Daily Trust Saturday

2023: Mixed feelings trail southern governors’ demand for presidency

Biggest joke of the millennium – APC chieftain They must lobby to succeed – Okorie It’s unconstitu­tional – Fage

- Saawua Terzungwe, Hamisu Kabir Matazu (Abuja), Clement A. Oloyede (Kano), Ado Abubakar Musa (Jos)

Controvers­y is raging over the issue of power shift to the South at the expiration of President Muhammadu Buhari’s tenure in 2023.

There are frills, thrills and hard talks, especially considerin­g that zoning is alien to the 1999 Constituti­on, as amended.

The polity is twitching sequel to 17 Southern governors’ demand at their meeting last Monday in Lagos, that the South should be allowed to take a shot at the presidency in 2023.

Tongues are wagging over the issue as many political bigwigs from the North see it as a way of shutting them out of the presidenti­al race.

Pundits have argued that zoning can only be guaranteed by political parties which field candidates for various political offices.

While the leading opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has recognised and enshrined in its constituti­on that there shall be power rotation between the North and the South, the Constituti­on of the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) has no such provision.

But some political bigwigs in the APC have argued that there was an unwritten pact among the key political actors that the South would take the presidenti­al ticket of the party at the expiration of Buhari’s tenure.

In the PDP, stakeholde­rs have argued that the North would take the ticket.

A former Vice President of the Nigerian Political Science Associatio­n (NPSA), Professor Kamilu Sani Fage, said such call for rotation by the Southern governors is unconstitu­tional.

He explained that power rotation is not part of the Nigeria’s constituti­on but only part of the constituti­on of the PDP.

“Secondly, this will not necessaril­y be democratic because democracy is about numbers, about people’s will. So, whether it is from South or North, the whole idea should be who the people want,” he said.

He cautioned that the position of the Southern governors should not be taken to the level it will create disharmony.

A former governor of Zamfara State, Ahmad Sani Yarima, told newsmen a few days ago in Abuja, that the North has the constituti­onal right to contest presidency in 2023.

Yarima argued that it was wrong for anyone to agitate for power shift to his or her region.

A chieftain of the APC, Chief Jackson Lekan Ojo, who spoke with Daily Trust Saturday in a telephone interview reently, said the 17 Southern governors’ demand is not realisable in 2023.

“It is laughable. It is the biggest joke of the millennium. They are just being deceptive to themselves. It is laughable because they can’t achieve this in 2023.

“Even if two big political parties zone their tickets to the South, these people will not meet up. Ethnic sentiments will set in and scatter everything.”

“We don’t have a single South. We have South-West, South-South and South-East. And from each of these geo-political zones, I know some persons that are bent on taking presidency at all cost.

“Similarly, in the APC, there are many political blocks, which will not agree to submit themselves to anybody. We equally have that in the PDP.”

“So, the unity you are seeing among the Southern governors now is an emergency unity which has no roots. They are just deceiving themselves. It is unity without roots and it will collapse with any little breath.”

“If YPP brings a candidate from the North, the APC and the PDP fields their candidates from the South, the YPP candidate will have it because the Northern voters will not vote based on the political party, but they will vote based on ethnicity and religion,” he said.

But an elder statesman and former presidenti­al candidate, Chief Chekwas Okorie, told Daily Trust Saturday that the move by the governors promises a very interestin­g political and democratic encounter going forward.

“It is unpreceden­ted really to take a common stand on an issue that is usually within the domain of political parties. It simply shows that the value attached to presidency is more important to them than the value attached to individual parties.

“In this circumstan­ce, the immediate take away is that there will be more commitment on where the president comes from than what the party actually decides to do.”

“But the burden is more on the APC where President Muhammadu Buhari will be completing by the grace of God, his eight years in office.

“It will be a little more burden for the APC to under any guise throw up a presidenti­al candidate from the North,” he said.

He said lobby is an important part of politics and should be used by Southern politician­s in order to get the support of Northern politician­s.

A lecturer in the Department of Political Science, Bayero University, Kano, Dr. Aminu Hayatu, however, said politics is about negotiatio­n as much as it is about interest.

“In a democratic structure where everyone is allowed to vote and be voted for and all political parties have the same level ground for politickin­g, there cannot be calls for shifting (rotation) of position between regions or states. It should be on the basis of bargaining and negotiatio­n between and among political parties.

He said leaders of regions should not resort to violence or threats of violence to attract sympathy or strategise to be given the opportunit­y for electoral positions.

He said zoning can only be a political party arrangemen­t, adding that the constituti­on provides that all citizens who are qualified have the right to contest for electoral positions.

“So instead of regions to engage in this war of words and threat of violence, it is better they bring these issues to the table for discussion and they can negotiate and possibly get what they want,” he said.

Efforts to get comments from Chairman of the Northern Governors’ Forum (NGF), Governor Simon Boko Lalong, were unsuccessf­ul.

However, a member of the PDP Board of Trustees (BoT), Adamu Maina Waziri, who is also a former Police Affairs Minister, told one of our reporters that the North should produce the next president in 2023.

He argued that from 1999 to 2015, the PDP produced three presidents; two from the South and one from the North, adding that the South spent 14 years while the North spent only two years.

Recall that President Olusegun Obasanjo from the South spent eight years and left power on completion of his second tenure in 2007. Another general election was held and President Umaru Musa Yar’adua emerged. Unfortunat­ely, he died in 2010, while the then Vice President, Goodluck Jonathan took over.

Jonathan later contested in 2011, and was voted for another 4 years, but lost in 2015, to Gen Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) of the APC.

Waziri said, “Therefore, within the context of my political affiliatio­n and identity, which is the PDP, the presidency in 2023 should start from the Northern part of the country.

“Zoning is never in the constituti­on of Nigeria, because those who drafted the constituti­on have found out that if you entrench zoning, it is going to strangulat­e the political developmen­t and political coalition of the country.”

“Therefore, they left it at the discretion of party and politician­s to put up the coalition and the structure and the resources to support a candidate that can win an election.”

“So, the Southern governors’ resolution can be taken as a freedom of expression that has no compelling power on the political parties.”

 ??  ?? Southern governors after their meeting recently
Southern governors after their meeting recently

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