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Lagos Shall Be Free! (2)
To Bola Tinubu, Adams Oshiomhole and Clement Ebri, who won a pyrrhic victory in the Lagos State APC governorship primary, I say you have all murdered sleep and you will sleep no more. Let me refer the trio and all those who have tried to lend credibility to the sham governorship primary conducted in Lagos on Tuesday October 2nd to the immortal words of Chief Obafemi Awolowo because they are so apt at the moment: “Evil deeds can never go unpunished, even done to man by man shall be redressed if not by man, then by God, if not now certainly later. For the victory of evil over good can only be temporary.”
I am not an APC member, but that is beside the point. As residents of Lagos, whatever happens in the party affects me and my family. And I would have voted for incumbent Governor Akinwumni Ambode in next year’s election if the forces of evil had not prevailed against him. He is the only “dreamer” among his peers.
What happened in the Lagos (a supposed centre of excellence) APC governorship primary was a travesty of democracy and a disgrace to Lagosians. It was a tragedy that caused me to again begin to lose hope for Nigeria. What we witnessed was the display of grand hypocrisy and a dangerous standard-setting election malpractice pushed through with ferocious propaganda on a scale never thought possible by crooked loudmouth pretenders, whose claim of being progressive democrats has become a stale, facile stereotype.
Indeed, so brazen and audacious was the sinister plot and actions of Tinubu and his gang to rape democracy that they threw away all pretences and claims to participatory democracy and all the accompanying values and incidental niceties, in a shameful display of electoral fraud and daylight robbery to coronate their preferred candidate as the Lagos APC governorship standard-bearer. Any honest self-respecting resident of Lagos would attest to the fact that election did not hold. The video clips on social media were stage-managed by a desperate gang of election thieves to create the impression that voting took place. While many were waiting for the right thing to be done, going by what the chairman of the APC NWC had said at a press conference, Oshiomhole, instigated by the Lagos APC, pulled Ambode’s legs from behind, and endorsed the sham primary. Tinubu, Oshiomhole and Ebri presided over a mockery called a primary election. They must have celebrated and clinked champagne glasses for their pyrrhic victory. To them, I say, Lagos shall be free some day and they will give a full account of their ways.
Emboldened, Tinubu, the godfather, now walks about with a swagger, feeling unrestrained in his conscience. I know power corrupts while absolute power corrupts absolutely. But I never thought I would see a day like this in Lagos. But here we are, held hostage by merchants of greed and purveyors of falsehoods. I am particularly disappointed in Ebri who many had erroneously thought was an honourable man. When results started to tumble in from the contrived primary, Ebri told the whole world in a press conference on television watched across the country that election had not commenced and that materials for the election were yet to be distributed. He even urged the public to disregard any announcement purportedly made with regard to the outcome of a primary that had not even started. Of course this gave some of us hope, and we went to bed believing a man of honour and integrity who would take no nonsense was in charge. Alas! How wrong we were. Less than 24 hours after he gave Lagosians that assurance, Ebri ate his words, turned 360 degrees to announce the results of a primary he did not supervise; the results of a sham election he had urged the public to discountenance. Who does that?
This utterly dishonourable human being, a former governor, turned democracy on its head. So many people who yearned for the right thing to be done had thought he was a responsible man of integrity, strength of character and capacity to say no to the evil machinations of saboteurs and election riggers. But he was clearly overrated; a willing tool, a pliable character, a cheat, and a foolish man without a modicum honour or integrity. It is any wonder that Nigeria is where it is now?
I have said it before, and I say it here again, Oshiomhole, Tinubu and the APC pose a clear and present danger to our democracy. In the morning, he said there would be no automatic ticket for anyone, but by evening, he had started to hand out automatic tickets to his preferred candidates.
Back to the central thrust of this piece: Fellow Nigerians, Lagos is in the chains of Tinubu’s suffocating grip. Every Lagosian is paying a ransom to Tinubu and his Mandate Movement. Of course, there is another illegal shadowy body called the Governor’s Advisory Council (GAC) which was recently thrust into the limelight due to the crisis in the Lagos APC. The council I suspect was created by Tinubu to arm-twist, weaken and cajole an elected governor into doing his bidding. If one may ask, who appointed members to this council and what were the criteria to qualify for its membership? How come Lagosians only knew about its existence just prior to the primary? Why should an advisory council determine whether a sitting governor should seek a re-election or not? Who gave the council such powers? How many former governors of Lagos State are members of the council? Why is Tinubu the only known former governor of the body? How is the chairman of the council chosen? How often does the council meet? We want minutes of their meetings. The council to me, looked like an elaborate power-grabbing scheme designed to undermine the incumbent governor by Tinubu. It is an unlawful body that exercised powers that it does not legitimately have and must be challenged by all Lagosians.
Tinubu had publicly declared that the achievements of the governor in office were a reflection of a man who was not only a thinker but a doer. This was how he said it: “Akinwunmi Ambode has reflected that clearly here today. I want to say thank you because experience is a great teacher and I am experienced. I am on the spot and I have watched things in Lagos since my tenure ended. I was worried hell when you (Ambode) took over, not about your credibility, character or capacity, but because however wise or smart a man is, if there are no resources to back the ideas, production would be zero, progress would be zero.
“When you (Ambode) took over, I know you inherited a burden of debt. The debt profile of Lagos was high, I was wondering how you will reengineer and face the challenges to make progress. Today, I can see your report card, you have scored well, and you have shown prudency especially in the judicious use of resources of the state. You didn’t disappoint us. Ambode is silently achieving, meticulously planning, religiously executing and brilliantly giving results for Lagos State.”Tinubu went further to say that all over Lagos, the results of good governance were being felt by the people, and wished Ambode sound health and wisdom to continue to lead the state.
In March this year, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, wife of the Jagaban showered praises on Ambode for his sterling performance during a visit to the governor by elected representatives of the National Assembly from Lagos. This was what she said:”Your Excellency, we’re proud of the work you have done for Lagos and that we’re proud to identify with you. We can only wish you divine help together with the First Lady of the state. As you continue to steer the ship of our noble state, you’ve done very credibly well. Even on our way here just seeing the masses having somewhere to go to is a testimony of how you really want to improve the lives of the common man. And not only that, we see that there’s nowhere you go to that you’ll not find development. Anyone that will say ‘they haven’t come to me’, all I can say is that they should be patient. It (development) is going to go round. I want to congratulate you and pray that your next term in office will be better than this because they said the glory of the latter house will be greater than the former. So we pray that you’ll continue to take this state from glory to glory. God will strengthen you with good health, joy and peace in your home and bless your family.” That was Jagaban’s wife in her own words. Truth be told, she did not try to massage Ambode’s performance. Her allusion to “your next term in office” (now deferred) was as a result of concrete verifiable evidence of performance.
Now fast forward just a few days ago, September 30, 2018 to be exact. From the very same mouth that showered encomiums on Ambode came a new song that Ambode must go because he deviated from the blueprint drawn up for Lagos. He even gave another ridiculous excuse for opposing Ambode, noting: “He is not a good party man.” Well, some have interpreted that as a euphemism to say Ambode did not give party leaders money.
Here are excerpts from what Tinubu stated on the eve of the primary as reasons for opposing Ambode’s second term bid. It was the rambling of a conceited fellow suffering from a god complex: “Roughly 20 years ago, a corps of dedicated and patriotic Lagosians put aside personal interests and rivalries, to put their minds and best ideas together for the good of the state. Out of this collaborative effort, was born a master plan for economic development that would improve the daily lives of our people.
Bestowed on me was the honour of a lifetime when I was elected to be your governor in 1999. My administration faithfully implemented that plan. The government of my immediate successor, Tunde Fashola, also honoured this enlightened plan.
“Where the state government remained true to that blueprint, positive things happened. During my tenure and Governor Fashola’s, Lagos State recorded improvements in all aspects of our collective existence, from public health to public sanitation, from education to social services, from the administration of justice to the cleaning of storm and sewage drains. Businesses, large and small, invested, hired millions of workers and thrived. I make no pretence that the master plan is perfect. It can always be fine-tuned. However, whenever a government departed from this plan without a compelling reason, the state and its people have borne the painful consequence of the improper departure.
“To ignore this blueprint for progress in order to replace it with ad-hoc schemes of a materially inferior quality contravenes the spirit of progressive governance and of our party. Such narrowness of perspective does not bring us closer to our appointed destination; it takes us farther from that destiny. For reasons unknown to me and most Lagosians, we have experienced such deviations from enlightened governance recently. This trend is that which most concerns me as the primary nears. We must arrest this trend before irreparable harm is committed against the people and their future.”
Now, can anyone ask Tinubu why he showered praises on Ambode last year, saying the governor had made him proud by his impressive performance? How well did Tinubu stick to the Alliance for Democracy’s blueprint between 1999 and 2007? When did Tinubu realise that Ambode had started to deviate from the (Tinubu’s) blueprint? Was it after he had showered praises on the governor? If that was the case, which I doubt, he still praised his performance even on the day of the fake primary.
Tinubu as at March last year told us “Ambode is very quiet, very peaceful, not a noise maker, but he is delivering on the job.” Those were Tinubu’s words not mine. A lot of people cheered when he made those remarks. When did Ambode stop delivering on the job? Finding no plausible reason to justify his opposition to the man he praised to the high heavens for his performance not so long ago, Tinubu resorted to the most improbable of reasons, claiming that Ambode deviated from a blueprint. Those who went to school for nothing fell over themselves believing and even defending the nonsense Tinubu had dished out just to impress him.
Tinubu should know that we are not fools, neither are we robots. We are reasonable, discerning human beings who can read between the lines and see through a façade of lies. Perhaps, sensing that his argument against Ambode’s second term bid was not watertight enough, Tinubu a few days after, rambled again that Ambode’s failure as a party man was responsible for the withdrawal of support for his re-election bid by the leadership of the party in the state: “Ambode is doing well, yes; he hasn’t been a good party man; not only the glamour, not only about bricks and mortar. A talent is determined by character.” Tinubu reportedly said. I hardly knew what to make of his latest excuse for dumping Ambode. What really did he mean by “a talent is determined by character”? Was he implying that, that Ambode had no character or what?
Remember he had said last year that he was worried hell not about Ambode’s character but about the huge debt left by Fashola. You see, the Jagaban was merely looking for a reason to nail his godson to the wall, nothing more, nothing less. And contrary to Tinubu’s claim that Ambode deviated from a blueprint for Lagos, which is neither here nor there, I can bet my bottom kobo, Tinubu was probably angry because Ambode deviated from a blueprint that had enriched his pocket, and that of his cronies and lackeys, not the blueprint that would elevate Lagos and serve its people. What Tinubu and his Mandate Movement along with that illegal Governor’s Advisory Council have now told us by ousting Ambode, is that performance doesn’t matter in evaluating the success or failure of leaders, and that the key consideration is how well party leaders are taken care of, or made happy. So much for progressivism!
I was further scandalised beyond words to see how Tinubu tried to praise Ambode’s predecessor, Babatunde Fashola. It was obviously a cheap and desperate attempt to present a unified front with Fashola’s camp against the governor. He wanted Nigerians to believe that Fashola kept to the master plan that he handed him while Ambode deviated. Hell no, Chief Jagaban! Let us ask this man who approbates and reprobates at the same time this simple question: Since Fashola kept to the plan, why was he(Tinubu) opposed to Fashola’s second term bid? The truth is that Tinubu does not want any governor to do two terms in office and grow too strong to challenge his strangulating hold on Lagos; that way he keeps everyone in line. Ambode’s achievements in three and a half years had simply dwarfed that of the last two administrations. Accordingly, he needed to be cut to size because another four years would have elevated him far above his predecessors. That does not mean Ambode’s government was perfect. No, far from it. There are many areas he needed to refocus, such as health system, environmental sanitation, waste management, education, improving inner roads, etc. Despite those challenges, Ambode’s achievements have been impressive to say the least.
The governor was a victim of a scheming, out-of-control godfather who is desperate to keep Lagos in the chains of bondage (don’t be fooled into believing those trivial excuses made by some Tinubu apologists). Every self-respecting individual should be appalled by their “search and destroy” tactic against Ambode who just a few weeks ago was the apple of their eyes. Why should we just allow Tinubu to be changing governors just because they did not take care of some greedy party leaders? What about the people? How can one man continue to force his will on Lagosians? The who’s who in Nigeria begged Tinubu to let Ambode be, he hardened his heart and refused. Well some of us still remember what befell Pharaoh in the Bible when he behaved this same way. So my takeaway from Ambode’s fightback, even though feeble, was that the end is nigh for the godfather and Lagos shall be free!
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The APC Primaries: Winners And Losers, Sportsmanship And Democracy As The Ultimate Winner
By Prince Adeyemi Shonibare
Public Affairs Analyst and Media Consultant.
Politics, like sports, produces winners and losers. Every competition cannot end with everyone carrying home a trophy, and every election cannot produce multiple winners for a single office.
At the conclusion of every democratic contest, there will be celebrations in some camps and disappointment in others.
What ultimately distinguishes a mature democracy is not the absence of defeat, controversy or disagreement, but the capacity of participants to display sportsmanship, accept outcomes with dignity, pursue legitimate grievances through lawful channels and place the collective interest of democracy above personal ambitions.
The recently concluded primaries of the All Progressives Congress (APC) have once again demonstrated both the beauty and complexity of democratic politics. Across Nigeria’s 8,809 wards, millions of party members participated in one of the most expensive and extensive internal democratic exercises ever undertaken by a political party on the African continent.
The party conducted primaries for 993 State House of Assembly constituencies, 360 House of Representatives constituencies, 109 Senate seats, governorship positions in states due for elections and the presidential ticket of the party. In practical terms, more than 1,462 legislative positions alone were subjected to democratic contests, in addition to governorship and presidential elections.
The magnitude of the exercise was extraordinary. Thousands of aspirants campaigned simultaneously across the federation. Millions of party members participated in selecting candidates. Thousands of election officials, observers, journalists, consultants, agents, volunteers and security personnel were mobilized. Ward structures came alive from the creeks of the Niger Delta to the savannah of the North, from the commercial centres of Lagos and Kano to remote communities scattered across the federation. Results were collated, disputes addressed and appeal mechanisms activated.
Yet, despite the sheer scale of the exercise, Nigeria remained peaceful.
Markets remained open. Businesses continued trading. Schools remained in session. Commercial flights took off and landed as scheduled. Public institutions functioned normally. Citizens carried on with their daily activities. The nation did not descend into widespread unrest despite the enormous political activity generated by the primaries.
That achievement deserves recognition and commendation.
Perhaps the most remarkable feature of the APC primaries was the adoption of the direct primary system, a process many observers have compared to the participatory spirit of the famous Option A4 model introduced during the political transition programme of former military President Ibrahim Babangida. Through this mechanism, political power moved beyond governors, ministers, senators and political elites and was placed directly in the hands of ordinary party members at the grassroots.
For perhaps the first time on such a nationwide scale, APC members in villages, towns, cities and communities across Nigeria were given the opportunity to directly determine who would represent the party in future elections.
The message was unmistakable.
The party belongs to its members.
Not to governors.
Not to ministers.
Not to senators.
Not to political godfathers.
Not even to the President.
But to the ordinary men and women who constitute the foundation of the party.
That is the essence of democratic participation.
Direct primaries are expensive. There is no denying that reality. Conducting elections across 8,809 wards simultaneously requires enormous financial resources, manpower, logistics and administrative coordination. Results recording materials must be distributed. Officials deployed. Security arrangements made. Results collected and verified.
Yet democracy is rarely cheap.
Participation has a cost.
Inclusion has a cost.
Legitimacy has a cost.
The reward, however, is that power becomes decentralized and decision-making is transferred from a handful of influential actors to ordinary party members.
The direct primary system compels aspirants to return to the grassroots. It forces politicians to reconnect with ordinary members. It rewards political relationships built over years rather than influence exercised from air-conditioned offices.
Indeed, one of the major lessons from the APC primaries is that money alone cannot guarantee victory in a direct primary election.
Financial resources may facilitate campaigns. They may improve logistics. They may enhance visibility. But they cannot easily substitute for popularity, grassroots structures, credibility and sustained engagement with party members.
Several prominent political figures discovered this reality too late.
Some highly placed office holders failed to secure nominations despite their visibility and influence. Some former ministers who left executive positions in pursuit of elective offices discovered that occupying public office does not automatically translate into grassroots popularity. Some lawmakers who had become accustomed to political comfort zones found themselves confronted by party members eager to exercise independent judgment.
In several constituencies and districts, party members selected candidates they considered more suitable, available and accessible to represent their interests.
That is democracy at work.
The result may be painful for some aspirants, but democracy was never designed to guarantee victory and painless.
It was designed to guarantee opportunity.
It was designed to guarantee participation.
It was designed to guarantee free choice.
The beauty of direct primaries lies in their capacity to reflect the authentic mood of the grassroots. Political history repeatedly demonstrates that it is difficult to suppress a genuinely popular candidate when ordinary voters are given direct access to the ballot.
Nigeria’s democratic experience provides perhaps the most famous example. During the historic 1993 Nigerian presidential election, widely regarded as one of the freest elections in the nation’s history, Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola secured victories across regional, ethnic and religious boundaries, including areas many analysts considered politically improbable against Bashir Tofa. The election demonstrated a timeless democratic truth: when citizens are genuinely allowed to express their preferences freely, popular candidates can transcend conventional political calculations.
That lesson remains relevant today.
It is difficult to defeat a candidate who genuinely enjoys overwhelming grassroots support when party members are given direct participation. The larger the electorate, the more difficult it becomes for narrow interests to impose outcomes contrary to popular sentiment.
The presidential primary itself was historic. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu emerged as the APC presidential candidate after securing an overwhelming majority of 10.9 Million votes cast by party members nationwide.
While a party primary should never be confused with a general election, the turnout demonstrated significant organizational strength and grassroots mobilization within the party.
Many political observers have interpreted the participation figures as a vote of confidence in President Tinubu’s leadership of both the party and the government.
Equally significant was the fact that the President himself faced a challenger.
The APC did not prevent the challenger from contesting.
It did not treat the aspiration as an act of rebellion.
It did not deny him access to the democratic process.
Instead, it allowed him to exercise his democratic right to test his popularity before party members nationwide.
That is democracy.
That is inclusion.
That is confidence in democratic institutions.
Following his victory, President Tinubu emphasized unity, democratic participation and inclusiveness. In acknowledging his challenger, he reinforced the principle that democratic competition should not create permanent enemies but strengthen democratic culture.
Every political giant was once unknown.
Every governor was once an aspirant.
Every senator once sought support.
Every president once requested votes.
Democracy creates opportunities where privilege alone cannot guarantee success.
The APC National Chairman also consistently emphasized party unity, reconciliation and internal democracy throughout the process. His repeated message was that while contests may produce winners and losers, the larger family of the party must remain united after the competition.
That message remains important.
Political contests are temporary.
Political institutions endure.
One notable development that generated political discussion was the decision of Siminalayi Fubara not to seek a second-term APC ticket. According to public statements from APC leaders, he successfully passed the party’s screening process. However, for reasons known principally to himself and those within his political circle, he ultimately did not proceed with the contest. As an old African proverb reminds us, a man does not inquire too deeply into the circumstances surrounding his father’s death until he possesses the strength and wisdom to confront the answers. Politics often contains dimensions visible only to those directly involved.
Beyond politics, the APC primaries generated substantial economic activity throughout Nigeria.
Campaign offices were rented and furnished. Hotels recorded increased occupancy. Vehicles were hired. Airlines transported campaign teams. Restaurants and caterers supplied food for meetings, consultations and rallies. Event centres hosted stakeholder engagements and political gatherings.
The advertising and communications sector experienced one of its busiest periods in recent years.
Political public relations professionals, media strategists, consultants, advertising agencies, printers, graphic designers and branding companies secured contracts worth millions of naira.
Campaign posters, banners, billboards, flyers and promotional materials decorated communities nationwide. Television stations benefited from paid interviews and sponsored political programmes. Radio stations hosted campaign discussions and special broadcasts. Newspapers carried advertisements and feature articles. Online media platforms generated substantial revenue through campaign-related content and digital advertising.
Social media became a major arena of political engagement. Facebook, Instagram, X, TikTok, YouTube and WhatsApp were transformed into platforms for persuasion, mobilization and voter outreach. Content creators, digital consultants and social media managers found themselves in high demand.
Experiential campaigns flourished.
Town hall meetings.
Stakeholder consultations.
Youth engagements.
Women mobilization programmes.
Community interactions.
Ward meetings.
Political rallies.
All these activities created opportunities for event managers, decorators, photographers, videographers, sound engineers, logistics providers and countless service professionals.
Campaign merchandise flooded communities nationwide. Thousands of T-shirts, face caps, umbrellas, notebooks, calendars, shopping bags and promotional souvenirs were produced by local manufacturers. Textile suppliers benefited. Tailors secured contracts. Embroidery companies expanded production. Transportation providers moved supporters and campaign teams across communities.
From roadside printers in local government headquarters to major advertising agencies in Lagos and Abuja, countless businesses benefited from the circulation of campaign resources.
The APC primaries therefore became not merely a political exercise but also a significant contributor to economic activity and temporary employment generation.
Another issue that generated debate concerns aspirants facing investigations or court proceedings.
Here, constitutional principles must remain paramount.
An allegation is not a conviction.
An investigation is not a conviction.
A trial is not a conviction.
Under the rule of law, every citizen remains innocent until proven guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction.
Political parties are not courts of law.
They are not judicial tribunals.
They are not moral temples established to determine guilt or innocence.
Their constitutional responsibility is to facilitate political participation within the framework of the law.
Where the Constitution, electoral laws or final judicial pronouncements disqualify an individual, such provisions must naturally be respected. However, where no legal disqualification exists, the determination of guilt remains exclusively the responsibility of the courts.
To replace due process with suspicion would undermine the foundations of constitutional democracy.
As Nelson Mandela once observed, a critical, independent and investigative press is the lifeblood of democracy.
Criticism therefore has an important place in democratic society.
Complaints should be investigated.
Questions should be asked.
Transparency should be encouraged.
However, criticism must also be fair.
Achievements deserve recognition just as shortcomings deserve scrutiny.
At this point, one is reminded of the biblical admonition:
“Let him who is without sin cast the first stone.”
Before condemning an exercise involving millions of participants and thousands of contestants, critics should identify a democracy anywhere in the world that consistently conducts elections without disputes, petitions, appeals, disagreements or litigation.
Such perfection does not exist. Or it can be found in the graveyard only.
As Winston Churchill famously observed:
“Democracy is the worst form of government except for all those other forms that have been tried.”
Similarly, Barack Obama noted:
“The hallmark of a functioning democracy is not whether everybody agrees, but whether people can disagree peacefully.”
And Abraham Lincoln provided perhaps democracy’s most enduring definition:
“Government of the people, by the people, for the people.”
Even William Shakespeare understood the complexities of leadership and public judgment when he wrote:
“The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves.”
Democratic societies succeed not because they are perfect but because they continually strive for improvement.
The APC primaries have also demonstrated a growing maturity within Nigeria’s democratic culture. Despite the enormous number of participants and contestants, democratic institutions continued to function. The republic endured. The political system absorbed disagreements without descending into widespread instability.
That is progress.
That is democratic consolidation.
At this stage, the wisdom of legendary Juju maestro Chief Ebenezer Obey becomes particularly relevant. In one of his memorable narratives, he tells the story of a father and son travelling with a donkey. When the father rode the donkey while the son walked, onlookers condemned him as heartless. When the father dismounted and allowed the son to ride while he walked, the same public condemned the son as disrespectful and the father as foolish. The lesson was profound: no matter what decision is taken, there will always be critics. Human beings are often difficult to satisfy completely.
Politics follows the same pattern.
No election will satisfy everyone.
No primary will please every aspirant.
No democratic process will escape criticism.
Leaders must therefore focus on fairness, participation, transparency and accountability, leaving posterity to render the final judgment.
However, every success story carries lessons and warnings.
The APC must not mistake success in internal primaries for guaranteed victory in the 2027 general elections.
A training session is not the same as a championship match against another formidable opponent.
Political strategists understand that internal party contests and national elections operate under entirely different dynamics. What succeeds within party structures may not automatically translate into victory against determined opposition parties in a general election.
The party must therefore avoid complacency.
It should pay close attention to voter sentiment in the South-West and other strategic regions. Political strongholds should never be taken for granted.
Loyalty grows when citizens feel respected, heard and rewarded through good governance.
The APC must also move swiftly to reconcile aggrieved aspirants and their supporters.
Politics is a game of addition, not subtraction.
Every disappointed aspirant represents supporters, associates, financiers and political structures.
Ignoring grievances can create opportunities for opponents.
That is why reconciliation is not merely desirable.
It is essential.
The leadership of the party at national, state and local levels should embark upon deliberate consultations, peace initiatives and confidence-building measures. Political bridges should be repaired before they become political fault lines.
A farmer who neglects his crops should not be surprised when another farmer harvests them.
Political parties must continually cultivate, encourage and retain their members.
Most importantly, governments at all levels must remain focused on governance.
Citizens want more security.
Citizens want more jobs.
Citizens want more stable prices.
Citizens want more quality healthcare.
Citizens want more better schools.
Citizens want more better roads and affordable mass transportation system.
Citizens want more electricity.
Citizens want more housing.
Citizens want more economic opportunities.
Citizens want more macroeconomic stability translated into better microeconomic prosperity for families, workers, traders, artisans, farmers and small businesses.
Politics is not an end in itself.
It is a means to improving the lives of the people.
In the final analysis, the APC primaries have demonstrated government of the people , by the people , for the people and that internal democracy is alive and evolving within Nigeria’s political system. They have empowered ordinary party members. They have strengthened grassroots participation. They have generated economic activity. They have reinforced democratic competition. They have highlighted the importance of sportsmanship .
Finally .
There were winners.
There were losers.
There were celebrations.
There were disappointments.
Yet above all else, one truth stands unmistakably clear.
Democracy was the ultimate winner.
Political victories are temporary.
Political defeats are temporary.
But democratic institutions endure when citizens and leaders alike respect the rules of the game.
The APC primaries have provided another opportunity for Nigeria to deepen democratic culture, strengthen internal party democracy and reinforce the timeless principle that political legitimacy ultimately flows from the people.
And in the final judgment of history—not emotion, bitterness or temporary political passions—the enduring verdict may well be that while individuals won and lost, democracy itself emerged victorious.
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APC Ondo North Primary: Reports Show ATM in Early Lead
Reports from the field in Ondo North Senatorial District indicate that voters, officers, and agents at the voting centers across the wards have put Abdul Tunji Mohammed (ATM) in the lead.
According to the current figures collated from the centers, ATM is polling with wider margins of votes
Going by these figures, ATM is poised to win all the six Local Government in the Senatorial Districtt.
We urge all party members and supporters to remain peaceful as collation continues.
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Senate Leader Opeyemi Bamidele Hosts Ondo North Aspirant Abdul Tunji Mohammed, Backs Grassroots Development Agenda
Senate Leader Opeyemi Bamidele recently hosted Chief Abdul Tunji Mohammed (ATM), a prominent aspirant for the Ondo North senatorial seat.
The meeting highlighted a strategic alignment between progressive forces, with both leaders emphasizing a shared vision for grassroots development and legislative excellence.
Senator Bamidele, a respected figure in Nigerian politics, is recognized for his contributions to national cohesion and impactful policymaking, drawing on his experience as a legal luminary and human rights activist.
Chief Mohammed, an astute businessman and dedicated grassroots mobilizer, has made a notable impact on Ondo North through his philanthropic work and commitment to constituents’ welfare. His approach blends corporate discipline, economic ingenuity, and a deep concern for people—qualities that have reshaped the region’s political narrative.
The two leaders discussed the district’s critical needs, exploring avenues for socioeconomic growth, legislative reform, and stronger community integration. Senator Bamidele stressed the importance of supporting President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, a sentiment echoed by Chief Mohammed.
The convergence of Chief Mohammed’s vision with Senator Bamidele’s legislative experience offers hope for Ondo North. This synergy between grassroots ambition and seasoned mentorship points to a promising future for the district’s representation in the Senate. With ATM’s drive and the guidance of leaders like Senator Bamidele, Ondo North is positioned for progress and transformative governance.
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