son. They sold it to the highest bidders; for their personal interests. They all conveniently forgot the agitation for a Nigerian President of Igbo extraction. Like most Southerners, except maybe the Yorubas, there is no shared vision or interest. It is everybody to himself. When convenient, personal interest can be masqueraded as zonal or ethnic interests.

    Despite his perceived uncouth manner and rascality, a tenacious Nyesom Wike, almost saved the day for the South. And for the Igbos. But he fell to the superior, adept and treacherous politics of the masters of the game. Until he is man enough to tell us what transpired between him and the Sokoto governor, Aminu Tambuwal, Nyesom Wike and his supporters cry of betrayal ring hollow. For six years, they were tag team partners. The expectation was that a day would dawn when they would combine to vie for the presidency of the country. But something we have not been told happened, between them. Tambuwal resolved on the death kiss of a lover, a stab to the heart, to teach his garrulous, uncouth and temperamental friend a political lesson of his life. Truth be told, it was not only Tambuwal whose hands held the knife struck deep into Wike’s ambitious heart. Many of his fiendly friends, what some describe as frenemies, directly held the knife and gave it the deathly penetration. Many Southern governors, including Igbos, were part of the betrayal.

    For Wike, it was a tale of the unexpected. The secrecy that sustained its deftness is a story for a Nollywood movie. Because, for most of the day, last Saturday, at the PDP convention, it was openly whispered that the day had turned in the direction of Wike. Most pundits were even beginning to paint a Wike presidential candidacy. Until the bombshell. A successful last minute coups turned the table. And it was a masterclass. Atiku Abubakar who had been plotting this day from way back, carried the crown which hours earlier had almost slipped from his enlarged hands. A season of Wike’s gargantuan ego tripping had come crashing.

    Only God and perhaps Wike himself know how much of Rivers state’s money was frittered away. Some claim it could be in the region of over N30 billion. They quantify the nationwide “consultation”, the array of chartered jets deployed, the humongous cash for votes game that went on all night, Friday night, the large fleet of Wike coated expensive, luxurious state of the art vehicles that flooded Abuja all branded with his ambition. Nevertheless, the truth is, the Rivers state governor is a man’s man. A talk-na-do, not just an empty boaster. He was a one man riot squad and all the tricks in the book were need to stop him.

    I feel for him. While I believe a Wike candidacy would have fallen flat at the polls because of his character flaws, he nonetheless gave it his all. he deserves some level of commendation. My suspicion is that Wike will not sleep with both eyes until the end of the convention of the APC. i can even second guess what his main prayers, were he be a praying man, will be? “God, you that made me to fail, please also fail Rotimi Amaechi. Make it a one-one goalless draw. I can’t stand him contesting for the position of president while I have failed so miserably” As most Nigerians now know, Amaechi winning the All Progressives Congress ticket will perhaps give this his former bosom friend a more deadly heart attacked than his being politically out smarted, by the deathly blow by Atiku and his fierce-some gang.

    As we all look to the APC Convention coming up early next week, the sky is still starkly dark. The candidacy water is still too troubled to throw up any educated guess. No one is sure who the eventual candidate will turn out to be. President Muhammadu Buhari is playing it close to his chest either because he wants to spring an earth shaking surprise, or he too is as confused as the rest of the APC as to who to give the ticket. Nevertheless, the fear of cataclysmic implosion looms large. Will the APC survive this its convention? Will Tinubu get the Wike treatment or will he devise his own Wikenised strategy to beat all those who are standing in his way, vowing that he cannot be the candidate? Will Buhari push the party towards an Amaechi candidacy or will the mafia around him, having failed with their audacious Godwin Emefiele gambit try to foist an Ahmed Lawan candidacy on the party? Will APC be as lucky as the PDP in managing the expected fall out from its convention?

    I suspect where the pendulum will swing but let me keep my mouth shut for now.

  • 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…

  • 2023: Ogboru, Frank Nweke, varsity Chancellor win APGA guber tickets

    Chief Great Ogboru has clinched the governorship ticket of the All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA) in Delta.

    Ogboru picked the party’s ticket after an affirmation vote at the primary election held on Sunday at Effurun in the Uvwie Local Government Area of the state.

    The governorship aspirant polled a total of 618 votes from the 625 accredited party’s delegates across the state, while seven votes were voided in an exercise which was described as peaceful.

    Chairman of the five-man State Special Electoral Panel, Elder Enemokwu Afamefune, after announcing the results, declared Ogboru as the party’s flag bearer for the 2023 governorship election.

    “God, in His infinite mercy, has now hearkened to the yearning and desire of the masses for a subtle and better life in Delta.

    “I refer to Ogboru as he who is to come to APGA and he has come to liberate the people of Delta from political bondage,” Afamefune said.

    Responding to the victory, Ogboru thanked the people for waiting patiently for the successful conduct of the primary election.

    “I am immensely and eternally grateful to all of you.

    “Suffice it to say that we know that if there is an election in Delta, an election so properly called in the terms of the word, we must win,” Ogboru said.

    He promised an all-inclusive government in the state if elected governor.

    Messrs George Timinimi and Peters Omaruaye picked the Delta South and Delta Central Senatorial Districts’ tickets respectively.

    Ex Information minister, Nweke, emerges Enugu APGA Governorship Flag-bearer

    Meanwhile, former Minister of Information, Chief Frank Nweke, has emerged as the Governorship Flag-bearer of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) for Enugu State.

    Nweke’s emergence on Sunday in Enugu followed the successful governorship primary election organised by the party’s Electoral Committee, led by Chief Uchenna Okagbue.

    The former minister polled a total of 273 votes out of 555 votes cast during the exercise, monitored by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), to defeat his closest rival, Chief Jeff Nnamani, who polled 267 votes.

    Other aspirants, who trailed behind, included: Mr Uchenna Nwegbo, who polled nine votes; Rev Donatus Obi-Ozoemena, four votes, and Mr Donatus Udeh, two votes.

    Declaring Nweke the winner, Okagbue commended the aspirants for conducting themselves in a peaceful manner throughout the process.

    “I will also appreciate the delegates for their patience and discipline throughout the whole process as well,” he said.

    In his acceptance speech, Nweke thanked the state’s electoral committee and party delegates for conducting a peaceful and credible election.

    He noted that his major concern was the development of Enugu State, and its repositioning on the path of growth and all round development.

    He said: “I will run an inclusive campaign to redeem our state, and I passionately appeal to other aspirants to support the APGA movement to take over Enugu State Government affairs by 2023.

    “Our business is to take over Enugu State government. This victory, which is for the party, is just one step towards taking over government in Enugu State.

    “We will march forward towards achieving this feat.  We know that the next nine months before the election will be challenging, but with your prayers and support, we shall get there and conquer,” he said.

    A total of 555 delegates voted in the primary election, and there was no void vote in the entire votes cast.

    2023: University chancellor emerges Abia APGA guber candidate

    Also, the Founder and Chancellor of Gregory University, Uturu, Prof. Greg Ibe, has emerged as the Governorship Candidate of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) for the 2023 general elections in Abia.

    Ibe polled 283 votes to defeat other contestants, including his closest rival, Mr Etigwe Uwa (SAN), who scored 148 votes.

    The two other contestants, Gen. Ijioma Ijioma (rtd.) and Chikwe Udensi scored 36 votes and 13 votes, respectively.

    In an acceptance speech, Ibe extended a hand of fellowship to his co-contestants, saying “there is no Victor, no vanquished.”

    He urged them to join him in the onerous task of salvaging Abia from imminent collapse.

    “As we begin the final journey of redeeming Abia, my doors remain open to receive those unique ideas that can help us to realise the new Abia of our dream.

    “Umunnem (my brothers), today is a good day to be an Abia citizen.

    “I want to profoundly appreciate Abia people in general for their patience and prayers so far.

    “I assure you that God has heard our collective prayers and has commenced the salvation of our state,” Ibe said.

    He appealed to everyone to join the struggle to re-write the story of the state, notwithstanding their party affiliations and personal interest.

    “As the lamentation of Abia people for 24 years comes to an end shortly, I implore you to weep no more for I see in the horizon, a brand new Abia,” Ibe said.

    Announcing the result, the Returning Officer, Mr Echezona Etioba, said that accredited voters were 482 and that three votes were voided.

    While Uwa congratulated Ibe at the end of the exercise, Ijioma expressed reservations over the result. He alleged some discrepancies and said that he would challenge the outcome.

    The congress, which took place at Kolpin Society, Umuahia under heavy security, was rancour-free.

  • 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.

  • Rivers APC mock Wike, insists God answered prayers for his presidential bid failure

    Rivers APC mock Wike, insists God answered prayers for his presidential bid failure

    The dramatic end to Gov. Nyesom Wike’s presidential quest has been described by the Rivers State Chapter of All Progressives Congress, APC, as prayer answered for the teeming workers, pensioners and the downtrodden in Rivers State.

    TheNewsGuru.com, (TNG) reports this came to fore shortly after the governor lost his bid to get the Presidential ticket of his Party, the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, at the Party’s Presidential primary election held last Saturday at Abuja, the State Publicity Secretary of APC, Chris Finebone, described the ill-fated ambition of the governor as a timely good riddance to the financial banditry, resource haemorrhage and complete absence of governance in Rivers State.

    “It was difficult for God not to hear the solemn heart-wrenching prayers and tears by civil servants who have not been promoted in the past seven years; pensioners owed pensions and gratuities since this governor came into office and the teeming people and residents of Port Harcourt who now share living space with garbage, stench, rodents and diseases arising therefrom.

    “Despite persistent calls by civil society groups and the opposition on the governor not to shirk his responsibilities as the Chief Executive Officer of the State, the governor ignored everyone and abandoned governance in the State. The height of this was his disengagement of waste management contractors in Port Harcourt for some months now which has turned the Garden City of Port Harcourt into the garbage capital of Nigeria with diseases and rodents competing with human beings for space and existence.

    “Sometimes one is perplexed and wonder how the governor sleeps without his conscience troubling or pricking him that he has abandoned those that he found himself in government to care for as their governor,” Finebone stated.

    Speaking further, the APC Spokesman advised Gov. Wike to have a change of heart and prioritize on governance over politics or resign. Finebone wondered how the governor ever dreamed of seeking for higher office of President when his understanding of development and performance remain pedestrian and brick and mortar.

    “Sometimes one wonders why Gov Wike ever imagined that he could become President of Nigeria. Was he deceived by the overhead bridges he built in Port Harcourt in the name of flyovers? What is his record on other sectors such as human capital development, education, agriculture, health, investments, etc? Why has he abandoned the state-of-the-art ultramodern primary and secondary schools he inherited from his predecessor? What about the fish farms at Buguma and other places? Why did he instigate the burning and destruction of the Banana Farm at Tai? What about the gigantic and paradigm changing Songhai Farms Projects and the Rivers State Sustainable Development Agency, RSSDA?

    “More worrisome is the demeaning of the personae of the average Rivers man and woman who are known to conduct themselves with candour, grace and civility. Today we are perceived as election riggers, hooligans and toxic people who compromise INEC to win elections, no thanks to the impression given to Nigerians by Gov. Nyesom Wike.

    “There is no doubt that the task of rebuilding Rivers State and her image will be a daunting one by Gov. Wike’s successor after the bashing the governor has subjected the State, her treasury and image to in 8 years of misgovernance.

    “Now that the governor’s daydream and Presidential cookie has crumbled in his face, let the governor immediately reconstitute the State Executive Council and allow governance to continue in the State even at the abysmal level we have lived with in the last seven years. He should, as a matter of urgency, put in place an improved structure to urgently and sustainably tackle the challenge of refuse management in Port Harcourt,” Finebone concluded.

  • Gov. Bagudu wins APC ticket for Kebbi Central

    Gov. Bagudu wins APC ticket for Kebbi Central

    Gov. Atiku Bagudu of Kebbi has clinched the Kebbi Central Senatorial ticket for All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Declaring the election result held at Haliru Abdu Secretariat, Birnin Kebbi, the state capital, the Returning Officer, Mrs Kelechi Njoku said Bagudu scored 455 votes to be the winner of the election.

    She said: “On behalf of the Kebbi Central Senatorial Committee from Abuja, I hereby declare Gov. Abubakar Atiku Bagudu as the winner of the primary election held in Birnin Kebbi today, May 28 having scored the highest number of votes.”

    Njoku expressed satisfaction with the level of decorum exhibited by the delegates, party stakeholders and other party loyalists.

    Recall that Sen. Adamu Aliero, a strong contender of the ticket withdrew from the race some hours to the commencement of the primary election.

    In his acceptance speech, Bagudu thanked the committee, stakeholders and all other party loyalists for their support and cooperation that led to a successful primaries in the state.

    While promising to ensure quality representation, Bagudu urged politician to always accept election results in good faith, advising that they should remember that power only comes from Almighty God.

    Bagudu recalled that in 2011, he won the PDP flag-bearer for Kebbi Central Senatorial seat but in the interest of peace and unity he relinquished the mandate to Sen. Adumu Aliero, assuring, “If there is need for that today, I am ready to do the same thing in this present situation.”

  • Long Week of Power Bazaars – By Chidi Amuta

    Long Week of Power Bazaars – By Chidi Amuta

    In a little over another week, a great deal of the political cacophony all over the country will have abated. The period will end with gatherings of Nigeria’s political tribes in Abuja. Their major achievement will be to lower the deafening decibels of our current political noise pollution. From then on, there will be no more consultation visitations. No more tongue-in-cheek promises by royals trying so hard to hide their lies in political correctness. No more cosmetic courtesies by host governors who believe and speak differently. No more undigested promises by mostly ill prepared aspirants.

    Delegates drawn from across the national spectrum representing lower levels of the two dominant parties will by tomorrow have decided on the two persons who will subsequently be authorized to make noise on their behalf. In the alternative, some form of inconvenient consensus will hopefully have been hammered out among ambitious aspirants as to who among them should parade the title of ‘presidential candidate’ out of the multitude. That in itself will mark some progress for Nigeria’s rabble democracy.

    From a tumultuous multitude of presidential aspirants, we will by the upper week hopefully be down to a binary choice of either or. Of course, the minor parties will exercise their constitutional right of fielding presidential candidates even if only to justify their registration certificates. There may likely be a microwave coalition of small to medium scale parties populated by all those disappointed in the big parties to form a party of ‘no’, a sort of conclave of the angry and rejected.  INEC will take note of all these minor skirmishes as it takes a  closer look at the continued existence of our motley of parties.

    Whatever happens, next week promises to be refreshingly more quiet on the political front. There will still be lawsuits and threats thereof arising from these untidy primaries at nearly every level. Noisy lawyers will invariably goad the ambitious aspirants towards the courts with the hope of getting a piece of the legal action in this season of political disputations. There will of course be widespread disillusionment among the losers and their disappointed spouses some of whom may have rehearsed new dance steps in anticipation of victory in the roles their partners dreamt about. A good number will count their losses in gold and cowries. A minority will move on in the hope that better days lie ahead. In a nation drenched in religious fanfare and superstitious determinism, quite a few pastors and imams will urge the disappointed to look up to heaven for better luck next time. All they need do is come forward with some token offerings of gratitude to God for the gift of life in this dangerous time and place.

    Ordinarily, the idea of party primaries should impose some order on the wildness of the democratic instinct among our myriad political animals. At every level from ward to local government, state and national, the party primaries that have dominated most of this week have had the beneficial effect of sifting aspirants from candidates. Imperfect as the system may seem, we need to celebrate this milestone of democracy. Anyone who expected perfect primaries in today’s Nigeria may not be one of us.

    Specifically, the presidential primaries of the two major parties should hold the greatest significance for the nation. From the ruling All Progressive Congress (APC), an estimated over 2000 delegates have converged in Abuja while another 800 plus party faithful from the opposition Peoples Democratic Party are gathered for the same purpose. This ritual gathering should ordinarily be a political carnival at which political leaders representing our rich diversity would meet and mix in Abuja to compare experiences and in the process further cement the bonds of unity. At such a time of serious national emergencies, the delegates ought to take seriously the task of leadership renewal through the instrument of the political party which is the essence of the primaries.

    At no other time has leadership renewal and change been such a dire and urgent imperative as in today’s Nigeria. The nation is besieged in all directions with clear and present threats of a strategic nature. Combat troops and sundry policemen and security personnel are on active patrol in all states of the federation. Nearly a hundred fellow citizens that have been held hostage for over a month after being abducted from the Abuja-Kaduna train terrorist attack are now at the risk of being murdered en masse by a band of blood thirsty terrorists. They have issued a seven-day ultimatum to the government to pay up or come for the corpses of their victims.

    In various urban centres of the nation, lynch mobs are on the prowl bludgeoning and setting fellow citizens ablaze for the flimsiest reasons. In yet other places, deranged gunmen of unspecified motives are killing fellow citizens, including mothers and their children, in an orgy of blood and madness. The general populace would be perfectly reasonable to feel entitled to the emergence of the right quality of leadership from these party primaries if only to be saved from this string of tragedies. In a democratic setting, only the process of peaceful change can replace the bumbling squad in Abuja with a more purposeful leadership from 2023.

    But judging by the media highlights since the immediate run up to the presidential primaries, public attention is hardly on the policies, ideas and qualities of the numerous presidential aspirants. Instead, the attention has been more on the ethnicity, religion, region or financial weight of the major aspirants in both major parties. Among a sample of the delegates themselves, the thrust of the discussion has since shifted to a more embarrassing area. Most delegates on their way to the Abuja presidential primaries have been more interested in how much money they were going to harvest from the competing aspirants in exchange for their votes.

    In the fortnight to the week of the primaries, Bloomberg reported a sharp further decline in the value of Nigeria’s beleaguered national currency, the Naira. Its value plummeted to over N600 to $1 US dollar from a previous already miserable N475 to $1 in streetside currency markets. The current predictable pressure on the Naira is the result of unusually heavy demand for dollars by leading politicians. The lighter more easily transportable US dollar is the currency of choice in Nigeria for payoffs, bribes, inducements, kickbacks and other nefarious under the table payments. In a political culture where vote buying and rampant monetization of political transactions are taken for granted, the demand for cash dollars is at an all time high in this election season.

    In these hotly contested party primaries to choose who becomes Nigeria’s next president, wads and bundles of American dollars are a convenient medium for buying off impoverished party delegates from the hinterland, some of whom have been waiting for the opportunity of these carnivalesque primaries to jet into Abuja for an all expenses paid weekend break of lavish free meals and splurges of cash. To some of them, this is a political wealth redistribution season that happens every four years. The only difference now is that the financial expectations have been adjusted for inflation, exchange rate fluctuations and other contingencies.

    The nearly 40 presidential aspirants from both major parties and their proxies have already each paid the equivalent of $100,000 to $200,000 just to procure the application forms for the party presidential gate passes. They seem even more prepared to shell out a few more hundreds of thousands of dollars to clinch the prize presidential ticket of each party.

    The major aspirants for the presidential ticket of each major party are speculated to have budgeted anything from $15,000 to a princely $50,000 per delegate. These are to be delivered in sealed parcels to delegates in the dead of the night preceding the delegate elections. The precise price tag of each delegate vote is not yet fixed. It could go up as aspirants weigh and balance their chances and compute the required number of delegates to defeat their rivals. It is all an open-ended equivalent of an Arab street bazaar. The highest bidder is bound to win. In effect, what could turn out to be one of the most lavish vote buying sprees in the history of party democracy anywhere in the world is in progress in Nigeria’s capital city as we speak.

    To most rational observers, the extent of monetization of politics in Nigeria defies all understanding and logic. Here is one of the most indebted countries in the world, spending over 98% of its mostly oil revenue on debt servicing. Here is a nation with the largest population of poor people (over 100 million) in the world. Here is a nation whose most prosperous city-Lagos- was this week voted the most difficult place to live in in the world.

    The sheer quantum of cash that will change hands to produce the outcome of who gets to rule Nigeria from 2023 is best left to the imagination. The open bargaining in this Arab street bazaar politics is often justified by the general simplification that politics everywhere costs money. Yes indeed, money and politics are bound by an ancient umbilical cord that is now nearly universal. It however remains a matter of how and to what ends money is deployed in a given political system in the competitive quest for power.  In normal political transactions, power is never treated like a commodity on the shelf to be purchased by the highest bidder in the kind of open market bazaar that has become the staple of Nigeria’s political industry.

    Yes indeed, in liberal democratic societies and their free market systems, the political enterprise has become a subset of the modern market economy. In such market societies, it is quite legitimate to buy media space, pay for advertising slots in the press, radio, television and the internet. It costs money to print innumerable posters, banners, mount billboards static and electronic, erect banners and other campaign material. These are the props that convert political candidates and aspirants into commodities that are either more attractive than their competition or fall by the wayside for scant marketing effect.

    It is equally legitimate to hire lobbyists, researchers, statisticians, strategists, consultants, influencers and facilitators of all shades at great costs to achieve political ends. In all of this, there remains an abiding requirement that political spending, like other aspects of the free market economic system, is subject to a regulatory framework. Campaign spending has ceilings and regulations and ought to be subjected to minimum accountability requirements and standards. Pre and post election audits ought to determine whether practitioners have complied with spending limits and caps.

    The accountability requirements of political money spending include the tracking of funds to ensure that bad money from terrorists, narcotics traffickers, gangster collectives and other bad sources are not deployed to political ends. It also ought to include limitations on contributions from local and foreign companies and a moratorium on campaign fund donations from foreign governments with or without business interests in the recipient country. Nigeria’s rule books contain most of these regulatory guard rails.

    In spite of extant laws on political spending and campaign financing,  money continues to play a less than edifying role in Nigerian politics. This is of course a reflection of the porous regulations that guide a great deal of Nigeria’s public sector spending with its lax accountability standards. The Nigerian system elevates the political leadership above most rules of public accountability. The concept of the king being the law himself is an underlying carry over from most Nigerian ancient traditions onto the modern state.

    There is a culture of inbuilt absolutism in Nigerian traditions that have been smuggled into the operation of the modern nation state. In this regard, the Nigerian president is easily one of the most powerful public officers in the world. There may be limitations to his power on paper but hardly any Nigerian president since 1999 has been held to strict account for the actions taken or not taken while in office. Nigeria’s presidentialism is said to have been adapted from the Washington model. The American president pays for his food and that of his guests except on state occasions. But the Nigerian president lives in a lavish and expansive string of mansions free of charge. He and his family and countless dependents and guests are fed, entertained transported and feasted at state expense. In addition to the power of life and death which is reserved for most sovereigns, the Nigerian president literally has an exclusive prerogative of impunity.

    The budget for feeding, entertainment, travel and maintenance in the Nigerian presidency is practically above legislative scrutiny. It of course features in the annual budget only as a matter of courtesy to the legislature.  There is a saying that the Nigerian president is free to help himself to limitless cash from the Central Bank only subject to his own moral restraint. Those who author these stories have often pointed to the late General Sani Abacha who is said to periodically send a truck with instructions to the Central Bank to load cash in specified foreign currencies. Twenty four years after Abacha’s sudden death, the funds he looted from the Nigerian treasury are still being discovered and repatriated from different countries and jurisdictions!

    Therefore, aspirants for the Nigerian presidential job will spare no expense to secure a ticket to the party ticket. It is this almost limitless lack of accountability that drives the literal stampede of a multitude of aspirants to the presidential palace in Abuja every four years.

    In the advanced democracies of the West, former presidents return to the real world of ordinary mortals at the end of their tenure and are expected to live by the limitations of mortals in a republican setting. Check Angela Merkel’s modest apartment block abode in East Berlin. Check Barrack Obama’s ordinary residence in a Washington precinct. In contrast, former Nigerian presidents literally enrol into a pantheon of men transformed into virtual deities.

    It is not the power and privilege of office that is at issue here. It is the destructive role of the ‘cash and carry’ culture on the development of Nigeria’s democracy that ought to be the lingering concern from this week’s party primaries. The success of most of the primaries should be commended in spite of the observed lapses in places.

    The monetization of our democracy and its processes is dangerous. Political parties that charge a fee of N100 million for a presidential nomination form can only be the prime promoter of a regime of corruption. A presidential ticket procured on a transactional basis can at best produce a mercantile president. A leader who literally bought his way into office cannot be trusted to honour the social contract which is a non-transactional bond between a leader and his fellow citizens.

  • 2023: Atiku reacts after emerging PDP’s presidential candidate

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has reacted after emerging as the presidential candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) for the 2023 presidential election.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Atiku pledged to unify the country in his acceptance speech after winning the presidential ticket of the PDP.

    He urged his fellow contestants in the primary election to work with him for the victory of the PDP in the 2023 presidential election.

    He described the primary election that produced him freest and a well-fought election, pledging to work with the co-aspirants and give them a sense of belonging if elected.

    “The reason I felt unity is important is that the government of APC [All Progressives Congress] has disunited Nigeria completely. I will work to restore unity for all Nigerians, irrespective of where they come from or the religion they practice.

    “I will also deal with the security and the economic challenges which were all caused by the APC government. Today is a very historic day because it gives us another opportunity to restore all the misgovernance of the APC.

    “Let me also use this opportunity to call on my fellow contestants and to assure them that I am ready to cooperate and work with them and give them a sense of belonging in this party and our next government.

    “Therefore, my fellow compatriots, I want to appreciate your efforts in deepening our democratic processes in this party. It was a well fought primary election.

    “So, I commend you for that and I look forward to working with you very closely. So that together we can build this party to a level where we can take over the government,” Atiku said.

    He also appealed to aggrieved party members to return to the PDP, pledging that their grievances would be addressed.

    The PDP presidential candidate described the exercise as the freest election conducted by the party, saying the outcome remains historical in bringing fundamental changes to governance and democracy.

    “Today, we are making another history. The history, which we believe will bring about fundamental changes in governance and also in our political processes. Today, we have witnessed another one of the freest elections to be conducted by our great party. Today marks another milestone in the process of our democratic gains,” he said

    The former vice president reiterated his pledge to unify the country as well as deal with its economic and security challenges. He recalled that in his declaration he referred to himself as a unifier and pledged to unify the country.

    “I am going to deal decisively with our security challenges in this country. I also pledge to confront our economic challenges, which were caused by the APC government. The PDP made Nigeria one of the most prosperous countries on the African continent. We implemented economic reforms that brought about jobs, and prosperity in this country,” the gains according to him had been wiped out, pledging to return them,” he said.

    TNG reports Atiku polled 371 votes to defeat his close contender, Gov. Nyesom Wike of Rivers, who polled 237 votes.

  • BREAKING: Atiku defeats Wike, Saraki, Anyim, others, emerges PDP candidate

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has emerged as the candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) for the 2023 presidential election.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Atiku emerged as the candidate of the PDP for the 2023 presidential election at a special national convention organized by the party on Saturday.

    The special national convention of the PDP was held at the Velodrome, located inside the M. K. O. Abiola National Stadium, Abuja.

    A total of 774 delegates were shortlisted for the primary election that produced Atiku as the candidate of PDP. However, only 767 delegates were screened.

    A breakdown of votes received by the aspirants in the primary election showed that Atiku polled a total of 371 votes from delegates, defeating Nyesom Wike, Anyim Pius Anyim, Bukola Saraki and the other aspirants in the process.

    Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike came second with a total of 237 votes, while Anyim polled 14 votes and Udom Emmanuel polled 38 votes.

    TNG reports Bala Mohammed polled 20 votes, Oliva Tariela scored 1 vote, Bukola Saraki polled 70 votes and Samuel Ohuabunwa scored 1 vote. Twelve (12) votes returned void.

    Atiku, who served as the Vice President of Nigeria from 1999 to 2007 during the presidency of Olusegun Obasanjo, was the candidate of the PDP in the 2019 presidential election.

    He lost the presidential election of 2019 to incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Earlier he contested the presidential ticket of the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the 2015 presidential election but lost to Buhari.

    Winning the PDP ticket for the 2023 presidential election would be Atiku’s 6th attempt to become the president of Nigeria.