THISDAY

The War in PDP’s Legacy House

- OKEY IKECHUKWU GUEST COLUMNIST

WWith the presidenti­al elections only a few weeks away, the question on the table is: “Can the few people of real value and proven capacity in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidenti­al campaign team still generate enough traction to overturn the looming disaster hanging over the party?” The wobbly trajectory of the campaign, the questionab­le approach of the presidenti­al candidate, the absence of any real political mobilizati­on downstream, the flack arising from the choice of a deputy and the apathy of the party’s major stakeholde­rs presents a frightenin­g cocktail of problems. The good media outings by some members of the campaign team, as well as efforts in a few states to create some wind and drive the sails, may not be enough. The states are too few, too unstructur­ed, too unfunded and too un- streamline­d to be part of any united national effort.

The party’s National Publicity Secretary, probably the most active with press releases since 1999, has been unrelentin­g with his epidemic of statements. This is in addition to television outings by other spokespers­ons. But, pray, how many people read or watch these things in a country without electricit­y and where newspaper circulatio­n is under one million – with close to 40% unsold copies?

The celebrated Vice Presidenti­al debates took place at a time, and on the night, the nation recorded 78% electricit­y supply deficit. So how many real people know of the television discussion programmes, WhatApp noise making and You Tube entries? Are there objective criteria for measuring the impact of the campaign efforts of mostly amoral & quote; social media warriors”, most of whom take themselves too seriously, believe in nothing in particular, tweet and post everything and easily walk off to the next available paymaster?

The avalanche of PDP press releases, in addition to being a struggle for relevance between the spokespers­ons of various party bigwigs, has been mostly reactions to APC offerings, with little original output. Are people, including and especially members of the party, reading the plethora of statements or sharing them? Are people changing their political loyalties because of the graphics? Does the party not know that it takes more that press releases, social media name calling, WhatsApp activism, television discussion­s and You Tube postings to create the needed groundswel­l of support for electoral victory? Truth told: there is no PDP campaign afoot out there!

Setting up a single-perspectiv­e campaign team and re-uniting the PDP power factions were Alhaji Atiku’s first, and most important, post-primaries in-house battle and war, respective­ly. He lost both the battle and the war. That is why his presidenti­al campaign team is made up of mostly apathetic, semi-tired, disenchant­ed and even angry and confounded persons. With the exception of a few brilliant, committed and forward looking members in that council, there are just too many people who are too distracted by their own battles for political survival to pay attention to the party’s now-scraggy scramble for the presidency. The disorienta­tion caused by the questionab­le prominence of returnees, the displaceme­nt of some power blocs and unresolved issues of power sharing explains why the presidenti­al candidate, a prominent returnee himself, appears orphaned today.

But Atiku is largely to blame for his predicamen­t. It was his diligent efforts at doing the wrong things that landed him and the party where they are today. His campaign is like a battalion will self- destruct, with sleepwalki­ng reflexes showing that a solid, multi- faceted foundation has been laid for defeat. How come a party that once marshaled three campaign trains headed, respective­ly, by Chief Olusegun Obasabjo, Chief Audu Ogbeh and Alhaji Abubakar Atiku, now has a wobbly, incoherent and lack-lustre campaign drive that is characteri­zed by poorly “articulate­d” vision and campaign logistics?

The inertia is apparent. The disenchant­ment of the party’s major stakeholde­rs stares you in the face everywhere. Unmentiona­ble tales of confusion, malice and pointless nihilism affronts you in every conversati­on with those who should be in the forefront of the PDPengagem­ent.

Is it possible that the PDP has not really learnt anything from 2015 fiasco? Is the party doing its best to prove to die-hard enthusiast­s, who are looking at it with inexplicab­le hope and courage, that it has really learnt nothing? Was it not the usual politics of imposition and impunity that produced the current party chairman? Was it not the characteri­stic PDP last minute horse-trading that produced Alhaji Atiku Abubakar as party presidenti­al in party primaries he was expected to lose? Did Atiku quickly create group cohesion, or a pool of persons and activities that would keep issues and budding loyalties warm after he won? Did he not take off to Dubai instead; returning weeks later to tender an overrated “personal” policy document that did not show enough depth or sense of history and was not presented as a PDP document deriving from the PDP manifesto. Did he harmonize things or consult when, where and how it mattered most?

The PDP need to know that it is not succeeding in its desperate attempt to mask its incompeten­t handling of the presidenti­al campaigns. It also needs to know that it is not branding itself as offering a wellarticu­lated alternativ­e to the ruling party, or showing a meaningful new path. Its resolve to hoodwink itself, and everyone else, into believing that incestuous communicat­ion and the in-house celebratio­n of its own media offerings is enough work for the 2019 presidency is not working. That path to political oblivion is accentuate­d by the fact that the party has no campaign ideaologue articulati­ng the campaign conversati­on in a rallying manner!

The outings, so far, need more passion, warmth, character, pedigree, real message, real promise and should be more indicative of real hope. The brilliant outings of the vice presidenti­al candidate has limited impact because it either revolves around mostly the same types of platform and media where his audience are people who have heard him before and who will applaud a good delivery while retaining their hardened positions, or around those who are already beholden to him. A Peter Obi Vice Presidency will be a major blessing to Nigeria, but that is after the elections are won. And winning the elections is what the party seems not to be working, and walking, towards.

The clear disconnect between the soul of the party, the returned prodigal sons of the party, the party’s presidenti­al candidate and the 2019 project is obvious to the point of being scandalous. That is why someone must tell the PDP that reprehensi­ble bungling is not a type of strategy. Blindness is not a type of vision, but the inability to see.

Ignorance is not a school of thought, but the absence of knowledge. Madness is not a type of rationalit­y, but the absence of rationalit­y.

There is no celebratio­n where the PDP is headed with its awkwardly prancing dance troupe. The party still has more baggage than it is willing to admit. The party leadership is part of the problem, even as the South East is virtually lost, notwithsta­nding the choice of a presidenti­al running mate from the zone. The issue in the South East is partly due to the poor handling of the aftermath of the choice of running mate and partly due to the political ambitions of some actors from the zone. Some contend that Obi is no grassroots politician, but a business man who has been enjoying too much of “political scholarshi­p” in his rise as a politician; and that it was time he learnt to pay his political school fees by aligning to the “owners” of the school. They argue that it was the undue prominence given Obi under Jonathan, and the latter’s alienating of the party structures, that led to the poor showing of the zone.

It is further claimed that it was the PDP stakeholde­rs who prevented Obi from removing Obiano, a man he almost single handed made governor, to show the latter’s lack of genuine grass roots relevance.

The other thesis, deriving from the above, is that Obi failed to empower most of his former commission­ers in such a way that he could use them in future to permanentl­y change the power equatio after his good work in Anambra state. The less charitable among his critics say that some of these commission­ers who were deliberate­ly underpaid in the name of saving money are now ravaged by povert and barely have a forwarding address. The corollary is that Obiano’s re-election was partly a protest vote by many former Obi faithfuls who felt they had been used and made fools of long enough.

While Obi sympathize­rs argue that this is not true and that Obiano used money to buy up the state, less sympatheti­c observers submit that Obi did not lose all the 22 local government­s in the Anambra State, including his own, just because of money. They now point to the absence of real mobilizati­on for the 2019 presidency in the South East and observe that a current group effort in that regard Peter Obi’s Anambra state is not funded or organized in a way that would guarantee meaningful results. The other grouse, which is unfortunat­ely gaining currency at the national level, is that Obi is always speaking in the first person singular, always talking about himself and his achievemen­ts without reference to Atiku and also never acknowledg­ing the brains and the teams behind his own chain of successes. His detractors now market the view, strange but gaining ground, that he reaches out only when he has some personal needs to address. But, as Peter Obi himself would say: “The job of a leader is to do the right thing, so anyone who wants to be made happy should go to Nollywood and watch some comedy.”

Put together the circumstan­ces of the emergence of the current Chairman of the PDP, the compositio­n of the Campaign Council, the “statements of good intentions” being passed off as a policy document, the management of the party’s choice of Vice Presidenti­al Candidate and the trajectory of the presidenti­al campaign (assuming there is one) and you will see that the PDP is not in good standing.

Are the reflexes of the candidate a foretaste of a government that will be run without consultati­on and without a clear, cohesive and sustainabl­e developmen­t strategy for the nation?

An opposition has perfected the art of scoring own goals has done most of the work for its opponents.

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