Thursday, 6 November 2014

Why Tambuwal dumped PDP

Why Tambuwal dumped PDP

By Emman OvuakporieSince the speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Waziri Tambuwal whose middle name simply means the’ Guardian of the Fate’ emerged the first among equals in the 7th Assembly on June 6, 2011, he had a game plan as to how to checkmate the onslaught of his party, the ruling Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.
His game plan finally came to bear last Tuesday when he red carded the party on whose back he clinched the speaker-ship of the House.
His reasoning was simple, since he was not the anointed candidate of his party and he knew the antics of PDP, he carefully waited for the dying days of the 7th Assembly to drop his masterstroke via his decampment to the opposition party, the All Progressives Congress, APC.
Aminu Waziri Tambuwal,
Aminu Waziri Tambuwal,
In the first place, it was the APC that ensured he won. Hon Mulikat Akande-Adeola, the PDP preferred candidate for the office of the Speaker failed on June 6, 2011 House of Representatives election. APC lawmakers ensured his victory with the support of some PDP legislators.
There and then, Tambuwal knew where he should pledge his allegiance and this he covertly and overtly applied until last Tuesday.
He kept his friends and political acolytes on their toes as to where his allegiance lay all these while. He knew from day one that if  he faltered the fire works of the PDP would be too explosive for him to handle.
He knew what happened to his predecessors that dared PDP. They went into political oblivion and remained politically irrelevant. And he accommodated genuine fears that he would face the same music if he remained in PDP. Re-election was almost uncertain and his political future remained bleak with PDP. He decided to join APC on whose platform he could run for the office of governor of Sokoto State or run for re-election back to the House.
Tambuwal, on his own, became his own pathfinder which endeared him to the hearts of his fellow lawmakers who at a time saw him as one rare gem that has come to right the wrongs of the past.
His leadership style  was embedded in the doctrine of humility which was one rare ingredient that his predecessors could not exhibit as speakers.
He came on board with a populist 7 point -Agenda designed primarily to keep the  House 100percent independent from all forms of incursions from the executive arm of government.
To a large extent this was achieved in the first two years of his administration as lawmakers  spoke in one voice until 2013 when the New PDP emerged following the break up of the Governors Forum.
This singular development that almost tore PDP into shreds affected the comradeship among members who, hitherto, enjoyed peace and oneness since inception.
The House he had toiled to construct day and night now became divided.
Tambuwal, at this stage, employed many intrigues but the damage had been done. He had to  prepare himself for the last card on his table which is his movement from PDP to APC.
His major challenges:
Tambuwal could not execute his pet project which was the 7-point Legislative Agenda to the letter. He recorded at least 70 percent success.
He had wanted to make Nigeria’s Green Chamber the first African e- Parliament compliant. Though work on this is at an advanced stage, this dream may not be accomplished before he leaves.
Secondly, his fervent desire to  carry along his 359 colleagues despite paucity of  funds was a major setback to him.
It is on record that Tambuwal knows every member by their  first name and the constituencies they represent. A very rare gift.
Thirdly, his penchant for good legislation to make Nigeria a better place for all is never in doubt.
Implication of his defection
The House has less than two months to execute serious legislative business as the month of December is always work free. The lawmakers may seat for only six days.
January 2015, lawmakers would be in the battle field trying to see how they can return to the House.
February is the month of election so there will be no legislative business.
By March the results of the election must have had their toll and casualties of the election would have been known.
April, there will be little legislative action on the floor of the House.
By May the politics of who emerges the new speaker  peaks.
By June 5, the 7th Assembly will be rested and the 8th Assembly emerges.
The effect of his defection may lead the House into a war zone. But one thing is certain, the PDP needs at least a dozen cranes and a 100 buldozers to buldoze Tambuwal out of office.
As it is now, the PDP has 195 active lawmakers while the APC has 159 leaving the remaining 6 that could pitch their tents  where it suits them.
PDP does not have the 2/3 majority to unseat Tambuwal which is a mandatory constitutional provision. PDP needs 240 lawmakers to shove Tambuwal aside.
Tambuwal’s trump card
After the PDP primaries, the lawmakers who failed to win will solidly stand by Tambuwal making the House an entirely APC House.
This development could make the 2015 Budget suffer an unprecedented setback, causing more problems for the PDP led government.
Tambuwal has an unequaled track record of being the only lawmaker that has gone to the House for three terms and was appointed a principal officer.
In 2003-2007 he was deputy minority under ANPP. 2007-2011 he was deputy majority whip. In 2011 he emerged speaker.
This his experience will come to bear and may further rubbish whatever impeachment plan in the offing for him.
Tail or head Tambuwal is on both sides of the coin.
 

Etiebet condemns PDP ward delegates' congress in AKS


A MEMBER of the Board of Trustees (BoT) of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Don Etiebet, has alleged that the ad-hoc delegate congress in Akwa Ibom State was a hoax, as due process was not followed in all the 31 local councils of the state.
  Etiebet, who revealed this yesterday while speaking with journalists in his Ewet Housing residence in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State capital, said the whole exercise was not only a farce but a fraud to democracy, calling on the national headquarters of the party to wade into the matter so as to avoid seeming crisis in the state chapter of the party.
  He said: “I want to tell you that I am not satisfied with the conduct of the ward congress conducted in the state on Saturday. It was a farce and there was no congress conducted in the state.”
  He further alleged that the Chairman of the PDP Electoral Committee in the state, Senator Abdulaziz Ibrahim, was bias because he refused to address the party elders in the state when he arrived on Friday preceding the ward congress.
  “Senator Ibrahim openly told the stakeholders and aspirants that he did not come to conduct ward congress but to monitor. Normally when such team arrives in the state, they will talk to party elders, they will address the different aspirants and their supporters but they did not do that. We did not even know that they were in Akwa Ibom,” Etiebet alleged.
  He said that when he got to know that the committee was in the state, he had to call the chairman on phone by 11:00 a.m. on Saturday when the chairman directed him to wait in the party office, which he did until 3:00 p.m. when the chairman surfaced with sealed envelopes.
  He explained that when the aspirants and stakeholders asked him to disclose the content of the envelopes, the chairman bluntly refused to oblige to their demand.
  Etiebet, who argued that such was not the instruction given to the electoral committee by the headquarters of the party, noted that his action gave room to suspicion as the envelopes might have contained doctored names of delegates for a preferred candidates.
  “I was surprised because the term of reference given to them was to come and conduct ward congresses. If he came to monitor, that means he was not conducting, which means there was no ward congress.  If he is monitoring, who then was conducting?
  “The truth of the whole thing is that we don’t accept the outcome of the ward congress. The party in Abuja is a listening one, if we are able to prove and we have proven that there was no ward congress in Akwa Ibom State, the party will have to send a new team to re-elect ward delegates. As a BoT member of the PDP, I want to assure you that I stand for justice. There should be a normal internal democracy, and whoever emerges, we will support”, Etiebet further said.
  He then called on the National Chairman of the party, Dr. Adamu Mu’azu and the National Working Committee (NWC) of the party to intervene and cancel the fraudulent ward congress in the state.
  He said that people were aggrieved and were only being controlled by party elders in the state, stressing that the people would only be satisfied when there is free, fair and level-playing field for all aspirants

Clashes mar A' Ibom PDP ward Congress

clashes mar A’Ibom PDP ward congress   

Godswill-Akpabio-0h

Several people were injured when two factions of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) from Eastern Obolo Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom engaged each other in confrontations during Saturday’s ward congress.
The Akwa Ibom State Commissioner of Police, Gabriel Ochong, who confirmed the clashes when he spoke to newsmen in Uyo, however said no one was killed.
Mr. Ochong said if any of the victims had died, the police, who took them to hospital, would have informed him.
“I don’t think there was any person that died. I was in Four Lane myself.
“The problem started when two factions from Eastern Obolo used wood to hit one another.
“The injured were bleeding and the police had to take them to hospital.
“If anything had happened to anyone of them, the police who took them to the hospital would have informed me.
“However, at the time I left my house for that place, I was even told that two people had been killed, only for me to get there and found out that the people who engaged themselves in brawl only sustained injury.
“No position is worth the life of any Nigeria, let the election be peaceful so that the will of people will prevail,” he said.
The state Governor, Godswill Akpabio, however, expressed satisfaction at the turnout of people.
He said that the turnout was impressive and promised that every aspirant would be given level playing ground to seek elective offices.
(NAN)