Showing posts with label Peoples Democratic Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peoples Democratic Party. Show all posts

Monday, December 23, 2013

President Jonathan orders probe of political hit list charge

President Jonathan
President Goodluck Jonathan said Monday he had ordered a probe into a rash of allegations, including the creation of a political hit squad, levelled against him by former leader Olusegun Obasanjo.

Obasanjo, who served as president from 1999-2007, penned an open letter to Jonathan on December 2 that accused him of training a private militia to assassinate political rivals.

A founding member of Jonathan's Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Obasanjo also accused the president of gross incompetence and urged him not to seek reelection in 2015.

Obasanjo's letter has dominated headlines in Africa's most populous country this month and Jonathan said he was compelled to publicly reply because the missive posed "a threat to national security." "Perhaps the most invidious accusation in your letter is the allegation that I have placed over one thousand Nigerians on a political watch list, and that I am training snipers and other militia to assassinate people," Jonathan said in the reply.

Jonathan dismissed the charge as "baseless" and "incomprehensible" and demanded Obasanjo offer proof. 

But, he added that he has "nevertheless... directed the security agencies and requested the National Human Rights Commission to carry out a thorough investigation of these criminal allegations and make their findings public".

While Nigeria has been gripped by the bitter public feud between the two political titans and onetime allies, the spat has mounted further pressure on Jonathan to declare his plans for the 2015 polls. The president has been hemorrhaging support in recent weeks, including the defection from the PDP of five powerful state governors to the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) last month.

The PDP, which has controlled all branches of the federal government since the end of military rule in 1999, also lost its majority in parliament last week after 37 lawmakers defected to the APC.

Obasanjo hosted senior APC leaders at his home on Saturday.

In weighing a reelection bid, Jonathan has been accused of breaking an unwritten PDP rule that calls for the presidency to rotate between southern Christians, like Jonathan, and northern Muslims. The country's 170 million people are roughly split between the two faiths. "I will only speak on whether or not I will seek a second term when it is time for such declarations," Jonathan's letter said.

Saturday, December 21, 2013

APC to woo Obasanjo today

Obasanjo
In accordance with the ongoing crusade led by leaders of the All Progressives Congress to canvass for support, the party is set to visit former President Olusegun Obasanjo today.

According to a report earlier published by a national newspaper in the country, it was reported that some leaders of the party, including some of its governors will meet Obasanjo at his home in Ota, Ogun State.

Recalling, APC had visited Atiku earlier this week, among other prominent statesmen following the success the party recorded in wooing five governors under the platform of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) to join its platform.

The governors, who defected to APC are Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers), Rabiu Kwankwanso (Kano); Aliyu Wamakko (Sokoto); Abdulfatah Ahmed (Kwara); and Murtala Nyako (Adamawa).

A new dawn at the Federal House of Representatives

Speaker, Federal House
The national leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP was last night locked in a meeting with the remnants of the party caucus in the House of Representatives in Transcorp Hotel, Abuja. Last night’s meeting was one of several carrot and stick options initiated by the party hierarchy to hold other fidgety legislators contemplating leaving the party.

The day before the meeting 37 members of the PDP caucus in the House defected to the All Progressives Congress, APC turning the once dominant majority into a minority.

One of the responses from the presidency was the decision of President Goodluck Jonathan to absent himself from the presentation of the 2014 budget proposals to the National Assembly. In his stead, the coordinating minister of the economy and minister of finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala presented the proposals to the two houses of the National Assembly. It was the first time that a sitting and fit president would present the country’s financial projections to the legislature in absentia.

Stakeholders were, however, divided whether the president was right to absent himself from the presentation or not. The absence of the president some alleged, was out of apprehension that the APC members and especially the new ones just decamped from the PDP would embarrass the president by booing him.
It was, however, learnt that this year was not the first time that such threats of booing the president were perceived.

One source revealed that in the past when such threats were made, the then Special Adviser to the President on National Assembly, Senator Joy Emodi took time to identify the source of such threats and worked on them to mollify them and sometimes, got some of the members to clap for the president during his budget speech.

However, Mrs. Emodi was eased out of office few months ago following an alleged face off between her and some presidency officials who sought to create what she allegedly described as a parallel and divisive support structure for the presidency in the National Assembly.

Wednesday’s defection inevitably made the PDP to for the first time since the advent of democratic rule in 1999 to lose its plurality of members in the House of Representatives as the party slipped in membership strength from 208 to 171.

What was a loss for the PDP turned into a gain for the APC which transformed itself from a minority party to the majority party in the House with 174 members. Even though the APC now has the highest number of members, the party is still short of an overall majority in the 360 member House.

Labour Party, the All Progressive Grand Alliance, APGA and Accord, together have a membership of 17, giving the impression that they could become the deciding factors in any partisan dispute. That prospect is, however, diluted by the fact that as many as 40 other members of the PDP are also waiting in the wings to leave the party. The 40 or so members who are allegedly waiting, it was learnt, were those who decided to tread the path of caution, apparently afraid that their seats could be endangered by whatever scheme that the PDP could marshal to hit at the renegade legislators.

It was as such not surprising that 57 of the lawmakers supportive of the now defunct nPDP in the House and 20 senators also inclined to the faction of the PDP went to court for an order to restrain the PDP or the National Assembly leadership from declaring their seats vacant in the event of defection. The members were guarding their seats against the background of constitutional provisions that members who leave their parties must vacate their seats except in the case of the factionalisation of the party on which they were elected. The PDP leadership has on its part sought to pooh-pooh insinuations that the emergence of the nPDP does not amount to the emergence of a new faction and have cited the court pronouncement that the Bamanga Tukur led mainstream of the party is the only recognized leadership.

It was being expected that the party would raise such issues with the members last night as the meeting was yet to commence as at press time yesterday. In a recent meeting with senators, Tukur had issued the carrot of a return ticket to senators, a promise, that inevitably quickly boomeranged given the aspiration of many second term governors to move to the Senate or to stop some of their senators from returning. It was following that interaction with senators that PDP governors again called for the removal of Tukur as national chairman. What was thought to be a respite for the beleaguered national chairman following the exit of the five nPDP governors from the party, it seemed, was not a respite after all. So, at yesterday’s night meeting the national chairman was expected to be more tactful in making any promises of giving re-election tickets to the legislators as a quid pro quo for their remaining in the party.

Whatever the actions of the PDP leadership, it is certain that the PDP in the House of Representatives would in the foreseeable future play a secondary role in the affairs of the House. After his heartfelt umbrages against the policies and points men of the administration, there are few doubts about the political inclinations of Speaker Aminu Waziri Tambuwal. Though he did not join the other 10 members from Sokoto State to defect, few doubt that Tambuwal is heart and soul in the APC. His remaining in the PDP according to some sources is just a matter of convenience as defecting would do little to his continued leadership of the House.

The same, however, cannot be said of others on the PDP side of the leadership, particularly the deputy speaker, Chief Emeka Ihedioha who given his alleged gubernatorial aspiration in his native Imo State would think twice about defecting. Sources in the House have told Vanguard that a change in the leadership would be effected on resumption after the yuletide break. It was learnt that an attempt may be made to alter the rules of the House to preserve the status quo, but how successful such a move could be has remained an issue.

However, Ihedioha as deputy speaker was elected by the House and not by a party caucus and unless the APC members are able to mobilize two-thirds of the members they may be unable to shove him aside. His personal chemistry with members may inevitably determine his fate. However, for the other party leaders who were appointed by the party caucus, it is expected that they would automatically revert to minority positions in the New Year.

The prospect of the incumbent minority leader, Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila becoming the Majority Leader and leading the affairs of the House is probably one of the factors that may have agonized the PDP national leadership and the presidency. Gbajabiamila, a strong critic of the Jonathan administration is also one of the closest allies of the APC leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

There are suggestions that in the new dispensation that Gbajabiamila would skip the presentation of government bills as majority leaders have done since 1999, and leave same for the minority leader from the PDP. The outlook for the PDP has never been this bad and it was thus not surprising that the president skipped his normal schedule of presenting the budget yesterday. Pitiably, he has plenty more of such days ahead!

Source: Vanguard

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

PDP peace process dead, buried says Nyako

The Governor of Adamawa State, Murtala Nyako, has said the suspension of key members of the Abubakar Baraje-led faction of the Peoples Democratic Party has not only killed the peace process, it has buried it.

Nyako, who said this on Tuesday, was reacting to Monday’s suspension of the factional chairman of the party, Alhaji Abubakar Baraje, the party’s National Secretary, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, and Senator Ibrahim Kazaure by the Alhaji Bamanga Tukur-led PDP.

He explained that the PDP under Tukur’s leadership shot itself in the leg by ignoring a legitimate court order to reinstate Oyinlola and taking actions which had “killed and buried” the peace process. Nyako, who spoke through his Director of Press and Public Affairs, Ahmad Sajo, said he had always known that nothing good would come out of the discussions with a PDP where Tukur remained the national chairman.

He said, “We always knew there was no peace process. The peace process is dead and buried. The court had given them a soft landing but instead of obeying the court order, look at the step they have taken. “It’s an ill wind that will blow nobody any good. We know that they are not committed to peace; Bamanga Tukur will lead this party to destruction.

“The President should think of the legacy he will leave behind and not allow himself to be led astray by people like Tukur.” In a speech he delivered at a parley with members of the Bishops and Emminent Clerics Forum of Nigeria, Niger-Delta Chapter, in Yola, Nyako said he was no longer prepared to work with the PDP.

Nyako said, “Let me quote one statement in one of our Great Books, the Holy Bible; ‘Can two walk together except they be agreed’ to do so? “We in Adamawa State have resolved not to ‘walk together’ with massive wrongdoers and cannot tolerate impunity and lawlessness by the national leadership of any political party located in Abuja, because that would be tantamount to inviting chaos and anarchy to our beloved state.
“We cannot and shall not ‘walk together’ with the evil-few of Adamawa indigenes with their cohorts residing in Abuja who wish us ill, calamity and destruction.

“These are the same fellows who must have brought about the declaration of state of emergency on Adamawa State six months ago and the renewal of the emergency rule a few days ago.”