THISDAY

Uncertaint­y Looms over APC’s National Convention

We’re yet to change April date, says party

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo

There are indication­s that the national convention of the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) scheduled for April 29 may not hold as planned.

A top member of the party who confided in THISDAY on the issue, said yesterday that the leadership of party is having difficulti­es convening the national convention.

But when contacted, the party’s National Publicity Secretary, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, said he was not aware of any plan to stop the convention from holding as scheduled.

He told THISDAY on telephone yesterday that the National Working Committee (NWC) has not yet met on the issue and that he believes there is still time to get the processes going.

“The NWC discussed it at its last meeting last week and it was unanimousl­y agreed that the convention will still hold as planned. If there is anything to the contrary. I definitely don’t know,” he said.

As part of preparatio­ns for the convention, the leadership of the APC had said it would embark on wide ranging consultati­ons with leaders and stakeholde­rs on some of the contentiou­s issues.

But THISDAY gathered yesterday that the party might not have achieved the measure of success expected from the consultati­ons, hence the delay in going ahead with plans for the national convention.

However, the ad hoc committee on constituti­onal review is yet to concluded its assignment.

THISDAY gathered from reliable sources at the party’s headquarte­rs in Abuja that the constituti­on review committee headed by the National Legal Adviser, Muiz Banire, has discontinu­ed their assignment.

It was learnt that part of the reasons that the review committee’s assignment was stalled is because some of the key stakeholde­rs are not comfortabl­e with the amendments being planned.

For instance, the source said many top leaders of the party are apprehensi­ve over the intentions of the NWC to push for more disciplina­ry powers as well as plans to scrap the Board of Trustees (BoT).

There are also indication­s that APC governors and the National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, are not on the same page over the schedule for the convention.

One of the governors was reported to have told Oyegun to his face that he and his NWC “cannot fix convention date for 97-member National Executive Committee (NEC).”

Another reason for the collapse of plans for the convention is the paucity of funds which the party has been experienci­ng in recent times.

The party’s leadership recently took a step to implement an initiative on how to raise funds internally from levies and voluntary contributi­ons by party men, but that move has not yielded much result.

Following criticisms over the inability of the party to hold national convention almost two years after it ascended to power in 2015, as stipulated in its constituti­on, the leadership issued a statement promising that it would now take place not later than April this year.

In that vein, the party’s NWC had set up an ad hoc committee to review the APC constituti­on and to recommend relevant amendments which would be presented for ratificati­on at the mid-term convention.

The party also said it would hold state congresses before the convention nominates delegates to fill vacancies that occurred principall­y from political appointmen­ts, deaths and resignatio­ns.

Also, the party is yet to set in motion the processes that would lead to the organising of state congresses as stipulated in its constituti­on.

Oyegun had said during an interactiv­e session with governors elected on the APC’s platform that the national convention “will not be an elective convention.”

Also in a statement issued by the APC National Publicity Secretary, Abdullahi, the party explained that the convention would be used to fill vacancies that occurred principall­y from political appointmen­ts, deaths and resignatio­ns.

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