Ahead of tomorrow’s National Executive
Committee (NEC) meeting of the All Progressives Congress (APC), the party’s
national caucus will hold crucial talks with President Muhammadu Buhari at the
Presidential Villa today, THISDAY has learnt.
The meeting comes against the backdrop
of a growing disenchantment among party leaders and the rank and file over
perceived marginalisation by the president who they accuse of sidelining them
in the appointments he has made since he assumed office in 2015.
THISDAY, however, gathered that Buhari
and his loyalists might seek to use the leadership meeting to try to secure a
badly needed vote of confidence for his administration.
Securing the confidence vote has become
very necessary in view of the president’s unconcealed interest in running for a
second term in office in 2019.
Among those expected to attend the
crucial meeting are the National Chairman of the party, Chief John Odigie
Oyegun; the National Leader, Senator Bola Tinubu; Senate President Bukola
Saraki; Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr. Yakubu Dogara; all the APC
state governors; and former interim National Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande.
Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar
might not attend the meeting as his media aide, Mr. Paul Ibe told THISDAY that
he was outside the country.
A lot has happened in the APC in the
last two years, leaving the party largely polarised and appears to be on the
brink of implosion.
Most of the political gladiators in the
party have either clashed over competing interests or engaged in verbal
exchanges over the handling of issues relating to the party and its
administration.
The APC administration led by Buhari has
also come under sharp criticism from both within and outside the ranks of the
party for what many described as the poor handling of the affairs of
government.
While some APC stakeholders have accused
the president of not carrying them along in terms of appointments, other
Nigerians especially from the opposition have criticized the administration for
its alleged bias in its anti-corruption war, sectionalism and poor performance,
among other issues.
A top party member who spoke to THISDAY
at the weekend said that the battle line has been drawn between the pro and
anti-Buhari elements and that the meeting at the Presidential Villa promises to
be a heated one.
For instance, the source said the
National Working Committee (NWC) led by Oyegun, which has long been alienated
from the president since his medical trips to London is expected to ventilate
its grievances at the meeting.
It further was learnt that the NWC would
be leading a protest on the poor funding of the party’s operations, which has
been blamed on the president.
Another issue that might come up during
the meeting is the complaint by the Atiku that he has not been carried along by
the Buhari administration and the party.
Party leaders who spoke with THISDAY
yesterday in confidence said that the meeting is crucial to the survival of the
party.
An aggrieved member of NEC said: “APC is
at a point of rebellion and an unmanageable stage, and the grenades are about
to explode,” adding: “If we refuse to take critical decisions at the meetings,
we will have missed the huge opportunity to save our party.”
He explained further: “Our party members
are not happy with the current state of affairs in our party and government;
they worked and laboured to install a government but those who are currently
being appointed in key positions of government today were not with us during
the campaign.
“The danger I am seeing, which many of
those surrounding the president are apparently not seeing is the coming
national convention of our party that will commence in February next year.
“In the past few years, the party
structures at all levels were rendered useless; they were used and abandoned.
Are you going to remove them and elect new members, thinking they will be
happy? That will be the end of APC.
“They said the leadership of the party
is not active and as a result some governors and senators want the National
Chairman, Chief John Odigie Oyegun removed for selfish political motives.
“My question is: Do they expect the
national chairman to start fighting the president on the pages of newspapers?
Do they expect him to start shouting, when he has access to the President?”
Throwing more light on the difficulty
the national chairman and his colleagues have going through, the NEC member
said they had informed Buhari in the past about sorry state of the party,
“telling him that the leadership of the party was not happy”.
The growing discontent in the party also
found expression in last weekend’s outburst by one of the president’s close
associates, the Comptroller-General of the Customs, Col. Hameed Ali (rtd), who
lamented that the administration was increasingly losing grounds due to the
infusion of people who did not share his vision or never took part in the
journey to get to the corridors of power.
Ali had said: “Let me say here without
fear of being contradicted that I think half way through the journey, we are
losing our core values. We are losing our vision and mission and I think that
the idea of our being here today is to look critically at what we need to do to
get back on track.
“There is no doubt that we have derailed
because we are not doing what we say we want to do. Why is it so? We need to
find an answer to that. If we do not find answer, then what should we do to get
us all back on track?
“We owe this great nation and the 180
million Nigerians the duty to give good governance. Good governance is what
they voted for and good governance is what they expect and deserve.”
A chieftain of APC in the FCT chapter,
Alhaji Tijani Abdullahi Markafi, said that topmost on the agenda of the
meetings slated for today and tomorrow would be the need for urgent reforms in
the area of party discipline, finance and organisation, saying the party would
need to agree on an effective reward system for stakeholders on account of
being members of the party in government.
According to him, “During the 2015
elections, Nigerians – young and old – who voted en masse for APC were certain
that President Muhammadu Buhari’s leadership would save the country from the
throes of the misrule of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
“In fairness to the new administration,
it addressed itself to the onerous task of rebuilding the country and
delivering on election promises which were largely hinged on curbing
corruption, restoring the economy and security of the nation.
“However, there are different
perspectives on the extent to which it has successfully tackled these
challenges. While spokespersons for the government are beating their chests on
how successfully interventions have positively affected the situation,
opposition elements have remained unimpressed.”
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