Daily Trust Sunday

An insider’s account of PACT (I)

Dear Readers, permit me to rest last week’s article about the revving political tsunami for something more momentous which has overshadow­ed that line of thought. The tsunami is still revving, but please scintillat­e yourselves with the events of the youthf

- Topsyfash@yahoo.com (SMS 0807085015­9) with Tope Fasua

Ifeel compelled to write about this because I had been broaching the issue and writing around it - and I had taken pains to discuss this with the parties that matter. Now that PACT has culminated in the way I predicted it would because of its many contradict­ions and naive assumption­s, it is apt to recount how it all panned out.

I woke up on 31st August, 2018, to see a message from amiable Fela Durotoye calling for support and unity. It took me a while to reply the message. Fela is not someone you would easily dislike. Or want to dislike. He has a disarming, charming personalit­y and is everyone’s pal. I loved him at first sight when I first met him like 15 years ago. He hasn’t changed. But when I replied him today, I made him know that my thinking is to see him and Kingsley Moghalu, myself and Sowore, on the final ballot representi­ng different political parties. I am greedy for talent. I have an artistic streak in me and sometimes find it hard to choose between two beautiful pieces of art. Fela, Kingsley, Sowore and others have different hues of uniqueness that we must not discard even for the sake of political expediency. Like I had advised the PACT before - and been ignored - we should spend more time to take such an important decision. There is no point rushing to press when we should be heating up the system and throwing in all the good ideas we have to help our nation. More on this later.

My initial reaction to the news of a consensus candidate was sadness because this situation could have been totally avoided. Why should one promising talent knock out another extremely promising talent when they both could have continued adding value to Nigeria even as aspirants? I must confess that personally, from a perspectiv­e of economic competence, internatio­nal connection­s, perhaps even maturity that comes with age, I would have wanted to see a Kingsley Moghalu emerge even though I felt it was too soon for that to happen. I had told him too. I used an analogy of how opportunis­tic predators like to isolate their prey for a ‘take down’. Already Kingsley’s campaign is facing the beginnings of a backlash from government agencies as his bill boards are being defaced. I don’t even believe that Kingsley needed that group because he was doing great on his own and had covered much ground compared to some of us who don’t have as much resources. From the point of view of getting the best brains to rescue Nigeria, I couldn’t bear seeing Kingsley’s dreams truncated so early. He has to now find any and every way to keep keeping on but I can imagine the backlash he will get and how the usual suspects will try and make mincemeat of him.

For Fela too, the crown he has obtained is fraught with problems, and of limited value. On one hand I know he had some issues at his party, the ANN. The endorsemen­t he has obtained may amount to some free advertisem­ent for ANN, where he has a strong man called Gbenga Olawepo-Hashim to deal with. Ordinarily, whoever obtained the ‘consensus candidate’ crown was supposed to have a smooth sailing to compete with Buhari or whoever APC puts forward. But now, it may just be that that garland will only be used to compete at a primaries and may probably be defeated because as we hear, Mr Hashim has a lot of financial superpower to have the party around his little finger by controllin­g all the state excos! This crown is getting devalued. Then there is the fact that only seven people voted for the winner of the consensus. Fela had four votes, Kingsley had three. What is seven votes in a situation where over 70 people and counting are aspiring to the seat of the presidency? Is the PACT representa­tive or approximat­ive of the aspiration­s of Nigerians? What weight does PACT carry among the voting populace especially those who don’t have their beloved aspirants prominentl­y represente­d in the group? Then with Kingsley’s ‘expected’ repudiatio­n of the process and outcome, the crown lost even more value and became sort of a poisoned chalice. What happened in PACT I attended the inaugural meeting of the young aspirants on the 31st of July 2018 at the behest of Mathias Tsado who is an aspirant on the platform of the ADP. We My initial reaction to the news of a consensus candidate was sadness because this situation could have been totally avoided. Why should one promising talent knock out another extremely promising talent when they both could have continued adding value to Nigeria even as aspirants? were like 15 on that day and guys like Ahmed Buhari, Sowore, Alistair Soyode, Eragbe Anselm, Sina FagbenroBy­ron, Jaiye Gaskiya and a few more were present. On that day the moment someone moved that we form a coalition, Sowore opted out and said he will not be part of any coalition because the word had already been abused. To the claim by some members that none of us could win single-handedly against Buhari, Sowore objected too. The man has great confidence that he can defeat Buhari and that is remarkable, given his tempo. I recall that it was Fela who came up with the name to call the group PRESIDENTI­AL ASPIRANTS COMING TOGETHER (PACT). I told him right there and then that that was plain genius!

On that day, we later met at Charly Boy’s house in Abuja and Kingsley Moghalu was there. He had sent a rep for the morning meeting.

Charly Boy posed a question as to what procedures we should adopt in arriving at a consensus. I was the second to last to speak but I believe my suggestion was more comprehens­ive. I advised 5 steps:

1. We should first expand the group to at least 40 because many people were out there aspiring and if we were too few, our outcome will be useless as so many other people outside the PACT would still power on regardless.

2. We should maintain an opening for those who may want to opt out of the group up to a certain point such that if they continue till the end they cannot say they are reneging. I preferred this to be in writing.

3. That we should have several more meetings and begin to invite the public to witness what we are doing eg through Facebook Live - such as to have their buy-in. We should not rush it at all.

4. That we should then begin to organize debates among members so that Nigerian people can see and hear the plans we have for them and also increase the buy-in.

5. That if possible we should have an election before the election, by allowing all Nigerians who are interested to vote for who they choose among us. On this one I know that some of the members there present have more followersh­ip online and in diaspora than others but I believe that the long and drawn out process would at least build a good tempo for all of us and give legitimacy to the project.

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