A columnist in Vanguard has written an article on how Obasanjo destroyed PDP. It was pretty revealing. Read below;
Former President Obasanjo, as we
can see, used the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) to rule Nigeria for eight
years. As soon as he assumed office in 1999, he made up his mind to reduce
Nigeria to a one-party state, his pet party system which he canvassed vigorously
while Nigeria conducted its transition to civil rule programmes.
By 2007 when Obasanjo was
constitutionally forced out of power, PDP was at the zenith of its power and
glory. It had 26 out of the 36 governors, 260 out of the 369 members of the
House of Representatives, 85 out of the 109 senators and an emphatic command of
the majority in the state legislatures and the 774 local councils. It was at
this point that the party started priding itself as “the largest party in
Africa”, and some of its chieftains boasted that the PDP would rule Nigeria for
“sixty years”.
The size of the Party was largely
as a result of Obasanjo’s repression of the opposition parties, which became
unattractive for politicians to contest for power. The party was so powerful
that Obasanjo suddenly developed an ambition to grab extra terms of office for
himself when he was nearing the end of his constitutional two terms. To
succeed, he nullified the membership of the party and ensured that all party
members were re-registered. This, of course, ensured that those Obasanjo did
not want in the party were weeded. These included former Vice President Atiku
Abubakar and former Governor of Abia State, Chief Orji Kalu.
When his tenure elongation plans
failed, Obasanjo put his Plan “B” into effect. He opted to unilaterally install
his successor in office. He chose a terminally ailing Governor Umaru Yar’ Adua
of Katsina state for president and paired him with a quiet, self-effacing
Governor of Bayelsa State, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan as Vice President. He also
planted his cronies as governors of the various states. He even planted them in
opposition parties.
A case in point was in Imo, where
the Obasanjo ordered the PDP to withdraw from the governorship race and support
Chief Ikedi Ohakim, who had decamped from PDP when he failed to get the ticket
at the primaries and ran on the ticket of the Progressive People’s Alliance
(PPA).
Obasanjo’s ambition, at this
juncture, was to become the Life Leader of the PDP, such that he could wield
great political influence and lord it over the occupants of Aso Villa from Ota
or Abeokuta.
The plan ran into storms,
however. When Yar’ Adua assumed power, he refused to dance to Obasanjo’s tunes.
He was determined to leave a legacy of his own. Obasanjo was not given any
space to maneouvre. But unfortunately, Yar’ Adua became seriously sick and died
in 2010. Obasanjo jumped out of his political doghouse and started prompting
Jonathan to run on his own terms in 2011, even though many northern leaders
preferred that he allowed one of theirs to replace him.
Soon, Obasanjo found out he had
lost his place in the PDP even under Jonathan. It was so bad he was almost
ignominiously booted out of his Board of Trustees Chairman post. In the middle
of 2013, he resigned from the post. President Jonathan was later on to describe
Obasanjo as “a goat seller who, after selling his goat, refuses to release the
rope”. The Ota-born chicken farmer went home and started the war that led,
ultimately, to the end of PDP’s reign.
In January 2014, he published one
of his series of scandalous open letters to President Jonathan, accusing him of
every abominable sin under the sun, including training snipers to kill his political
opponents. A man under whose watch many prominent people were murdered was
accusing a president who never recorded a single such incident in his five and
half years as President!
Between April and May 2014,
Obasanjo went round many states of the North and persuaded some of the
governors he planted in power to run for president to replace Jonathan. Some of
these were: Governors Sule Lamido of Jigawa, Rabiu Kwankwaso of Kano,
Magatakarda Wamakko of Sokoto and Babangida Aliyu of Niger. Some of these OBJ-made
governors were at the forefront of the rebellion against Jonathan.
The tipping point came when five
of the rebel governors decamped from PDP and joined the newly amalgamated All
Progressives Congress (APC) which was put together by Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu
and General Muhammadu Buhari.
From that point on, the rapid
emaciation of the PDP could no longer be stopped. Obasanjo was relentless in
his attacks on Jonathan. Apart from writing public letters, he also nudged some
of his out-of-work former ministers, such as Oby Ezekwesili, Nasir el Rufai and
lately, Charles Soludo, to slam the Jonathan administration each time they got
the chance to go public. Obasanjo climaxed his choreography with the public
tearing of his PDP membership card a couple of months to the presidential
election.
Of course, PDP’s fall from power
under the watch of President Jonathan was further helped by the President’s
failure to take decisive steps when and where he needed to. This made him
subject to blackmail. Jonathan surrounded himself with people who posed as his
lovers but were actually deceivers. They took whatever they could from him and
abandoned him when he needed them most. Matters were not helped by his sloppy
handling of the Boko Haram insurgency, which grew from a small pox on the nose
to a plague that wracked the whole nation.
Perhaps, if Jonathan had been a
little more in charge and decisive, he would have prevented some of the little
problems that ballooned to decide for him only one term in office. But Obasanjo
was the headwind that chipped away, unchallenged, at the pedestal of his
presidential power.
This was written by Ochereome Nnanna, The Columnist, Deputy Chairman Editorial Board at Vanguard Media Ltd
Source: Vanguard Newspaper
2 comments:
oBASANJO TRULY DESTROYED PDP AND NOW HE CLAIMS HE IS A SAINT
A party he never founded.It was hijacked from the original owners.
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