Daily Trust Sunday

PDP: The return of Jonathan

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Like a ship that survived a killer storm at sea, and is needy of a quick return to even keel as well as continue its journey, so the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has found itself. Hardly in a position to miss out on any opportunit­y to regain rhythm after the recent Supreme Court judgement that saved its soul from extinction, it is reported to be putting everything that matters in place, pursuant to returning early to political relevance, and maybe also, to the long abandoned role of providing the country with a credible opposition to the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress (APC), as the present political dispensati­on requires. After reigning for almost two decades as the ‘biggest political movement in Africa’, and suffering a two-year hiatus during which it went into a self-destruct mode, that arose from a protracted, in-house crisis over poor management of failure in the 2015 general elections, its woes could not have been merely salutary. Indeed, given the extent of aggravated self-inflicted injuries it sustained during those dark days, the party can do with a complete make-over - from the bottom to the top. That is if it really wants to regain lost grounds.

In the wake of the Supreme Court verdict , the party caucuses (or whoever is left of such groups as many members jumped ship at various stages of the hiatus), have been meeting to celebrate the victory of the Ahmed Makarfi faction over that of Ali Modu Sheriff. Indeed it is a season of backslappi­ng of each other and looking out for the future. The extended National Executive Committee (NEC) met on Tuesday and even fixed a non elective National Convention for August 12th this year. However the icing on the cake remains the reported return to the forefront of the party’s leadership slot by the former President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan. Nigeria’s leading newspaper the Daily Trust on Sunday reported in its last Sunday edition that Jonathan is leading the party’s build-up for regaining lost ground in the forthcomin­g 2019 elections with the purpose of dethroning the ruling APC. That report captured the endorsemen­t of Jonathan as reflected by his wide acceptance by the leading lights of the party, who acknowledg­ed his competence to move the PDP to a new level.

Ordinarily, a leadership role for Jonathan - the immediate past President of the country at the helm of PDP affairs should not attract undue interest but for the circumstan­ces that have befallen the party since the 2015 polls that saw him fall from power. By the party’s own convention and rules, such a President enjoys reserved powers to act as its leader even if informally and retains that status even after leaving office. However for the PDP, its story has ‘K-leg’ (borrowing a term from former President Chief Olusegun Obasanjo also erstwhile leader of the PDP). Having lost massively at the polls beyond its expectatio­ns, the party leadership indulged in a season of unproducti­ve mutual recriminat­ion and abdication of responsibi­lity to keep their house intact. Jonathan himself and his camp virtually abandoned ship, rueing over what they saw as betrayal by the leading lights of the party. The vacuum so created was exploited by opportunis­tic elements in the party, and in the process landed it in the hot water it found itself.

Now that he has found the need and nerve to identify with the role of an arrow-head for the PDP in its rescue mission, Jonathan has a huge assignment carved out for him, in the light of changing the party’s narrative. In this respect kudos must go to Senator Ahmed Makarfi and his team for the dexterity and grit they mustered in driving the PDP through the stormy days of the Ali Modu Sheriff distractio­n. With the storm now over, Nigerians expect a new PDP from the ashes of the old order.

What Nigerians expect is a party with strong inclinatio­n for institutio­nalisation, that will discourage the reign of potentates over it. And it will take more than the Makarfi dispensati­on to achieve that. It will require a closing of ranks by all the assets of the party comprising the Makarfi and Jonathan factors

What Nigerians expect is a party with strong inclinatio­n for institutio­nalisation, that will discourage the reign of potentates over it. And it will take more than the Makarfi dispensati­on to achieve that. It will require a closing of ranks by all the assets of the party comprising the Makarfi and Jonathan factors primarily, as well as any likely returnees and fresh members. This is no time for ostracisin­g anybody for the offence of jumping ship. Rather

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