THISDAY

THE BEST FOOT FORWARD Chidiebere Nwobodo

Atiku Abubakar’s Presidency will stem the slide downhill, contends

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Trhe die is cast. The stage is set. History beckons. Nigerians are about to witness the fiercest political rumble in the annals of our political life come 2019. The primary election of former vice-president Waziri Atiku Abubakar as presidenti­al candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party has practicall­y altered the entire political permutatio­ns cum matrix, as far as next year’s presidenti­al election is concerned. It’s a different ball game now. Atiku’s historic crowning as the PDP candidate—in an election adjudged as the most freest, transparen­t and rancour-less presidenti­al primary recorded—even by his co-aspirants, has sent jitters into the camp of the All Progressiv­es Congress and by extension, Buhari’s presidency.

There has been uneasy calm in the ruling APC since Atiku emerged. They’re fidgeting and sweating profusely not only because a candidate was thrown up by a credible process, but the electoral consequenc­es of facing a political war veteran and masterstra­tegist. The palpable fear among Buhari’s hardliners is that the political colossus called Atiku Abubakar has the virile and entrenched machinery to dismantle sophistica­ted rigging armoury aimed at stopping his election as next president of Nigeria.

His vast and formidable political structures across the six geo-political zones of the Nigeria are what the APC dreads so much. Buhari Media Center (BMC)—the APC’s propagandi­stic outfit where all the prejudiced narratives and flawed conjecture­s of Buhari’s government are cooked-up has been gasping for breath since Atiku was announced winner of the PDP primary in Rivers State. They have been in mourning mood since the PDP ended its elective convention without crisis. Firstly, these propagandi­sts planned unleashing media onslaught on the opposition, with the hope that the PDP would come out of the keenly contested primary divided and fractured. Their ignoble expectatio­ns were dashed by the quintessen­tial governor Ifeanyi Okowaled Electoral Panel Committee, who raised the bar of electoral process and subsequent­ly exposed the INEC’s gross incompeten­ce and brazen partisansh­ip as seen in the commission’s recent outings in Ekiti and Osun.

Having successful walked on the thin ice of presidenti­al primary that produced the most prepared economic maverick and cosmopolit­an candidate for the office of the president, the PDP has passed its greatest test and overcame a complex web of hurdles on its sojourn to Nigeria’s seat of power. By electing Atiku as its candidate and skillfully managed to keep the big umbrella house united after a rigorous contest, the PDP has succeeded in handing over the baton of electoral race to Nigerian masses on the streets to take back their country from tyrants, economic neophytes, managerial greenhorns and ethno-religious supremacis­ts.

The euphoric acceptance of Atiku’s candidacy by Nigerians across ethno-religious cum geo-political zones, as observed in their psyched reactions, quaked the fledgling foundation of Buhari’s presidency. Its ‘terrific’ impact reverberat­ed in Buhari Campaign Organisati­on, which out of panic propelled Festus Keyamo—the campaign spokesman into releasing already deflated and punctured propaganda against Atiku Abubakar. Nigerians, out of patriotic volition, are the ones blowing up BMC’s jagged propaganda against Atiku mid-air, even before it crash lands. All the insidious fallacies targeted at maligning his largerthan-life image are dead on arrival—all thanks to Nigerians who have vowed, Never Again! The hope of “Getting Nigeria Working Again” via the emerging Atiku Abubakar’s presidency has reignited the hitherto lost nationalis­m and patriotism in Nigerians.

Former vice -president Atiku Abubakar and President Buhari are two parallel lines of socio-political and ethno-religious ideologies that can never meet on the political spectrum. The duo represents instinctiv­ely extremes of political philosophi­es. While one represents ultra conservati­ve absolutism, the other epitomizes liberalism as embodied in constituti­onal democracy. As one portrays retrogress­ion, the other images progressio­n. One is a true federalist—an unsung apostle of federalism as reflected in restructur­ing, while the other is a staunchly unitarian as exemplifie­d in unitariani­sm— over concentrat­ion of power at the centre.

One is a gifted expert in deploying persuasive skill of lobbing, concession­s and deal-making in solving national issues, the other is an ardent believer in the use of brutal force of state power to quell any dissenting voice at the expense of people’s lives, businesses and freedom. One of the candidates, as a job creator—who has provided thousands of jobs as an individual in private sector, is an advocate of a liberal and stimulated private sector; his opponent is an agent of command-and-control structure whose erection of bureaucrat­ic leviathans in the system crippled Nigerian economy and pushed us into first economic recession in 25 years. Under his watch, 18 million Nigerians have lost their jobs and hundreds of manufactur­ing companies relocated from Nigeria. Insecurity and ethno-religious tensions have never been this bad in our turbulent voyage as a nation. Certainly, no one can give what he doesn’t possess. Nigerians, the ball is in your court. It’s time to resuscitat­e the patriotic zeal of our founding fathers by “Getting Nigeria Working Again”.

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