Daily Trust Saturday

Before the PDP elects a presidenti­al candidate

- O.J Sufyan

If experience in politics and government were to be the sole determinan­ts of qualificat­ion, the PDP should be looking in the direction of one of three persons as its presidenti­al standard bearer at its election primary holding in Port Harcourt this weekend, to wit: former vice president, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, former Jigawa state governor, Alhaji Sule Lamido and former Kano state governor, Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso.

Apart from being recurring decimals in the politics of the fourth republic, the trio had their imprimatur­s firmly stamped on the politics of the ill-fated third republic. Whereas, Atiku played a leading role in the strategic moves by the defunct SDP to secure a strong footing in the nation’s presidenti­al politics, Lamido’s persona was writ large in the administra­tion of the SDP as the party’s national secretary. Kwankwaso, on his part, was deputy speaker of the House of Representa­tives in that republic.

But if single-minded purpose and readiness to run for and occupy the position of Nigeria’s president on the basis of preparedne­ss and self-motivation to confront the existentia­l issues of governance, and not on promptings by godfathers, the fancy of political accidents and peer pressure or prospects of anchoring the nation’s presidency on camaraderi­e on which toehold the governor of Rivers state, Nyesom Wike, has built his open support for his lawyer-friend and Sokoto state governor, Aminu Tambuwal, then the PDP should look in the direction of Atiku.

Validation: Atiku bears the same can-do spirit that had continued to propel President Muhammadu Buhari’s interest in the presidency since 2003 until 2015 when he enjoyed a historic massive coalition of forces that galvanised a near national consensus on the imperative of his presidency. That sensationa­l nationwide approbatio­n had resulted in his defeat of an incumbent president, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan.

Pushing through his preference in the in-your-face-manner with which he is rambunctio­usly promoting and selling the aspiration of Tambuwal may be counterpro­ductive to the party. Regardless of misgivings about his preference, he seems to have crossed the Rubicon on the matter. The point being made here is that whereas it was not difficult to rally other aspirants behind Buhari’s candidatur­e in 2015 given his charisma, gravitas and the cult-like support he enjoyed and still enjoys in the core north, Wike should have been true to himself in assessing the capacity of Tambuwal’s persona and politics to galvanise and unite behind him the other aspirants if he emerges as the candidate. Will the other aspirants, given the evident hands of Wike in the process, find it convenient to accept Tambuwal’s candidatur­e? Besides, is there a repository of cultic followers in the core north, not to talk of the south where he is hardly known, that Tambuwal can leverage on to defeat Buhari 2019?

The Tambuwal persona, in the event Wike succeeds in foisting his candidatur­e on the party, cannot arguably engender the collective acquiescen­ce by others in his support because the justificat­ions are simply and evidently weak. There must be some strong reasons that would bring about such consensual support just as the Buhari candidatur­e witnessed in the 2015 election. Tambuwal is not sure-footed about the presidency. The presidenti­al race is not a game of chance as the Sokoto state governor’s attitude is said to have shown.

Conversely, it is believed that a majority of the presidenti­al aspirants will not find it difficult to support Atiku on account of his capacity, age, experience, respect, nationwide structure and acceptabil­ity, commitment to restructur­ing which the southern part of the country is enamoured of and the possible ramificati­ons of power devolution that will make the central government unattracti­ve moving towards the 2023 presidenti­al election if he becomes president in 2019.

Should the PDP leaders and delegates fail to act in the overall interest of the party and they allow Wike to have his way, they may all be headed for a doomed presidenti­al adventure. The fate of the PDP in the forthcomin­g presidenti­al battle should not be left for Wike to decide. First, he does not have the political savoir-faire, the kind that Tinubu deployed in the emergence of Buhari at the APC presidenti­al primary election in Lagos in 2014.

Indeed, there is nothing in the books that says that Wike must always have his way as he did with the imposition of Uche Secondus, his friend, as national chairman of the PDP at the expense of the south west zone to which the position was originally ceded. The PDP leaders and delegates owe it a duty to themselves and their party members to do their due diligence and speak emphatical­ly with their votes in the presidenti­al primary election in support of the best of the aspirants.

Sufyan contribute­d this piece from Abu

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