The
proposed mega party for the 2019 general election is still on the pipeline.
Movers
of the party are said to be targeting 16 states of the federation and they are confident of displacing the All Progressives Congress (APC) in 2019
A
report by Thisday indicates that 16 incumbent governors may join the proposed
new mega party expected to challenge the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC)
in the 2019 general election.
According
to the report, the promoter of the new party immediate plans is to win the 2018
governorship polls in Ekiti and Osun states.
The
proposed opposition party is believed to have the tacit support of the Senator
Ahmed Makarfi-led faction of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), a national
leader of the APC, Chief Bola Ahmed Tinbubu, and former Vice-President Atiku
Abubakar, a major chieftain of the APC.
Both
Tinubu and Atiku have, however, denied their involvement in the proposed party,
saying they remained committed to the APC.
The
states considered to be the strongholds of the proposed mega party are Abia,
Ebonyi and Enugu in the South-east; Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Delta, Cross River and
Bayelsa in the South-south; Osun, Oyo, Ekiti and Lagos in the South-west;
Gombe, Taraba, Adamawa in the North East; and for now Benue State in the
North-central zone.
Meanwhile,
the Makarfi-led PDP has expressed disappointment in the way Atiku and Tinubu
denied their involvement in the formation of the new party.
The
PDP leaders are said to be of the opinion that the duo should have known what
they were up against from the outset.
According
to a PDP stalwart: “We would have expected Atiku and Tinubu to have been more
strategic in their reactions to the news,
“They
just proved that they could develop cold feet at the slightest whiff and are
not really prepared to take on the challenges that lie ahead. Their denials
could be a setback for the mega party, as there is no way the formation can
progress with this kind of attitude.
“We
know it is going to be tough, but we must be ready to live with the
consequences.
Media
reports on Sunday, December 4, suggests that the mega party would make its
debut by the end of March 2017, just about two years before the next general
election in 2019.
In
a related development, Dr. Junaid Mohammed, a second republic lawmaker and a
foremost commentator on northern Nigerian affairs, has described President
Muhammadu Buhari as a ‘monumental failure’ as president.
Mohammed
warned that crisis may erupt which could hasten the break-up of the country if
Buhari decides to run for re-election in 2019.
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