Would 2023 elections return Nigeria to multi-sum politics? — Magnus Onyibe

It is such a welcome relief that the crowded political space by a deluge of contenders for the office of president of Nigeria is panning out nicely as the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had concluded its presidential primaries over a weak ago and the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) is about now rounding up. It is also gratifying that no lives were lost as the PDP exercise was less rancorous than anticipated.

Commendably, and by all indications, the candidates who failed to win may not end up in court as Atiku Abubakar is adjudged to have won, fair and square towering with 371 which is about 134 votes above his closest rival, Nyesom Wike’s score of 271.

Unlike what transpired at the state governments level, where state governors more or less unilaterally drew up delegates lists which they change in the twinkling of an eye to suit their whims and caprices, delegates lists for electing the presidential flag bearer of PDP were transparent and made available to all the presidential candidates in a timely and timeous fashion.

With the exception of Ebonyi State, where the presidential aspirant from the state, Anyim Pius Anyim raised alarm about not having access to the list of delegates, the PDP convention is generally adjudged to have been organised to the satisfaction of those who chased their dreams to the end.

While the PDP has crossed what l would like to term the political rubicon by successfully concluding its primaries for its candidates for 2023 general elections from the state house of assembly, House of Representatives, Senate, gubernatorial to its presidential flag bearer, its rival, APC was still until 6th June trapped in the vortex of internal political Armageddon, for lack of a better nomenclature to characterise the ongoing storming over its choice of a presidential flag bearer.

After passing through the mandatory screening for integrity and probity which was supposed to hold on the 23rd day of May, but was postponed and later held over the past couple of days, the destiny of the remaining 13 candidates for the final 23 from the stable of the ruling party at the centre, that are now cleared to contest for the office of the president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, are hanging in the balance pending when President Muhammadu Buhari discloses his mystery candidate which he pleaded with the powerful APC governors forum during his meeting with them on Tuesday 31 May to grant him the liberty to recommend — a privilege that he noted the governors have been enjoying by choosing their successors.

The wait would hopefully end after the convention held this week so that the winning candidates and their parties can start to focus more on how they would solve the mounting obstacles on the path to progress and prosperity for Nigerians.

Now, three factors have been adduced as the trigger for the unusually large number of contenders for the 2022/33 presidential ticket which was in excess of 40 until the PDP deftly concluded its political recruitment exercise last weekend, thereby initially pruning the unwieldy crowd to APC’s 25, then 23 after two were disqualified and later 13 who will slug it out during their primaries holding 6th and 7th June, after another 10 aspirants were dropped by the Odigie Oyegun-led committee.

The first reason every Tom, Dick and Harry exercised their rights to becoming president of Nigeria is the taciturnity of President Muhammadu Buhari, who unprecedentedly announced that he had in mind a candidate that would succeed him. But the identity of whom he has been keeping to his chest, thus throwing APC presidential hopefuls into a frenzy, as most party chieftains who believe they have done president Buhari a favor or two have literally thrown their hats into the ring.

The second factor is the effect of the electoral reforms embedded in the electoral act 2022 which promises to make elections more transparent such that votes would count going forward hence the avalanche of ‘wannabe’ presidents who are buoyed by the fidelity intrinsic in the new provisions in the electoral statute.

And the third is the initial prevarications by both the ruling and main opposition parties to dishonour the 1994/5 gentleman agreement for rotation of the presidency between the north and south which has been observed since 1999 when multi-party democracy returned to Nigeria after a long military interregnum.

The last-minute resolve to keep the faith with the rotation of presidency arrangement by the APC resulting in some northern presidential aspirants dropping their 2023 presidential ambition has further helped to reduce the crowded presidential stage.

But the rules of the game got switched by the PDP in the middle of the game and in consonance with the presumed changing political dynamics in the country which has rendered the rotation of the presidency in the eyes of the party less critical, compared to rescuing the country from what it termed the ruinous policies of the incumbent government that has polarised our country unprecedentedly and imperilled lives and properties monumentally.

On the flip side, in the interest of equity and fidelity, 11 of APC governors from the north, have resolved to push for the 2023 presidency to be zoned to the south, and possibly to the Igbo since that is the only ethnic nationality yet to get a short at it.

Although, politicians from the Igbo nation by straight-line calculations (all things being equal) are supposed to be the zone from which both the ruling and main opposition parties, APC and PDP

should have sourced their Presidential candidates, (based on the gentleman agreement to rotate the presidency between the three major ethnic groups in the north and south of Nigeria) a plethora of aspirants showed up.

But the emergence of Igbo candidates on the presidential dais which was somewhat late in happening, and who are, in any case, lightweight, had justified my observation in a previous media Intervention in which l had made a case that there is a dearth of presidential ‘materials’ from Igbo land.

As such, I made the following recommendation in an article which I wrote and published way back on 21 October 2021 on both traditional and online media platforms titled “Nigerian Presidency 2023: Where Are The Igbo Candidates?”

The excerpt below encapsulates my thoughts about the Igbo dilemma a year ago.

“In my view, a partnership with Atiku Abubakar as a pathway to Aso Rock Villa remains the most viable trajectory for an Igbo man/woman to become president of Nigeria in 2027 on the PDP platform.

That is because Atiku Abubakar is liberal, broad-minded, business savvy, and has links by marriage to all the three major ethnic groups-Hausa/Fulani, Yoruba, and Igbo in Nigeria. It implies that Atiku Abubakar’s presidency would likely be more inclusive than the nepotistic-a trademark of the current government in power that is fueling the current gale of separatism.”

I then threw more light on the issue by stating that:

“The point being made here is that under Atiku Abubakar’s watch as president, separatism would be consigned to the dustbin as inclusiveness becomes a major plank in government policy.

With inclusiveness becoming a centre point of public policy in Nigeria, secessionist tendencies would die a natural death in the manner that Niger Delta militancy ceased after the late President Umaru Yar’Adua took strategic steps to stabilise the volatile region via his offer of amnesty to former militants after meeting some of their demands.”

I further pointed out that “The existential reality in Nigeria’s current political equation is that the Igbo need help to actualise their quest for the presidency of Nigeria. As Atilla, the Hun advised, “choose your enemies wisely and your friends carefully.”

And then l offered the following advice. “It should be obvious to the average Igbo that they cannot ascend the throne in Aso Rock Villa by themself. And they must accept that their mastery of business can not overnight translate into the political savviness that is required for someone of Igbo extraction to become the number 1 citizen presiding over our country in Aso Rock Villa seat of power from 2023.”

I could not conclude the referenced piece, without making a recommendation, and offering the following advice which has remained valid: “So an alliance with the former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar whose political fortune has been built since the time that he first contested against the late MKO Abiola in Social Democratic Party (SDP) primaries held in 1992, remains the most viable political catapult that can propel the Igbo nation into Aso Rock Villa, after Alex Ekwueme’s partnership with Shehu Shagari for the presidency.”

True to my projections into the future, the Igbo have now been edged out of the presidential contest through superior political brinkmanship in the PDP, and they might have concluded that in the PDP, they are like a stepchild whose future is not so bright in the family he/she finds his/herself.

The APC may be on the verge of throwing the easterners the much-sought opportunity for one of their own to preside over Nigeria in Aso Rock Villa.

While they can justifiably be disappointed with the set back in the PDP, they should not give in or give up until their mission for someone from their ethnic stock is accomplished perhaps in 2027 under PDP or by leveraging the APC vehicle to become president in 2023, if the ruling party is fair enough in its ongoing presidential primaries to concede the ticket to the Igbo.

Again, it needs to be reiterated that in my article published widely in the mass media on 17 May 2022 with the title “Becoming President of Nigeria, 2023 And Its Surprises”, l made a strong case for the presidency to return to the south. I took the same stance in my new book with a similar title: Becoming President of Nigeria:

A Citizen’s Guide where l made a case for an Igbo president in 2023 in four of the 12 chapters of the tome.

But in light of the fact that presidency is never given on a platter of gold, did the lgbo actually invest enough vigour and political brinkmanship in seeking to become president of Nigeria as the eventual winner of the PDP contest, Atiku Abubakar, Turaki of Adamawa, did? Cognizant of the fact that the lgbo’s brightest chance of realising its dreams of becoming president of Nigeria in 2023, Peter Obi at the 11th hour dramatically dumped the PDP and moved to the Labour Party (LP) to pursue his ambition, it is left to readers to figure it out if by Obi’s somewhat erratic action, he did not, perhaps inadvertently shoot the lgbo nation in the foot.

The fact that should also not be lost by observers is, whereas Aminu Tambuwal collapsed his campaign into Atiku Abubakar’s to boost the former’s fortunes, the southern candidates- Nyesom Wike, Udom Emmanuel and Anyim Pius Anyim, etc did not see any reason to consolidate their votes.

And I hope our brothers and sisters from the land of the rising sun will learn to be proactive enough to commence bargaining with the winner of the presidential contest, Atiku Abubakar by aligning with him in the forthcoming general elections in order to secure a strategic role for the lgbo nation as Alex Ekwueme of blessed memory did and became Vice President to former President Shehu Shagari, also of blessed memory from 1979 to 1983.

As l had argued in previous media interventions, it is not all the time that Fulanis are polarising figures. As records reveal, Shagari was not by any stretch of the imagination a polarizer. He equitably shared out public offices mindful of federal character principles entrenched in the constitution and rolled out economic infrastructure such as automobile assembly plants and steel rolling mills throughout the country equitably.

Neither was Umar Yar’Adua a divider. He is the president that offered Niger delta militants amnesty and thus restored some peace and stability in the hitherto volatile region.

So based on past experience, there is every tendency that Atiku Abubakar would not be a polarizer. Instead, he would be a unifier as he was when he served as Vice President, 1999-2007.

As the initial fear has become a reality that the presidency would not be zoned to the Igbos in line with the concept of Rotation of the office of the president of Nigeria introduced through a gentleman man agreement during the 1994/5 national conference held under general SANNI Abacha as military head of state, since had been killed by the report of Bala Mohamed led committee set up by PDP, which opposed rotation of presidency, the Igbos have been left in the lurch. And it is unsurprising that not a few of their leaders are expressing their indignation by resigning from the PDP ostensibly for the betrayal of their trust.

Is their reason altruistic and is it not that the aspirants are only just seeing the handwriting on the wall as Orji Kalu and Ken Nnamani had done and as l had foretold in my previous media projections into the future of politics in our beloved country?

First to show PDP his back is Peter Obi, former two-time Anambra State governor, vice presidential candidate to Atiku Abubakar in 2019, an apostle of frugality in governance and internet sensation. Having originally leveraged the APGA platform to win and serve as governor of Anambra State for eight years, he crossed the carpet to PDP from where he just joined the Labour Party.

While the running mate of Atiku Abubakar for the presidency in 2019 has been saying all the correct things that strike the right notes and sounds like music to the ears of the youths and internet denizens, another contender for the office of the president of Nigeria on PDP platform, who lost to Atiku Abubakar and regarded as ‘infant terrible’ in politics, Nyesom Wike, currently the governor of Rivers State, in a Channels Television interview deflated or punctured Obi’s sky-bound balloon in the social media space by drawing attention to the fact that Obi has lost elections in his home state consistently since he left office as governor in 2014 by unsuccessfully sponsoring candidates against his predecessor, Willie Obiano.

He also did not enjoy the support of eastern states governors when he was picked by Atiku Abubakar as running mate for the 2019 presidential race. That implies that Obi has no significant political substance in Igbo land, as he is a superstar in the online space because his words resonate with youths nationwide who dominate the virtual space. Since the Generation-Z or #EndSars cohorts (as someone has categorised them) are hardly party delegates, so they can not vote on the D-Day, one wonders how Obi could have won the PDP primaries? Even during general elections, the youths hardly turn up to vote, as they do online by posting thumbs-up emojis for Obi. So, how would he win the presidency? The reality is that the members of Generation-Z that are bestriding the world of social media are less assets and more liabilities to Peter Obi or any other candidate.

Unless there is a pathway to mobilising and motivating them to become active participants in politics, the road to Aso Rock Villa for Peter Obi would just be a mirage. As an aside, l have a piece of advice for those hoping to tap into the potential benefits of youth engagement in active politics. One man who has a blueprint for harnessing the voting power of the youths is Barack Obama- the first black president of the United States of America (USA), who keyed into the voting power of the youths in his country to clinch the presidency in 2009 as the 44th president of the USA. And his successful journey into the White House is simply owed to the fact that American youths that cut across races, were unlike their parents who saw Obama from the prism of a black slave, being influenced by the intellectual capacity and organisational ability of the candidate as opposed to assessing him from the prism of the colour of his skin as their forbears had been doing.

In like manner, the youths who are applauding or hero-worshipping Peter Obi mainly in the virtual world are obviously peeved with the past and current political leadership, and therefore yearning for a new beginning. One thing anyone who wants to become president in 2023 needs to do is plug into the movement and momentum already stirred up amongst our youths by making conscious and concerted efforts to bring Generation- Z out from the virtual world down to planet earth. That is the sure way to tap their latent energy with a view to converting it into a political asset.

And that task can be achieved by organising them into a sort of positive tour de force via engaging them in physical world activities that would advance their positive involvement in events that would reinforce the virtues of civic responsibilities in them.

Now, the reason that Obi advanced for quitting PDP is his disinterest in money politics.

By his own admission, in departing from PDP, he moved from a palace to a hut. Obviously, it is going to cost him huge sums of money to convert the Labour Party hut into a palace that he branded the PDP. From the outcome of the primaries in which ex-Vice President, Atiku Abubakar triumphed, money is good, but goodwill built on a solid political foundation developed over a considerable length of time is better. Hence Nyesom Wike, who has put up a good fight to earn the next highest votes after the winner, made a significant impact that might not have surprised those who subscribe to the school of thought that money works wonders in politics-be it in Nigeria or any clime for that matter.

Shadowing Obi in his disappointment about the notion that the Igbo have been literally thrown ‘under the bus’, the Senate Minority Leader, Eyinaya Abaribe, another Igbo chieftain has reportedly also exited the PDP. So also has the immediate past Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, who dropped his gubernatorial ambition with both of them citing loss of confidence in their erstwhile party, which they are accusing of betrayal. Had Peter Obi’s exit from PDP been a movement to APGA (he prefers to like Nnamdi Azikiwe look beyond Igboland) the predicted loss of the Igbo electorate by the PDP could have been the gain of APGA, the only ethnic-based party that demurred in 2013/14 from blending into the coalition of opposition parties, APC — as a political vehicle to oust then ruling PDP.

Of course, there is also the Young Progressive Party (YP with Senator Ifeanyi Uba as the only elected representative. Just as no independent candidate including Ross Perot was able to win the presidency as an independent in the USA, Obi’s departure from PDP to LP is likely to be disappointing because building up a party from the ground is not a tea party as can be testified to by Olusegun Mimiko, ex Ondo state governor who was once the leader of the party and Dele Momodu, who is a one-time presidential candidate of LP.

With respect to APC’s delay in organising its presidential primaries, until 6-7 June, which initially suggested that the party had established a pattern of tackiness, shoddiness, and inelegant attitude in political party organisation and laxity in public administration reflected by its vacillation on the date that it’s presidential primaries would hold, last minutes activities by the party suggest that it had been doing a lot of work building consensus amongst the key stakeholders.

By shifting its convention dates from 29-31 May before settling for 6-7 June, after INEC was compelled to compromise its timetable to accommodate APC’s foibles, there was a strong likelihood that the party would experience a sort of chasm or meltdown which presumably has been waiting to happen. But as the ruling party at the centre had successfully evaded that since its birthing in 2013/14, it appears ready to one more time escape implosion and wax stronger. All of these are owed to intensive negotiations by President Buhari with the party stalwarts in the last week or so.

Nevertheless, the risk of implosion would be more rife if the man fondly referred to as Jagaban, a former Lagos State governor, and national leader of the APC, Bola Tinubu, with a larger than life image, and who has frankly stated that his lifelong ambition is to rule Nigeria, fails to become APC’s flag bearer after its presidential primaries. If he is not given the presidential baton to run the race, would an alternative platform like Accord Party be resurrected?

Better still, would any other political vehicle be cranked up to drive his presidential ambition as being speculated? Should that happen, it would be evident that the much anticipated political realignments would continue to unfold and the equation would be balanced with Chukwuma Soludo APGA already being strengthened in the South East, Musa Kwakwanso‘s NNPP gaining converts in the Northern part of the country and a Yoruba party of whatever nomenclature being prepped up in the South West, should Bola Tinubu fail to clinch the ticket of APC and he opts to leverage another platform to pursue his ambition.

With the outlined potential outcomes, there is clearly a looming danger that the legacy political parties that formed the ruling party, APC, may end up returning to the status quo ante. By that,l mean returning to their original ethnic and regional formations geared towards specifically and realistically attending to the narrow interests of the multiple ethnic nationalities that make up our country.

And that would amount to re-enacting the days of yore when the National Party of Nigeria (NPN, 1979-1983) in partnership with the GNPP and other smaller parties collaborated (not collapse into one party) to form the central government since it could not win enough votes to give it the mandate to form government at the centre on its own. That is a privilege that the PDP had enjoyed from 1999 to 2015 and the APC has been enjoying it from 2015 to date.

It may be recalled that during that era, unlike now, there was equitable distribution of political offices and infrastructure reflecting the inclusion of all ethnic groups nationwide. Steel rolling mills were equitably set up across the country and so also were automobile plants distributed nationwide and across all the regions based on fairness. As such, there was significant ethnic harmony and little or no religious extremism since policies and programmes were conceived and implemented in the best interest of all nationalities, transparently. The presence of peace provided the atmosphere for the growth and development of society until the military coup of December 1983 literally torpedoed the ship of state. In my opinion, the current two-party system is a major bane of politics in our country. The year 2023 could be the year that our country can return to that period of political and religious tranquillity that we all so much romanticise owing to a plurality of political parties with each pushing their peculiar regional agendas.

As already stated, Musa Kwakwanso, a two-time governor of Kano State, ex-minister of defence and senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria has opened the floodgate of political parties returning to the status quo ante via the formation of his own ethnic-based political party, New Nigerian Peoples Party, (NNPP).

Another two-time governor of Kano State, Ibrahim Shekarau has joined Kwakwanso in NNPP. Atahiru Jega, former INEC chairman has joined the fray with his entrance into PRP –a foremost northern party. And APGA is attracting Igbo political heavyweights back into its fold, just as YPP May also be a destination for other Igbo politicians.

That is in addition to Peter Obi’s cross carpeting to the Labour Party that would give the hitherto ailing party a shot in the arm and a new lease of life.

The stimulus for the return to the basics by some of our political actors is reminiscent of the Biblical injunction ‘To your tents o Israel.’

And it is clear aftermath or manifestation of the stepping down of the rotation of the Presidency Principle that had become a tradition, if not culture and glue holding the multiple ethnic nationalities that constitute our country together in a single party like the PDP, and with potential for playing a similar binding role in the APC.

What the evolving phenomenon of ethnic-based parties foretells is that it is unlikely that a single party in the mould of APC or PDP would solely lead Nigeria at the centre in 2023.

That implies that a major party may only win a significant share of the votes but not a majority that is large enough to give it full control. As such it would be compelled to go into alliance with the smaller regional or ethnic parties that would dominate their local environment to form government at the centre. And in the event that it turns out that smaller parties like APGA and YPP in the South East, one or two local parties spring up in the South West going by whatever name and joins NNPP and PRP in unfurling in the northern region, and they control their local environments such as states and LGAs, they would bargain for strategic positions in the central government in the manner that corporations allocate board seats to stakeholders based on the size of their investments in a firm or corporation.

That is one way that the hue and cry about the current central government allocating all the strategic ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) to members of the same ethnic and religious background as the president, would be reduced, if not eliminated. That would be the situation when multiple parties in the national partnership negotiate positions that are in the best interest of their regions and zones as they form central government together. It would be a re-enactment of the 1980s when the NPN relied on a coalition of other parties to form a national government.

In any case, as l espoused in the book: Becoming President of Nigeria: A Citizen’s Guide, rotation of the presidency between the north and south calculus, has been producing a negative and unsavoury outcome of zero-sum politics, instead of a multi-sum outcome. And Atiku Abubakar’s emergence as president may end the nihilistic zero-sum politics if he runs an inclusive government with restructuring as the driver. In pari-passu, so would picking a southerner who will work towards restructuring the country as the presidential candidate of the APC be an elixir for curing the current toxicity in our polity. The realisation of that prospect is imminent as the ruling party at the centre appears to have resolved to pick a southerner as its candidate for president in 2023, during the 6th and 7th June special convention.

It is easy to forget that rotation of the presidency was a mere stop-gap measure aimed at fixing an existential challenge of mistrust amongst the multiple ethnic nationalities that make up Nigeria, which is that the minority would be marginalised by the majority. But the rotation of the presidency between the north and south took on a life of its own at the expense of the more robust policy proposals that would mitigate the threats to the harmonious co-existence of the multiple ethnic nationalities that constitute Nigeria, enunciated in the Goodluck Jonathan 2014 Confab report and earlier in the Sani Abacha Confab of 1994/95 which is also a treasure trove of wisdom on how best to administer our beloved country in an inclusive and progressive manner.

Since the palpable fear of the minority had been sufficiently addressed in the report of both Jonathan and Abacha Confab reports, which without the sudden death of Abacha in 1998 and the defeat of Jonathan as president in 2015, should have been implemented by now, rotation of presidency principle ought to have become moribund at this point in time. But the loophole has been exploited to the detriment of society via zero-sum politics witnessed since the return of multi-party politics in 1999, and especially in the past half a decade via the winner taking it all politics presently in practice. What is zero-sum politics, some may wonder? It is the fact that when anyone from each side of the north-south presidency rotation equation takes over the reins of power in Aso Rock Villa, he builds a castle with his Kith and kin positioned in strategic public offices and locates infrastructure in their regions or states of origin to the detriment of other nationalities in the federation. Subsequently, after eight years, the successor to the presidency throne or the next Aso Rock Villa occupant brings down the edifice constructed by his predecessor that is made up of his tribesmen and women.

With the metaphorical building up and bringing down every eight years, Nigeria has failed to make genuine progress since none of the past leaders has built or is building on the foundation already laid by his predecessor which could have had the beneficial outcome of multi sum politics that would engender prosperity and improved standard of living of the masses or hoi polloi. That is instead of benefiting a few elites from both sides of the divide that rise and fall with their benefactors in the political class.

Fortuitously, there has been an opportunity to remedy the ruinous practices that have been bedevilling our country. And it is evident in two initiatives Independently undertaken by the ruling and main opposition parties, APC and PDP.

It may be recalled that the APC had set up a committee led by Nasir El Rufai, Kaduna state governor to chart a way forward for the party after its victory in 2015. It recommended devolution of power from the centre to the states which would allay the fear of the minorities and also set up state police as a panacea to the frightening level of insecurity in the country. The PDP similarly had after being defeated in 2019 by the ruling party, also set up a committee to envision a future for the party. It was led by Bauchi state governor, Bala Mohammed. And it came up with the recommendations that the party should replace the rotation of president policy with meritocracy and throw the presidency open. If both recommendations by the two committees of the ruling and main opposition parties were adopted and implemented, our country would be a better place as the two proposals uncannily addressed the fundamental causes of the mutual suspicions fueling the current crisis of lack of trust wracking our beloved country and the reason for the push for restructuring which would address the twin demons of insecurity of lives and properties being driven by religious insurgents and separatists.

Not restructuring the political system as El Rufai’s committee has recommended, is basically the tumour that has become not only cancerous, but has metastasized and therefore threatening to kill Nigeria, and which we must all resolve to kill before, it kills us as individuals and a nation.

Unlike the PDP which has implemented the recommendations by its committee as evidenced by the suspension of rotation of the presidency, the APC has failed to implement the report of the El-Rufai committee that recommended the devolution of political power from the centre to the states which would likely end separatist agitations in the east, west and middle belt zones; and the establishment of state police to address insecurity driven by religious insurgency, especially in the hinterlands of the northern parts of our country. It is a no-brainer that the implementation of both Nasir El Rufai and Bala Mohammed committee reports together would have enabled our country to experience a political reset and rebirth.

All the manoeuvring and nuances by political leaders in the two political parties are contained in my new book, Becoming President of Nigeria: A Citizen’s Guide.

Realistically, and with regards to the Igbo jeopardy in not being able to produce the presidential candidate for the 2023 race to Aso Rock Villa, as they had anticipated,(if Peter Obi miracle does not happen) l had figured out long ago that the pathway to Aso rock Villa for the Igbo would be rocky.

I have also in several analyses projecting into the future, enjoined the Igbo to get into an alliance or pact with former Vice President Atiku Abubakar to have a member of Igbo stock as running mate for the 2023 presidency, but they have been adamant until the reality hit them like a thunderbolt that the PDP would not give a member of their stock the ticket.

Well, l hope that since former Vice President Abubakar has once again clinched the PDP presidential ticket 2023, as l had projected about a year ago, they can now see the wisdom in my timely advice which was unheeded. As people adept in business, the Igbo can spot business opportunities a world away. But they failed to get the drift about their political future which l had painted based on trend analysis. What would it have taken to spur the Igbo into action when l prompted them about a year ago?

Although, the apparent Igbo inflexibility or poor reflex in political affairs could cost them the number two slot in the pecking order in the Aso Rock Villa hierarchy if they don’t make haste, rather than throw their arms up in the air lamenting, it may not be too late to align with the Turaki of Adamawa and PDP in their March to occupy Aso Rock Villa from 29bMay 2023.

As l will always counsel my Igbo brothers and sisters, in a highly fluid political environment into which our country can be categorised, there are many ways for someone of Igbo origin to become president of Nigeria without necessarily relying on a set piece of rotation of presidency or other power-sharing formula if the two major political parties ignore them. For instance, the Igbo can choose not to be like a football team that relies only on a penalty shoot-out in a football game to win the match whereas they can dribble and take a shot at the goal any time the opportunity arises. The above analogy is what waiting for the pendulum of the presidency to swing to them based on a tenuous gentleman agreement, entails in my view. They should try dribbling rather than waiting to be dribbled.

And the door to Aso Rock Villa’s number one seat may still be open to the Igbo, as, unlike the PDP, the APC has not closed it until it draws the curtain on its delegates convention.

—Magnus Onyibe, an entrepreneur, public policy analyst, author, development strategist, alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, Massachusetts, USA and a former commissioner in Delta State government, sent this piece from Lagos

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