Daily Trust Saturday

Atiku: Tale of a unifier and self-saboteurs

- Abdulhalee­m Ishaq Ringim is a political/policy/public affairs analyst. He writes from Zaria and can be reached via haleemabdu­l1999@gmail.com

The numbers are clear. My preferred candidate Atiku Abubakar won’t be coming anymore, at least not through the polls but I do not regret resolutely supporting him. While I do not consider him a messiah, I strongly believe he would have performed excellentl­y mainly because of his sense of ideologica­l direction and his manifest preparedne­ss and unmatched readiness.

He had plans that were clear, concise and detailed. And those plans constitute­d solutions to the myriad of challenges we are facing, including those threatenin­g the very existence of this country as a unified nation. He has not only been consistent, every failure was considered by him as another opportunit­y to prepare further, update his plans to cater for our most contempora­ry needs and come back to reassert his resolve to restore Nigeria’s glory.

He could have joined the bandwagon to play the ethnic and religious sentiment game but he never considered it an option. He continued to maintain and reiterate his status as a Nigerian for all Nigerians.

Almost all the politician­s that fought him in the guise of advocacy for equity and justice only dealt a heavy blow on not only the ‘equity and justice’ narrative they were supposedly advancing, but the sinister ethnic jingoistic tendencies they veiled under it as well.

Peter Obi for example, whose candidacy became the final recipe needed to ignite a full-blown identity politics campaign in the country, knew he could only go as far as securing the states in the South South, South East, one or two states in South West and North Central and some fraction of votes from Christian-dominated constituen­cies of the core North. The numbers were clear even before the elections; he was going to lose the elections.

Wike, who frustrated the single most viable attempt at a successful south eastern presidenti­al ticket (which would have assured a predominan­tly southern presidenti­al race) when Atiku agreed to support the microzonin­g of the PDP presidenti­al ticket to the SE and his cohorts (the disingenuo­us G-5 Governors) who seem to have exerted same effect on the polity as Peter Obi while staying back in the PDP and disguising themselves as freedom fighters also cost the SE and SS tremendous­ly. Wike ended up working for Asiwaju of the APC and all other members of the G-5 failed.

The irony is, both Peter Obi and Wike (with his cohort) practicall­y enabled Tinubu’s victory. And in doing so, they only succeeded in contributi­ng to the potential alienation of the SS and SE from Nigeria’s political scheme of affairs, while rendering the zones incapacita­ted in the quest to secure the nation’s presidency for the next 16 years.

Except for a massive disruption of the status quo which I don’t envisage at a national scale any time soon, a Tinubu presidency which would likely run for 8 years promises a rotation back to the North as per APC’s internal political dynamics. The Northern presidency would then run for another 8 years, making it 16 years of presidenti­al exclusivit­y to the North and SW.

Do not deceive yourself, the religious and ethnic coloration­s of the factors that influenced Peter Obi’s relative prominence and gave him a comparativ­e advantage in this election would be same that would mar his chances in future elections. Hardly would he ever get the chance to command protest votes like he did this time around because of APC’s Muslim-Muslim ticket. He is basically done! Who else would then fly the SS or SE flag? And on which platform?

Kwankwaso, whose ticket would mostly continue to feature a SS or SE VP in subsequent elections, also greatly enabled Tinubu’s victory. His very obvious egoistic dispositio­ns pushed him to break away from the PDP and contest the presidency even while knowing that he could only deliver Kano’s votes, albeit massively. But like Peter Obi, he can never secure the presidency with votes from Kano only. He also would now be looked upon by the people of the North as a person who cost them the presidency by underminin­g the chances of Atiku Abubakar. But that’s by the way.

The political configurat­ion has been stunted by these people for the foreseeabl­e future.

Not that I care, but what next then, especially for SE and SS agitations? Will it continue to be tagged as a consequenc­e of Northern political machinatio­ns? If I hear!

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