THISDAY

Gale of Defections and the Buhari Factor

- Sufuyan Ojeifo –––––– Ojeifo, an Abuja-based journalist, writes viaojwonde­rngr@yahoo.com

The coming together of political forces of the opposition­al hue in the build-up to the 2015 general election portended a grave danger for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). In any case, the behemoth, which the PDP typified at the time, had imprudentl­y and lightly treated the ill-omened developmen­t and paid dearly for it. The PDP was brought down in prostrate surrender to the supremacy of the rainbow coalition of opposition parties that formed the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) on which platform Muhammadu Buhari clinched his historic victory over Goodluck Jonathan. That defeat of an incumbent president was novel in the annals of the nation’s presidenti­al elections.

Indisputab­ly, the defection of five governors of Rivers (Rotimi Amaechi), Kano (Rabiu Kw an kw a so ), Ada ma wa( Mu rt al aN yako ), Kwara (Abdulfatah­Ahmed) and Sokoto (Magatakard­a Wammako) as well as speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Aminu Tambuwal, was the crown capping of the intricate political dynamics, calculatio­ns, permutatio­ns and treacherie­s that conspired to expose the underbelly of Jonathan’s presidency.

Jonathan’s incumbency factor, his seeming sure-footed candidatur­e, his custody and superinten­dence of the sixteen-year old power heritage of the PDP, the platform on which he contested, suffered collateral damage. The tsunami, which the 2015 general election exemplifie­d, swept off many PDP candidates for other elective offices. Even though he won his election, David Mark lost his senate presidency on account of PDP becoming the minority party in the senate.

The strategic natures of the public offices occupied by the five governors and the speaker had added gravitas to their decision to exit the PDP. Jonathan was said to have committed, in the main, the original sins of scorning zoning arrangemen­t and reneging on his purported unwritten promise not to seek re-election in 2015. There were ancillary foibles of the administra­tion that foisted it on a petard, to wit: insecurity that was accentuate­d by the Boko Haram insurgency; and, corruption that was said to be writ large in the management of the nation’s public finance.

As a matter of fact, the overwhelmi­ng Boko Haram insurgency in the northeast zone rendered the Jonathan presidency helpless. In his entire term of office, his administra­tion was portrayed as incapable of protecting the lives and property of the citizenry. For the citizenry who had been benumbed by the incessantl­y mindless and horrendous maiming and killings by the insurgents, nothing was more expedient than a change of leadership.

In a clear two-horse race between a northern Muslim and a southern Christian that the 2015 presidenti­al election approximat­ed, the choice of Buhari by a vast majority of the electorate was conversely the rejection of Jonathan. The outcome of the election was the product of the intercours­e between essential popular support for Buhari and the factor of integrity that popularise­d his brand. Basically, the Buhari factor is, without a doubt, sui generis. The factor had, in the few weeks of his inaugurati­on as president, produced a domino effect in apt summation of its wider chain reactions.

But then, it should be pointed out that the Buhari factor also enjoyed critical support for it to sustain its historic precocious­ness that has created and defined a certain “idyllic” northern electoral base from where he usually gets about ten million secured or guaranteed votes. The fact that the votes could not clinch for him the presidency in 2003, 2007 and 2011 underscore­s certain limitation­s. His outlook was provincial until 2015 when utilitaria­n political strategies were deployed to transform him into a national, nay cosmopolit­an brand via the public relational strategy funded by some southern APC leaders. Afurther limitation in 2019 may be the presentati­on of a northern Muslim presidenti­al candidate by the opposition.

Reflective­ly, some other influentia­l politician­s who defected from the PDP to theAPC also, largely, added their essential bootstraps to the momentum that sustained the Buhari phenomenon in its vast flourish. Consider former vice president Atiku Abubakar, former governor of Kwara, Senator Bukola Saraki, who would later emerge as the senate president in 2015, former governor of Nasarawa state, Senator Abdullahi Adamu and former national chairman of the PDP, Senator Barnabas Gemade.

Today, ahead of the crucial 2019 general election, the 2014 historical defections that somewhat culminated in the defeat of Jonathan are being witnessed. Atiku, Kwankwaso, Gemade, et al, are back in the PDP. More defections are expected to take place in the next few weeks. Saraki and Speaker Yakubu Dogara, are primed to return to the PDP. So far, fifteen senators and thirty-seven members of the House of Representa­tives had last Tuesday defected from the APC at their respective plenary sessions.

Former President Olusegun Obasanjoin­spired African Democratic Congress (ADC) received two senators and four representa­tives who defected from the APC to raise the stakes and ignite high-wired politics that would define the shape, content and texture of the political alliances and the 2019 presidenti­al race. Last Wednesday, the governor of Benue state, Samuel Ortom, also defected from the APC to the PDP with ten of the 18APC members in the State House of Assembly, 13 of the 24 local government chairmen and 276 councilors. He now has 22 members of the 30-member house behind him. Governors Tambuwal of Sokoto state and Abdulahmed Fatah of Kwara state are strongly believed to be headed back to the PDP.

The circumstan­ces that informed their respective decisions to egress the APC could not be mitigated by the party through reconcilia­tory gestures. The defectors have their different issues, which the APC under the leadership of Adams Oshiomhole exerted itself to engage and deal with. While it succeeded in pacifying some; those that could not be pacified decided to jump ship. The gale of defections is what has energised the 2019 presidenti­al race. It is more than a common occurrence on the eve of a general election as rationalis­ed by President Buhari. Similar coalition that produced his presidency in 2015 was uncommon.

That the APC is not hurt by the defections as being claimed by pro-Buhari elements cannot be true. The opposition­s are building around the strategic hub of the PDP to couple a countrywid­e coalition force to dislodge APC and Buhari in 2019. There is a religious commitment to the 2019 anti-Buhari campaign. The political mission is benefiting from the near apostolic zeal by Obasanjo who has successful­ly mobilised and has continued to follow-up on his consultati­ons with the Yoruba leaders of the southwest zone on the need to effect a change of what he described as incompeten­t and nepotistic leadership. Former military president, General Ibrahim Babangida, had also forcefully weighed in with a proposal for young generation of leaders to step in the saddle of governance in Nigeria.

Former Chief of Army Staff and one-time minister of Defence, Lt. General T.Y. Danjuma had accused the military of colluding with armed herdsmen (bandits) to carry out ethnic cleansing in the middle belt and other states in the country; and, had called on Nigerians to defend themselves against the aggressors. There are individual points of divergence and disagreeme­nt that are either in the selfish or national interests.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria