Fellow Nigerians, we
are now back to basics after the euphoria and giddiness of the June 12
reactivation and revalidation by President Muhamadu Buhari.
If the Nigerian opposition
parties had thought it would be easy to defeat the incumbent in next year’s
Presidential election, I’m appealing to them to re-permutate and re-configure
their strategies. The political masterstroke by President Buhari demonstrated
once again that the power of incumbency rests, not only in manipulating the
electoral process and the security surrounding that process, but, also in
manipulating policies and acts of government to enable the citizenry enjoy the
feel good factor that can make them forget the ills and sorrows of the past.
Please, permit me to speak authoritatively from my personal experience as a
former Presidential candidate in 2011.
You will read more
about the Nigerian reality in my forthcoming book, authored by my Presidential
Campaign Manager, Ohimai Godwin Amaize, the youngest man ever to hold suchposition in
Nigeria, and probably in the world. The book titled, FIGHTING LIONS: THE UNTOLD
STORY OF DELE MOMODU’S PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN, is fashioned after THE AUDACITY
TO WIN: THE INSIDE STORY AND LESSONS OF BARACK OBAMA’S HISTORIC
VICTORY, written by David Plouffe, Campaign Manager, Obama for America.
The difference is that Obama won, I lost. Those who laughed scornfully at my
epic effort and passed snide remarks about my supposed “stupidity” for ever
thinking I could win are now among those crying wolf, asserting, with all their
youthful vigour, that they are not-too-young-to-run.
They said I lacked
experience. They actually believed that you must have been a Senator or
Governor or both to qualify for their support and vote. Part of that experience
should have included stealing sufficient and substantial money from government
coffers and blow it on politicians of the same ilk, without principle or
ideology. This is neither a joke nor hyperbolic assertion. It is a sound
reality. If you think I’m just blabbing, ask our dear President his experience
on the three occasions he lost elections. No one was half as popular. He had
perceived integrity in abundance.
He was as meek as a
Monk. He was ascetic and stern. But he lost to weaker brands. His
fortune changed when the deep pockets and carpetbaggers got jazzed up and
hypnotised into seeing the born-again democrat in Buhari and fell for the
spell. I’ve gone through this preamble to tell my friends who are in the race
the home truth before it is too late. Truth is there are just too many youthful
aspirants in the race. For them to make any appreciable showing and impact,
they must hold a serious and soul-searching meeting to determine those who
stand the best chances among them.
They should first
narrow down to four maximum, two from the North and two from the South. The
four should meet further to delete two from among their number, one from the
South and one from the North. Those picked and those de-selected should pledge
to work together harmoniously for the good of the nation. Not everybody can be
the number one or number two citizen in the country. In picking the candidates,
the youngsters should endeavour to jettison the zoning nonsense of the two
leading and established political parties. This would help destabilise the
status quo. A Southern Presidential candidate is likely to create problems for
APC and PDP (if PDP still retains that brand) and force the two to scramble for
votes largely in the North since both have stuck obstinately to their
preposterous zoning rascality.
The third force may
end up with a Southern candidate in the hope that this candidate can force a
grand coalition of all Southern regions in alliance with the North Central.
This may be a perfect foil to anything that the major parties then throw up. As
remote as it sounds, it may turn out to be the revolution unforetold. The third
force should also do the unusual, form a government of National Unity ahead of
the elections by creating a shadow cabinet amongst the brilliant and brightest
youths from all parts of Nigeria and reach out to those in the
diaspora for good measure. Let me confess that this is likely to be a day-dream
or pipe-dream. Knowing my people well and their proclivity for egocentricity,
none of them would ever agree to hold the meeting that is desired and, even if
they do, none would condescend to step down for another. What this portends,
therefore, is that Nigeria would be stranded irrevocably and irredeemably with
the two big parties, APC and PDP. And where would this leave or lead us?
The answer is simple
and straightforward. APC has no other way to look but towards the incumbent,
President Muhammadu Buhari. This is sure banker unless something akin
to an earthquake, volcanic eruption or Tsunami occurs and Baba decides
not to run, or is forced by circumstances beyond his control not to run. I
refuse to believe the rumours making the rounds that President Buhari is
secretly and stylishly shopping for a worthy successor. However, knowing that
our country is a nation of rumour-mongering, I’ve decided to analyse and
dismiss or disregard the conspiracy theories. For example it has been suggested
that the recent validation of June 12, the seeming recognition and acceptance
of Chief MKO Abiola as the undisputed winner of the 1993 elections, the National
Honours of GCFR and GCON awarded to him and his running mate,
Ambassador Babagana Kingibe respectively, was a cunning strategy and tacit way
of bringing back Kingibe into mainstream politics in order to prepare him for a
possible baton transfer from President Buhari. Others have even gone so far as
to theorise conspiratorially that the plot is to declare the June 1993 election
results and thus ask Kingibe to step in to fulfil the mandate arising from the
declaration of those results.
This notion is so far-fetched
and constitutionally, legally and politically unsound that it can be dealt with
as dead on arrival, before it even begins to take root. Checking on
Kingibe’s age, we can see that there is no difference really between the two
friends. Ambassador Kingibe is already 73 years old, and he will be 74 next
year, by the time of our next elections. Despite the Malaysian experience, it
is clear that the world has already moved away from the era of
retired and tired geriatrics running governments. Science and technology are
fast developing and changing pace, accelerating almost at the speed of light,
that it would be unkind and unfair on these individuals to ask them to run
modern governments and expect them to succeed when they cannot keep abreast
with modern trends and ideas. This brings me to the fight to finish between PDP
and APC. I repeat, the next President of Nigeria will come from the file and
rank of either of these two parties. I do not believe that the third force or
ADC or whatever they may choose to call themselves is quite ready to take on
the mantle of liberator of the Nigerian masses as yet.
However, it is
beginning to look like the main opposition party, PDP, is beginning to
overstretch its luck. The party is facing a government which seems bereft of
ideas and looks willing to forfeit its power to the opposition. Yet, instead of
taking advantage of this farcical debacle that the government seems
to have conjured for itself, PDP seems to be ready to embark on a journey of
self-immolation. Consequently, the discussion and conclusion in town is that
Buhari does not seem to have serious opposition as we speak right now. And you
can’t blame those who feel that way. By now, most people expect PDP to have
realised that it needs to rebrand itself and rid itself of the yoke of the
past. That way, it becomes easier for those in the ruling party, who are
desperately seeking a move and wanting a way, to do so with some modicum of dignity
and respect. We are in almost the same scenario that the opposition to
President Jonathan was faced with, prior to the 2015 elections.
Those elections were
won, not simply because the Government of President Goodluck Jonathan was so
bad, which indeed, it was, or because the allure of President Buhari was so
great, which indeed, it was not. The election was won because the opposition
rebranded and came together as a party of national unity, with the disparate
elements from all of the major opposition parties uniting for the good of the
nation. Equally as important, as the issue of rebranding, is the failure of PDP
to settle, and be seen to be working, for a certain candidate, even if that
candidate is not yet formally confirmed. There are too many camps as it were
within the ranks of the PDP. Depending on who you ask, there are at least six
contenders for the number one slot.
They are Atiku
Abubakar, Rabiu Kwankwaso, Ibrahim Dankwambo, Sule Lamido, Bukola Saraki, Aminu
Tambuwal and Kabiru Tanimu Turaki. Interestingly, three of them, Kwankwaso,
Saraki and Tambuwal, are still technically in APC but it is generally believed
that their hearts and most of their bodies are no longer in that party. They
feel a sense of animosity, antipathy and aversion towards them that is
certainly more real than imagined. The result is that this alienation, leading
to possible, even, annihilation is such as to make them wounded animals, ready
to let rip against a party that they believe they helped to birth and nurture.
It is not healthy for PDP that it has not gone through what will be a painful
process of picking its candidate, or at least narrowing down its choices,
because it means the period for the healing process will be short and possibly
insufficient before the elections come. It is certain that there will be a lot
of dissatisfaction and disaffection on the part of the losers, because these
are strongmen, ironmen in their own individual right. Some will be sore losers.
Egos will be bruised. Bad blood will be created.
The party must be
ready to cope with the fallout, but without time, which is a precious commodity
at this moment, it cannot succeed. PDP would require a rock-solid team to
dislodge Buhari. That is why it is imperative for the party to take on the two
issues of party rebranding and preferred candidate sooner rather than later.
Indeed, the right time is now. Once a preferred candidate is known, that person
must be ready to play for broke and if necessary commit political suicide. For
now, I see only two people with such lion hearts at the moment, out of these
seven potential candidates earlier mentioned.
These two have been
grilled through the ages. They’ve experienced the vicissitudes of politics and
are still standing by the grace of God or whatever stroke of luck, at least so
far. I see Atiku Abubakar and Bukola Saraki in that mould. I do not however
rule out others. Both Rabiu Kwankwaso and Ibrahim Dankwambo have displayed some
steel and courage in the past. My assessment of them at this stage is because
they are simply not household names like Atiku and Saraki, but that is not to
say that they cannot yet prove to be the joker in the pack. Dankwambo in
particular seems to have done a lot of work in Gombe, as has indeed Tambuwal
who because of his relative youth may yet appeal to younger voters. The next
election is not going to be as easy to conduct and contest like the 2015
version under President Goodluck Jonathan.
The Buhari
administration comes with intimidating credentials from a most robust military
background. These ones won’t go down without a fight or guns blazing. Only
warriors with stupendous war-chests would stand any chance whatsoever of
sacking Buhari and his army of fanatical supporters and acolytes. The PDP
should make up its mind urgently because time is not anyone’s friend under this
circumstance. I think all the potential candidates should meet as soon as
possible with some of the party apparatchik and settle for number one and
number two, if ever they hope and pray to dismiss Buhari from power. Time will
soon tell!
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