Daily Trust Sunday

The next APC national chairman and politics of the right choice

- By Abubakar Kago Abubakar Kago, a political scientist, writes from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria

On Tuesday, the 22nd of January, 2022, President Muhammadu Buhari and governors under the aegis of his party, the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC), rose from a consultati­ve meeting and finally laid to rest speculatio­ns about the zoning of the party’s national offices. By a simple play of musical chairs, the APC leaders announced the swapping of roles between the North and South. Thus, offices in the National Working Committee hitherto occupied by northerner­s in the last eight years will shift to the South and vice versa.

It was a welcome developmen­t, especially as it disappoint­ed those who have gone to town in recent times crowing about the imminent disintegra­tion of the governing party for an alleged inability of her leaders to agree on anything. However, it is not yet Uhuru.

This is only possible by a clear-headed SWOT analysis based on the reality on the ground in each geopolitic­al zone within the context of the overall national balance of power between the APC and her opposition parties, especially the PDP. Now where the party sends the position of national chairman within the North to which it has been zoned is of utmost importance.

To my thinking, the most compelling criteria for the choice of an APC national chairman from Northern Nigeria should be based on the following factors: current strength of the APC in the state from which he or she will emerge, the candidate’s leadership persona, the proven national influence and network of the individual, cognate experience in high political leadership, with a clear line of sight, strong mental and physical fitness for, among other reasons, going through the rigours of leading a campaign across the length and breadth of the country.

Once the above factors are accounted for, and to ensure that no geopolitic­al zone is marginaliz­ed or excluded, the APC must go further to align them with the political considerat­ions that will play out in 2023, many of which are already very visible right now.

For instance, out of the three geopolitic­al zones in the North, only the North Central has not enjoyed any stint in the seat of power in a democracy since Independen­ce, either as president or vice president and that includes this Fourth Republic. The premise is that parties send their national chairmansh­ip position to the zone they want to exclude, ab initio, from the presidenti­al race.

The people of the North Central have recently risen in uproar against the near default zoning of the national chairmansh­ip of ruling political parties to them once it is the turn of the North, while the other two GPZs savour the two highest positions. There is a groundswel­l of support for such bodies as the North Central Renaissanc­e Movement (NCRM) which campaigns to withdraw the zone’s support from any party that dumps the chairmansh­ip on them again on the journey to 2023.

Conversely, the region, which hosts the Federal Capital Territory, has promised to rally with their votes round the party that puts one of them on the ballot for the presidency. With the barrage of citizen advocates and groups springing up all over the region around this cause, the APC must not dismiss their threats lightly only to find out they were serious the hard way.

While that may not be the most compelling argument for why the national chairman should come from another zone other than the North Central, it should not be lost on the APC that this is a strong factor that will affect voting patterns in the 2023 presidenti­al race.

Wide-ranging logic and strategy, not sentiments, are therefore the best tools to use in choosing a national chairman for the APC that will be acceptable to all the differing positions.

In the circumstan­ces, logic and strategy would dictate that the APC’s national chairman must come from a state which does not currently have an APC governor. By ceding this very influentia­l position to such a state, the APC will shore up her political weight in that state for forthcomin­g elections.

The APC is indeed fortunate to have at least two persons who fit the profile perfectly.

Number One is a former governor of Bauchi State, Alhaji Isa Yuguda. My opinion and advice to the APC would be that he is the perfect candidate for a consensus national chairman of the APC from the North.

He has won two gubernator­ial elections for himself in Bauchi State; he was a striker in the APC’s lineup for the 2019 presidenti­al election and helped to beat the incumbent governor and the PDP silly in that contest as illustrate­d in the figures above.

Another excellent pick is Yakubu Dogara, former Speaker of the House of Representa­tives from 2015 to 2019.

In conclusion, if the APC is to retain the presidency in 2023 and remain a formidable party in Nigeria into the future, the current sentimenta­l approach over legacy party, promise and fail, disregard of health status, North or South zoning, religion, and tribe must stop immediatel­y and make way for clear-headed political assessment­s such as this one.

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