Peoples
Democratic Party governors who voted for the re-election of Rivers State
Governor Rotimi Amaechi in the last Nigeria Governors' Forum election may be
considering floating a new party, to emerge as a Third Force to the ruling PDP
and opposition coalition party, All Progressives Congress.
The group, comprising seven governors, has already commenced talks with the
three governors of the All Nigeria Peoples Party with a view to aligning to
form the new party, THISDAY has learnt.
Amaechi
and Sokoto State Governor Aliyu Wammako have been suspended by PDP for reasons
not unconnected with the NGF election and their position on it.
Besides
Amaechi and Wammako, others said to be involved in the proposed new party are
Governors Sule Lamido of Jigawa State, Murtala Nyako of Adamawa State, Rabiu
Kwankwaso of Kano State, Babangida Aliyu of Niger State and Usman Dakingari of
Kebbi State.
The
governors, who are perceived to be opposed to President Goodluck Jonat-han’s
assumed second term ambition, want a party where they would form the nucleus of
its organisational structure and be founders ahead of the 2015 general
election.
As part
of their game plan, the governors are also considering talks with the national
leader of the Accord Party and former Oyo State Governor, Senator Rashidi
Ladoja, and another former governor of the state, Otunba Adebayo Alao-Akala, in
a bid to make an in-road into the South-west.
Ladoja
and his hitherto estranged deputy, Alao-Akala, have reunited in a rare
political rapprochement aimed at stopping Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi's
re-election.
ANPP is
one of the parties trying to merge with Congress for Progressive Change, Action
Congress of Nigeria, and a faction of All Progressives Grand Alliance to form
the All Progressives Congress.
The PDP
governors’ move is said to be hinged on their alleged distrust of some leaders
of the emerging opposition coalition and the fact that they may not be fully
integrated into the new party's structure.
THISDAY
gathered that the decision to open talks with the three ANPP governors may not
be unconnected with the complaint of the ANPP that the opposition merger
partners are showing more preference for CPC, which governs only one state
(Nasarawa), than ANPP that is in control of Borno, Yobe and Zamfara states.
The
sense of distrust being felt by the PDP governors towards some leaders of APC,
it is gathered, also follows the treatment meted out to Nuhu Ribadu, who was
the presidential candidate of ACN at the last general election in 2011.
The
former Lagos State governor and national leader of ACN, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu,
and ACN were alleged to have dumped Ribadu for Jonathan at the last minute.
The PDP
governors are also worried about the perceived autocratic tendencies of the CPC
leader, General Muhammadu Buhari, his military background, and his hard stance
on issues.
One of
the apprehensive PDP governors told THISDAY, “The option in this regard for the
aggrieved PDP governors, senators and members of the House of the
Representatives is to move to another party or form a new one.
“If our
fears are not addressed both in the PDP and the merging APC, we are going to
leave to a new party where we will present a credible candidate that both PDP
and APC lack.”
The governors aim to ensure that three strong political parties,
comprising PDP, APC, and the one they are considering, contest the 2015 general elections.
They are
trying to build up political relationships across the country, but especially
the South-west, through Ladoja and Alao-Akala as well as associates of former
President Olusegun Obasanjo.
According
to the source, who spoke with THISDAY, the said PDP governors, who are mainly
from the three geopolitical zones of the North, already have the approval of
the former president.
Obasanjo
too is believed to be rallying his political associates to meet with the
governors for the concretisation of plans for the new party.
But for
his trips to the United States and Canada, the former president would have been
holding the consultations for the planned new party by now, but his associates
are said to be doing this on his behalf.
A
northern governor, who spoke on condition of anonymity, narrated some of the
permutations ahead of the 2015 election, thus, “You don’t put all your eggs in
one basket. Some of us have expressed our fears and we expect that such fears
are addressed. But in the meantime, we are still exploring other options
to ensure that democracy is fully established within the rights of association
and assembly.”
A source
within ANPP said some of the party’s stakeholders were aware of move to form a
third force. He said, “This is all about politics. We in the ANPP believe that
we ought to be ranked higher than the CPC that has only one state of Nasarawa.
So what we are doing is to explore options and not that we are working against
the merger.
“We have made our views known and it is expected that such
complaints would be addressed in time.”
THISDAY understood that the protem officials of APC were aware of the ANPP’s complaints, as this was believed to be one of the reasons why the coalescing parties could not go to the Independent National Electoral Commission last Friday.
THISDAY understood that the protem officials of APC were aware of the ANPP’s complaints, as this was believed to be one of the reasons why the coalescing parties could not go to the Independent National Electoral Commission last Friday.
Source: Thisday
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