A growing number of politicians are making moves for a realignment of
political power in Nigeria towards a new political party, THISDAY has
learnt. This is amid crisis in the main opposition party, Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP), and conflicting interests in the ruling All
Progressives Congress (APC).
It was gathered that discussions
among politicians from the two leading parties towards the floating of a
new party started in earnest some months ago, and it was fast gathering
momentum. Insiders said the new political move had the support of some
serving governors from both the APC and PDP, key principal officers of
the National Assembly, and some aggrieved political leaders across the
six geo-political zones. A former senate president, Ken Nnamani, is
being prevailed upon to act as the arrow-head of the emerging party, it
is gathered.
Nnamani announced his resignation from PDP on
February 6, saying, the party had abandoned “the path of its noble
vision and values”. He was elected Senate President in 2003. In his
statement titled, “PDP, the Burden and My Conscience,” Nnamani said he
was fed up with the state of things in the party. But said he was
quitting “without any iota of bitterness.”
He stated, “I do not
believe I should continue to be a member of the PDP as it is defined
today. This is certainly not the party I joined years ago to help change
my country. I do not also believe that the PDP, as it is managed today,
will provide an opportunity for me to continue to play the politics of
principles and values, which I set for myself as a young man on leaving
graduate school and working for a large multinational in the United
States in the 70s and 80s.”
Nnamani did not announce an intention to join any political party, but he promised to remain politically active.
A
former Senate Chief Whip, who chose not to be named, confirmed the
emerging political moves. He said, “Go and talk to many political elites
across the country today, you will hear and confirm huge frustration
among them. Nobody seems to be happy with what is happening in the APC
and the PDP. And some of us have come to a conclusion that there is
urgent need to have a new and credible platform to save this country.
“You
will be shocked to know that the agitation for a new political platform
is more pronounced in the North, in spite of the fact that we currently
have a sitting president from the North. It shows how frustrated people
are in the country today.”
Another enthusiast of the emerging
political grouping, who is a prominent leader of APC, also told THISDAY
in confidence, “The hope that things will change for the better, with
President Muhammadu Buhari in power, is being dashed by the day. As I
speak with you today, the soul of the APC is gone. Go to the national
secretariat of the party, they will tell you.”
It was learnt that
some desperate efforts recently by concerned leaders of APC to iron out
things among themselves were frustrated by the political hawks around
Buhari, who are already strategising for 2019.
“What you are
likely to have in the coming months is a congregation of old PDP members
in the APC pulling out to form a formidable political party with some
progressive-minded members of the present PDP,” the APC leader said last
night in Abuja.
The special caucus meeting held last week by APC
was said to be part of the measures to halt the tide of disenchantment,
which promises to seriously threaten the ruling party. Very little was
achieved by the meeting following the absence of President Muhammadu
Buhari, who was unavoidably absent. But another meeting is being
contemplated for this week, where aggrieved APC members would be
expected to table their grievances before the party and the government.
Many
APC members are said to be calling for the removal of the national
chairman, John Odigie-Oyegun, citing poor leadership. It is suspected
that the replacement for Odigie-Oyegun would come from the North as part
of a grand plan to put the president in a position of comfort as far as
party administration is concerned. But that is expected to meet with
resistance, as party leaders from other parts of the country are likely
to oppose the idea. Generally, many leaders of the party are said to be
unhappy with the current status of the party and the government, having
been shut out of the decision-making process, despite their commitment
to the success of the party.
One of the problems believed to be
delaying the manifestation of the idea of a new party, according to the
promoters, is the question of the personality around which the party
will be built. They want a personality that would sell, like Buhari did,
for the APC.
Indications of how the politicians are readjusting
towards the eventual formation of a new party are clearer in PDP. The
party has lurched from one crisis to the next since it lost the general
election to APC last year. The high turnover of PDP national chairmen
since the election is symptomatic of the crisis within.
Adamu
Muazu resigned under pressure as PDP national chairman on May 20 last
year, accused of leading the former ruling party to a devastating defeat
at the polls. He was replaced by Haliru Bello, who was appointed acting
national chairman on May 25 last year and was sacked on February 10
this year. Bello was succeeded by the PDP deputy national chairman, Uche
Secondus, who worked in acting capacity until February 16, when he
handed over to the newly-appointed national chairman, Ali Modu Sheriff.
Sheriff’s appointment has been enmeshed in controversy.
Though,
PDP says it has resolved its leadership crisis following an agreement to
let Sheriff run the affairs of the party for three months, until the
national convention, when a new national leadership of the party would
be elected. There are fears that PDP may come out of the national
convention more divided than it went in. This is due to the very huge
likelihood of a clash between the PDP governors, who were the main force
behind Sheriff’s emergence as national chairman, and other groups and
interests in the party that had opposed his choice.
In recent
times, some prominent PDP members have resigned from the party without
joining other parties, in what is seen as a strategic move to help
nurture the expected new political platform. Besides Nnamani, Samuel
Ogbemudia and Dalhatu Sarki Tafida have recently left PDP, but did not
defect to other parties.
In APC, the National Assembly has been
the main theatre of war. Senate President Bukola Saraki and House of
Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara won their positions last June
against the wish of the party, in connivance with PDP legislators.
Sources say Saraki’s current trial by the Code of Conduct Bureau may
prepare the ground for the consolidation of the moves towards a new
party. Both Saraki and Dogara belong to a bloc within the party, the New
PDP, which believed they needed to be compensated for their
contributions to the victory of APC.
http://www.thisdayonline.com/index.php/2016/02/28/with-crisis-in-pdp-discordant-interests-in-apc-politicians-realigning-for-new-party/
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