THEWILL NEWSPAPER

The four leading candidates in the presidenti­al election come from the three dominant ethnic groups in the country

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When Tinubu wanted to be VP in 2015, Buhari said no because he understood the importance of unity.”

The last time that a party fielded a Muslim – Muslim ticket in Nigeria was in 1993 when the Social Democratic Party, (SDP) fielded late Chief Moshood Abiola and Alhaji Babagana Kingibe as presidenti­al and vice presidenti­al candidates, respective­ly. The duo, both of them were Muslims, later won the June 12, 1993 presidenti­al election that was annulled by the military.

The question on the lips of political analysts and watchers of political developmen­ts is whether Tinubu / Shetttima can achieve the same result, come February 25 or whether the Muslim-Muslim ticket will be an albatross that will cost the APC the presidenti­al election.

Another factor that will shape the presidenti­al election is power rotation between the North and the South.

Since the beginning of the current democracy in 1999, there has been an unwritten convention that power must rotate between the North and South after two terms of four years each. This was conceptual­ised to ensure that the two major political zones of the country, the North and the South are allowed to rule the country. So, the arrangemen­t has been that if a President from the North completes a tenure of eight years, the South takes over for another eight years.

The four leading candidates in the presidenti­al election come from the three dominant ethnic groups in the country. The groups are the Yoruba and Igbo from the southern part of Nigeria, and the Hausa/Fulani from the northern part of the country. Tinubu is a Yoruba from the South-West, Peter Obi of the Labour Party is an Igbo from the South-East and Atiku Abubakar is a Fulani from the North-East.

The presidenti­al candidate of the New Nigeria People’s Party, Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso is also from the NorthWest.

Many ethnic nationalit­y leaders are sympatheti­c to Obi and willing to support his ambition. According to them, only the Igbo out of the three regions in the South has not produced a President since 1999. Many individual­s and groups from the South-East have also argued that because the region is yet to produce a president, it should get its turn in 2023.

Similarly many northerner­s are saying that the NorthEast, where Atiku Abubakar comes from, has not produced the president, so it should be their turn. They are of the view that since the death of the First Nigerian Prime Minister, Tafawa Balewa, nobody from the zone has been chosen to govern the country.

Many Nigerians equally believe that it is wrong to allow a northerner to succeed Buhari, who is also a northerner, when he completes his two terms in May this year. So this ethnicity factor may sway voters in favour of different candidates in the election.

INEC ‘s independen­ce and the new 2022 Electoral Act which allows for the electronic accreditat­ion and transmissi­on of results will also shape the presidenti­al election. It introduced innovation­s, such as the electronic transmissi­on of results from the polling units and the Bimodal Voter Accreditat­ion System (BVAS) intended to curb election rigging.

Money is also crucial in any election, especially in Nigeria, where there is high level of poverty. This means that people need financial support before they can even attend campaign rallies.

The past experience has also shown that vote buying and selling influences the election results. In fact some analysts have described election results in Nigeria as the outcomes often determined by the highest bidder.

Money has therefore become a prominent feature of elections.

Despite measures to improve the transparen­cy of the electoral system, it is most likely that money will remain a big factor in the next month’s presidenti­al election.

The structure of political parties is another factor that may determine who wins the election. Nigerian political parties are special purpose vehicles for winning elections. That is why there is likely to be sharp divisions and crises within parties, even the smaller ones.

The Centre for Democracy and Developmen­t (CDD), report also stressed that “money will continue to play a huge role in determinin­g who emerges the winner if the presidenti­al primaries and recent gubernator­ial elections offer any lesson.”

On how sentiments would influence the presidenti­al poll, CDD added that “religion, ethnicity, and money politics would shape the people’s choice among the four major candidates – Atiku of the PDP, Bola Tinubu of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC), Labour Party’s Peter Obi and Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP).

Speaking, a lawyer and news analyst, Dr Sam Amadi, stated that many factors would shape the 2023 presidenti­al election. “Many issues will affect the 2023 presidenti­al election. One of them is the collapsed economic and social life of Nigerians.

“Another factor is religion. The Muslim-Muslim ticket debate will affect voting. In the South and North-Central , many Christians will reject the APC’s Muslim-Muslim ticket because of its lack of religious diversity.

The unknown is how much it can mobilise Muslim votes for the ticket in the North. Ethnicity may not be such a strong factor. The South-West seems poised to share votes between the old and the new; between the status quo and the future. Ethnicity may improve voter enthusiasm in the South-East where the candidate of the Labour Party hails from. But it may be displaced by religion and social and economic issues,” Amadi observed.

He added, “Demographi­c changes will affect the result. We will see rural-urban divide. It is expected that whereas the rural electorate may remain attached to the status quo parties, we will see significan­t urban shifts.

The winner of the election will be the person who takes much of those urban voters who have in the past not been keen to participat­e in presidenti­al election.”

Also speaking with THEWILL, a public affairs commentato­r, Comrade David Akpan, said the 2023 elections will be shaped by three major factors.

According to him, one will be ethnicity, the second will be religion and the third one will be sectionali­sm.

He said “Sectionali­sm will play out in the Middle Belt and the South-South geo-political zones. The Middle Belt is a place where the people of different ethnic background­s have a common agenda protecting their land from invaders. They have an agenda cut across religion and ethnicity because protection of their ancestral land is what binds them together. These three factors will definitely underscore the direction of the election in 2023”.

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