LP advised to stop merger with NNPP as Galadima dismisses coalition

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There are conflicting signals over moves to see merger talks between the Labour Party (LP) and New Nigerian Peoples Party (NNPP) blossom into a formidable third force ahead of the 2023 presidential elections.

At the weekend, both the Head, of the Public Affairs Directorate of NC Front, Dr. Yunusa Tanko, and the National Publicity Secretary of NNPP, Dr Agbo Major, in separate interactions with newsmen said the bond between LP and NNPP has not broken down.

The Pat Utomi-led NCFront spearheaded the coalition that midwife the adoption of Peter Obi as the presidential candidate of the Labour Party.

Tanko said the candidature of Obi had grown beyond his political platform into a mass movement, which Nigerians across ethnoreligious and sectional divides were identifying with.

But a chieftain of the NNPP, Buba Galadima, yesterday, dismissed the rumour that the presidential candidate of the party, Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, and his LP counterpart, Obi, are planning a merger.

Galadima, who spoke during a chat with Arise TV, said what the two presidential candidates are discussing is an ‘electoral alliance.’

He said: “We are not discussing a merger with LP. What we are discussing is an electoral alliance between the candidate of NNPP and the candidate of LP.

“I chaired the negotiation for 13 good hours and we have an understanding on almost all the issues raised except one – which is who should be the presidential candidate and who should deputise for him.”

Galadima also stated that those who are saying it is “insulting” to ask Obi to be Kwankwaso’s running mate “are not politicians, because if they were politicians, they wouldn’t even have dreamt of that.”

He added that while the Peter Obi movement started only two months ago, Kwankwaso’s ‘Kwankwasiyya movement’ has been in existence for 32 years.

The former chieftain of the defunct All Nigeria People’s Party (ANPP) further stated that Kwankwaso is a stronger candidate than Obi in Northern Nigeria, and giving the presidential ticket to the latter would benefit Atiku in the North.

“If Kwankwaso deputises Obi, it is not the ticket of Obi that will gain currency, it is Atiku that will benefit because as far as we are concerned if Kwankwaso steps down to be vice-presidential candidate, the people from this part of the country are likely to vote one of their own who is running as president.

“If Peter Obi is vice president to Kwankwaso, he doesn’t lose his followers because that could’ve been the best position that people of Southeast extraction could’ve got in the 2023 election. They are out in the PDP, they are out in the APC, but having a vice president with a promise and viability of becoming president after Kwankwaso would now make them self-satisfied,” he said.

MEANWHILE, the national leadership of LP and its presidential candidate, Obi, have been advised to stop further merger negotiations with NNPP and its standard-bearer, Kwankwaso. A director in the Peter Obi Support Network (POSN), Mr. Jones F. C. C. Onwuasoanya, who made the call, noted that Kwankwaso’s appearance at the Channels Television programme on Sunday left no one in doubt that he was not ideologically aligned with Obi and LP.

Onwuasoanya noted that “an in-depth analysis of Kwankwanso’s utterances and arguments on the TV programme gives the disturbing impression that the former Minister of Defence might be aiming to be an ethnic-inspired candidate, rather than a new Nigeria patriot and advocate, which the Obi campaign is hinged on.

“It bears reiterating that Obi is not motivated by any ethnic, sectional or religious sentiments, nor is he banking on the votes of a particular section of the country against the other, but inspired by the dream too, working together with like-minds, accomplish a working, productive, secured and equitable Nigeria for all, and through the votes of all Nigerian patriots from all sections and classes of Nigeria.”

While insisting that Kwankwanso’s motivation and confidence in vying for the presidency are clearly rooted in some self-serving ethnic and class biases, he declared that “such an individual shouldn’t be allowed to taint the purely progressive, selfless and people-inspired aspiration of Obi and many well-meaning Nigerians.”

According to Onwuasoanya, the former Kano State governor “is not ideologically inclined to Obi or the Labour Party, especially, on the key issues driving the former Anambra governor’s aspiration to the presidency.”

His words: “Kwankwanso has regrettably manifested a most distasteful understanding of the Nigerian situation, as he advertised himself as primarily hinging his aspiration to the presidency on the basis of where he comes from, rather than where he wants to take Nigeria.

“By arguing that his candidacy is propelled by the North, rather than by Nigerians and also emphasising our ethnic differences rather than blunting them, we should understand that Kwankwanso sharing a ticket with Obi will alienate genuine Nigerian patriots, who have bought into the Obi candidacy out of their conviction that it is a unifying, ideas-driven and masses propelled pan Nigerian project.”

The POSN director regretted that Kwankwaso had to come on national television, even while the alliance talks were yet to be finalised, stressing that that “categorically foreclose the chances of pairing with Obi as running mate.

“Kwankwanso has shown himself as coming to the alliance negotiations with a closed mindset and as a self-centred manipulator rather than being open to superior ideas, logic and credible electoral and political data or having the slightest pretext to patriotism.”

A chieftain of LP in Anambra State, Chief Dons Uzor, stated that Kwankwaso’s statement was made in a bad light, insisting that it shows a “man without agenda for the presidency.

“I think he should concentrate his campaign on what he can do to remedy the country that has been bastardised by his brothers. He should cover his face in shame that in all they claim to be in the North, they have succeeded in running the country down. If his people could not salvage the country, let them allow the Igbo man to go there and rescue it.

“This vitriolic attack and campaign of calumny will not stop an idea whose time has come. We are prepared to rule Nigeria anytime, any day just as we have succeeded in the things we do, so shall we succeed. Let them allow Obi to rule for eight years and let’s see whether there will not be a positive change in this country.

“Kwankwaso cannot claim he knows more than other Northerners that have ruled the country and the earlier he understands this and submits to superior reasoning, the better for him. Obi can never be his running mate. It is rather himself that should accept to become Obi’s running mate,” he said.

Source: Guardian

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