Governors elected on the platform of the
All Progressives Congress may queue behind Gen. Muhammadu Buhari(retd.)
as the preferred presidential candidate of the party for the 2015
election, SUNDAY PUNCH has learnt.
The governors are suspecting that those
asking the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, to
pick the presidential form are enemies of the party.
Two of the governors, who spoke with our correspondent on Friday and Saturday respectively, said they would work for Buhari.
One of them, who called our correspondent on Friday evening, said there was no way he and his colleagues would support Tambuwal.
He said he and his colleagues were not worried with Tambuwal’s picking of the party’s presidential form.
He said, “We are not worried with his picking presidential form. He’s not going far.
“We expected him to focus on him
becoming the governor of Sokoto State. He’s a good product anyway, but
he’s not ripe for Presidency now. He can’t defeat President Goodluck
Jonathan.”
Another governor, who’s from the North,
said Tambuwal’s entrance could be a ploy by pro-Jonathan sympathisers
within the party who he said, could be looking for a weak candidate that
the president could easily over-run.
He said he and some leaders within the
party were informed the national leadership of the party and the
Presidency were scared of a Buhari challenge.
He said this could be the main reason
the pro-Jonathan people within the party could have sold a dummy to
Tambuwal, deceiving him that he’s young and would be liked by all.
He said, “We know what’s going on. We
are not being deceived. Those saying Tambuwal is young and vibrant are
saying the truth, but his time hasn’t come. He doesn’t have the capacity
to command the followership in the north and the entire country.
“This is not the time to allow anyone to sell any dummy to the party. It is a national party and not a regional party anymore.
“If there is anyone who think he can
betray us at this stage, the person must think twice. We like Tambuwal,
but he can’t be our candidate for now.”
Meanwhile, the presidential aspiration
of Tambuwal has worsened the problems being faced by the All
Progressives Congress in choosing its presidential candidate.
Sunday PUNCH learnt in
Abuja, on Friday, that the Speaker’s entry had altered earlier
projections of a possible deal on a consensus candidate.
It was gathered that the leadership of
the APC had reasoned that choosing a consensus candidate would save the
party from rancour arising from a presidential primaries.
Some nursed fears that the primary might not produce the desired results for the party.
A member of the party’s National Working Committee, who spoke in confidence with SUNDAY PUNCH,
said, “We know that primaries may not produce a candidate that will be
acceptable nationwide. That is why we would have preferred a consensus,
but from the look of things, the presidential primary is unavoidable.”
The party’s National Chairman, John
Odigie-Oyegun, had recently stated that the leadership of the party
would gladly welcome the emergence of a consensus candidate for the
party in the 2015 election.
“I will give you one clear assurance; if
there is a consensus among the aspirants, we as a party will welcome it
completely. But if there is no consensus, we are going to give you the
cleanest, most transparent primary,” he said.
Also, while receiving Atiku Abubakar
last week in Lafia, the Nasarawa State Governor, Tanko Al-Makura,
appealed to the APC presidential aspirants to agree on a consensus
candidate.
The northern caucus of the party had, on Tuesday, met as part of efforts to choose a consensus candidate.
An ally of one of the leading aspirants, who pleaded anonymity, described Tambuwal’s entry as “a crude joke.”
The source pleaded anonymity because his principal forbade him from joining issues with any other campaign group.
He accused an unnamed leader of the party as not having outgrown the politics of “selfish interest for the unfolding scenario.”
The source said, “It is sad that some of
our so-called party leaders do not have the capacity to sacrifice
personal interest for the greater good.
“What you are seeing is the personal
interest of this individual, who wants to remain relevant at all costs,
especially after the Muslim/Muslim ticket kite failed to fly.”
Similarly, a member of another campaign
organisation, who also pleaded anonymity, said, “What we are facing now
is a make-or-mar situation.
“Let us not be deceived; if the primary
falls short of the standard of transparency, we may very well be saying
goodbye to a party which held so much promise, but failed to deliver.”
Reacting to the development, the
National Publicity Secretary of the APC, Lai Mohammed, said the party
did not zone the presidency to a particular part of the country.
This, he said, made it possible for all
interested members of the party to step out and obtain the party’s
expression of interest and nomination forms.
“Look at the calibre of the people that
are coming into our party: former heads of state, former
vice-presidents, speaker, governors, and former ministers, unlike theirs
when they printed only one form.”
Commenting on the Speaker’s entry into
the race, a leading member of the Maj. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari Campaign,
Osita Okechukwu, described Tambuwal’s entry into the race as a healthy
development.
He told one of our correspondents that
the more the presidential aspirants, or any aspirant to the office of
governor, National or State House of Assembly joining the party, the
better for it.
He said, “Tambuwal is, therefore, highly
welcome into the presidential race. This is why the constitution of our
party was amended penultimate week, to accommodate, in less than one
hour, any person who joins the APC.”
On Tambuwal’s chances, he said “one
cannot hazard a guess, as Tambuwal, unlike Buhari or Atiku, had never
contested nationwide election. He only contested in a federal
constituency and his popularity had never been tested in Kano, Akure or
Enugu.
“All one knows is that his entry will
neither diminish nor cut off the celestial bond between Gen. Muhammadu
Buhari, the masses and the middle class of our dear country.”
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