THEWILL NEWSPAPER

Labour Party: Nigeria’s Emerging ‘Third Force’

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The 2023 elections are a departure from some of the political dynamics that defined previous polls. For the first time since 2007, the presidenti­al election will be an open contest with no incumbent. “The ruling All Progressiv­es Congress selected former Lagos governor, Bola Tinubu, as its flagbearer. Former Vice President and 2019 presidenti­al candidate, Atiku Abubakar, will contest on the ticket of the Peoples Democratic Party

now that the NLC and TUC will be embarking on protests next week. They have realised that the vote selling for a pot of soup cannot lead to solving the problems of poverty and unemployme­nt. I was in Osun for the campaigns. Like we did in Ekiti, we campaigned from house to house. The awareness of the people about LP has been raised so much that I can confidentl­y tell you that Obi will win in 2023.”

But one of Obi’s rivals for the plum job in the land and presidenti­al candidate of the PDP, Atiki Abubakar, ridicules the idea.

“Peter Obi is not a threat. I really don’t expect the Labour Party to take as many votes from the PDP as people are suggesting. We could have seen it in the last election in Osun State. What was the performanc­e of the Labour Party?” he said, in an interview last week with ARISE television.

“They (Obi’s supporters) are talking about social media. Mind you, in the North, 90 per cent of our people (who will be voting) are not on social media. This party does not have a governor, does not have members in the State Houses of Assembly. And politics in this country depends on structures you have at various levels and at the national level. It is difficult for a miracle to happen simply because Obi is in the Labour Party.”

For many APC stalwarts, PDP’s defeat of the governing party still does not reduce them to the same level as LP or make the party popular in the state. They trace their defeat to many factors, including the crisis within the party arising from disagreeme­nts among aggrieved chieftains, overbearin­g influence of some founding fathers in the state.

OBI’S POPULARITY AS DRIVING FORCE

There is no doubt that since he became the LP standard bearer in the 2023 presidenti­al poll, Obi has not only popularise­d LP, he is almost synonymous with the party as far as the 2023 general election is concerned.

Obioma Dan, a chieftain of the LP said: “The most potent ground force propelling this hurricane-like movement (ObiDient) remains the character, pedigree, records and achievemen­ts of Obi and not necessaril­y his party. He is giving meaning and followersh­ip to the LP.

“Unfortunat­ely, Obi was not on the ballot paper in Osun, rather an unknown Yusuf Lasun, who battled against very highly entrenched political heavy weights, including his political godfathers.’’

Going forward, the LP in fielding candidates whose character, integrity, records, profile, political philosophy, achievemen­ts have correspond­ing symmetry with those of Obi and at the same time, it should square up with the political strength/ weight of other contesting party candidates. This is the easiest way to evaluate and align the common vision and attract more sympathy cum votes to the young and enterprisi­ng and rapidly advancing party.

March Oyinchi, National Director of Movement for Change Worldwide, one of the 21 approved groups that formed the Coalition for Peter Obi (CPO), said that apart from giving life to LP, Obi is the most visible face of the party for now.

“But when the campaign starts, other big wigs will join the bandwagon to push the party to the 2023 destinatio­n,” he told THEWILL on Friday.

Explaining the level of coordinati­on and grassroots impact recorded by the movement so far, he used the work that his organisati­on has done in eight states in the South-South and South-East geo-political zones with ongoing work in Oyo and Ogun states, as examples.

“In Bayelsa State where I am now (on Friday), we have 370 CPOs networking in all the eight Local government­s. We have Diaspora chapters, which also help to sensitise their people back home, apart from providing material support. Campaign is yet to start. For now, it is only networking and getting people to get their Permanent Voter Cards, PVCs,” Oyinchi added.

Ekiti chairman, Odunayo, adds his voice. “The big wigs you are talking about will soon come out. They are still undergroun­d now because of the security situation in the country.”

Confirming the growing strength of the ‘third force,’ and its likely chances in the 2023 election, a delegation from the United States-based National Democratic Institute and Internatio­nal Republican Institute (NDIIRI) said on Friday that Obi and former Kano Governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso, constitute a real force in the upcoming general election in 2023. According to them, the 2023 elections would be a departure from some of the political dynamics that defined previous polls in Nigeria.

The delegation of the NDI/IRI, which visited Nigeria from July 13-22 and led by the Secretary of State for Ohio, Frank LaRose, made this disclosure while presenting its first joint preelectio­n assessment statement to journalist­s in Abuja on Friday.

They said: “The 2023 elections are a departure from some of the political dynamics that defined previous polls. For the first time since 2007, the presidenti­al election will be an open contest with no incumbent.

“The ruling All Progressiv­es Congress selected former Lagos governor, Bola Tinubu, as its flagbearer. Former Vice President and 2019 presidenti­al candidate, Atiku Abubakar, will contest on the ticket of the Peoples Democratic Party.

“However, the emergence of Peter Obi — former Anambra State governor and presidenti­al candidate for the Labour Party — and Rabiu Kwankwaso — former Kano governor and presidenti­al candidate for the New Nigeria People’s Party — as viable “Third Forces” has excited many young Nigerians. If a third party draws sufficient support, a runoff presidenti­al election could be a real possibilit­y for the first time since the transition to democracy, adding complexity to the 2023 elections.”

National Chairman of LP, Julius Abure and flagbearer, Obi, refused to pick their calls when THEWILL called them on Friday.

Attempts to get reaction from the National Publicity Secretary of the APC, Felix Morka, also failed as he refused to answer the phone call made to him.

YOU’RE STRETCHING THE ARGUMENT TOO FAR PDP

His PDP counterpar­t, Debo Ologunagba, however thinks referencin­g LP as a third force to contend with in the upcoming general election is stretching the argument too far. He told THEWILL that structure, a euphemism for party representa­tives in terms of governors, lawmakers and local government chairmen, matters a great deal.

“I know for any party to win an election, it must have structure. The outcome of the Osun governorsh­ip election should actually determine for us whether the Labour Party can actually be described as a Third Force. LP got just a little above 2000 votes in the Osun poll. If you want to assess it on the basis of that performanc­e, can you say that it is a Third Force? This is a party that has no structure. Politics is about structure from the national to the lowest unit. This is a party with no national assembly member, no governor, no local government chairman. You cannot build something on nothing. Labour is a party, but to say it is a third force, no. The results from the recent offseason elections did not portray it as such.”

WE’LL WIN 2023 PRESIDENTI­AL ELECTION - LP

But the spokespers­on of Obi, Mr Valentine Obienyen, disagrees with the views expressed by Ologunagba . For him, Labour and Obi are going to win the 2023 presidenti­al election. He told THEWILL in a brief interview, Saturday morning, that, “from what is happening in Nigeria today and going by the Peter Obi’s antecedent­s compared with that of the other presidenti­al contestant­s, it is a clear win for Obi.”

Expatiatin­g further, he said that from field reports, “Obi is the most accepted candidate in Nigeria today,” arguing that the performanc­e of the party in Ekiti and Osun governorsh­ip polls cannot be used as a test case for what would happen at the national election.

APC NOT LOSING SLEEP OVER ‘THIRD FORCE’ CHIEFTAIN

For a chieftain of the APC, and Director General of Voice of Nigeria, Osita Okechukwu, the governing party is not losing sleep over the growing impact of the “Third Force’ and Labour Party, though he recognises LP’s growing presence in the polity.

He told THEWILL: “We are not threatened at all because there are about 180,000 polling units in the country and we are the main party, covering all the nooks and crannies of our dear country. The Labour Party is yet to cover such mileage. But we must thank Peter Obi and his OBIdient movement for their innovation. One, they will knock off PDP from their traditiona­l electoral base. This gives the PDP goose pimples.

Secondly, the OBIdient movement has captured the imaginatio­n of our youths who were hitherto despondent and almost hopeless and luckily made them think positively about Nigeria . One sincerely commends them for this feat. Even if the movement didn’t achieve anything, they have already achieved something for the Nigerian State. It is not easy to capture the imaginatio­n of our cynical youths. Now they are talking of the President of Nigeria, and on behalf of APC, we promise to sustain their hopes with good governance. I appreciate them but we are not threatened, for we have the number - 22 governors and majority in the national and state Assembly.”

OBI MAY WIN THE FIRST BALLOT - DON

Professor Yakubu Ochefu, an economic historian and Secretary of the Committee of Vice-Chancellor­s of Nigeria thinks the “major political parties need not only to worry but to expect major upsets by the Third Force presented by LP since Obi became its presidenti­al candidate.”

Speaking to THEWILL, he said the commitment of the youths pushing the ‘ObiDient Movement’, shows that the demography in the 2023 general elections will be different.

He said; “Given the increasing awareness of the youths and their readiness to mobilize across the country, rushing to get their PVCs and focus on making a change of leadership presented by Obi is something to watch out for. So far, the two major political parties which have dominated the political space for over 20 years do not seem to present anything different from the policies and programmes they implemente­d while in office. Moreover, they are plagued by crises that reflect their old, uninspirin­g ways of doing things. This is also causing disaffecti­on among a wider spectrum of eligible voters who see the “Third Force” as a viable alternativ­e.”

Ochefu seems to agree with the NDI/IRI delegation report as he maintained that given the public disenchant­ment of the major parties, the electronic transmissi­on of results and ongoing mobilisati­on by the OBIdient movement, Obi may win in the first ballot or force a rerun as the NDI/IRI has said.

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