The Illogicality of an Exclusive APC Presidential Candidate from the S’East or S’South

Share:
 At his last media chat late last year, President Muhammadu Buhari said he had his own preferred candidate for the 2023 election, but declined to give a clue saying the candidate may be harmed or even be eliminated before the time.
That statement not only heightened the permutation among the aspirants in the ruling APC, but it equally charged the atmosphere politicians and stakeholders across the country had to work under.
Less than 48 hours after the chat, Senator Ahmed Bola Tinubu, former governor of Lagos and chieftain of APC surfaced in Aso Rock to “brief the President and inform the nation about his presidential ambition in 2023.”
A week after, Governor Dave Umahi of Ebonyi state followed suit. Though the kites have also been flying with different colours in the other political parties, last week, rumours from high quarters of associates of the Federal Government and political gladiators expressed the possibility of the President throwing his weight behind either a South-south or South-east candidate. Prominent among them are Rotimi Amaechi, Ogbonnaya Onu, Dave Umahi and most recently, Godwin Emefiele. It is rumoured that this choice will be narrowed to these two regions.
The illogicality of this choice is more than obvious, this goes a long way to expose the naivety and lack of requisite political arithmetic (logic) in the brains of those who made these propositions to the President.
The record of the support the party enjoys from each and every Geo-political zone of the country is very open and glaring. In the 2015 presidential election, the APC got 2.411 million votes from the North-central; 2.848 million from the North-east; the North-west gave the party 7.115 million votes; while the South-east gave 198,778 votes. The South-west brought 2.433 million, and the South-south 418, 590.
In the 2019 presidential election as well, the North West brought 5.995 million votes to the APC; the North-east gave 3.465 million; the North-central gave 2.465 million votes; South-west mustered 2.036 million; South-east gave 403, 968 and South-south brought 1.051 million votes to the party.
Also, the recent elections in Anambra and Abuja have given us a clue on how the 2023 election will most likely be, at least for now since the country ethno-religious division  is coming to the fore now more than any time  before.  For instance, the Anambra elections where Federal might was deployed, yet
The APC could not find it feet in just one South East  State, with APGA emerging victorious over APC. This is an indication that the South-east is obviously not an APC friendly zone. This has been manifesting even before the coming of APC, in 2003, 2007 and 2011 when Buhari paired himself with one of their own sons to fly the presidential flag of the ANPP.
The election in Abuja which took place on the 12th of February is yet another experiment of the possible outcome of the 2023 general elections. If one take a closer look at the Geo-political composition of the six Area Councils, it is easy to conclude that it is a reflection of what is expected in the larger country space. The Abuja election is a litmus test conducted to give a clue of what should be expected in other geo-political zones of the federation outside the federal capital come 2023.
The analysis below further elaborates my argument where it could be seen clearly Area Councils that have predominant composition of South Easterners, and South Southerners  have supported and voted for PDP candidates while the APC candidates turned out victorious in areas where there  are largely composition of Northerners and South Westerners as indicated below.
Analysis of Party Against Geo-Political Domination
S/n       Area Council   Party   (A+C) (A+B)   Remarks
1          AMAC PDP    Largely S/East            A reflection of SE/SS
2          Bwari   PDP    Largely S/East            A reflection of SE/SS
3          Kuje     PDP    Largely S/East            A reflection of SE/SS
4          Abaji    APC    Largely composition of N/Central, N/West and S/West         A reflection of NC/NW/SW
5          Kwali   APC    Largely composition of N/Central, N/West and S/West         A reflection of NC/NW/SW
6          Gwagwalada   APC    Largely composition of N/Central, N/West and S/West         A reflection of NC/NW/SW
A – Northern Composition
B – Eastern & South South Composition
C – Western Composition
If the analysis above is anything to go by, the idea of ignoring the North Central and Southwest in the choice of a presidential candidate for APC which are no doubt the strongest support base of the party is a miscalculation and an illogical political exercise taken too far.
The best option for APC to be on the track to electoral victory is to expand the option of including the North Central and the South West where they have 5 governors of APC out of the 6 States in each zone making them the undisputable, strongest hold of the party rather than excluding them as opposed to the South-east and South-south where they have two and one APC Governors respectively out of the 11 States in their zones.
The least strategy for the APC-led government to adopt is to allow an open and free contest for the most credible and popular choice to emerge but never narrow the ticket to a South-east or South-south option. Narrowing the choice to South-east and South-south will be political suicide!
The consequences for such a decision may be a serious revolt and possible decamp from those strong APC hold who would see their loyalty and consistency in following the party as a wasteful and unappreciated exercise. The conclusion would be that APC would have kissed a goodbye to any chances of victory come 2023 should they adopt the idea of narrowing the presidential ticket to only South East and South South.
*Saad, a Political Strategist/Commentator writes from Abuja

Previous Article

Aguar Land Rover Announces Partnership With Nvidia

Next Article

When Tinubu Got Royal Blessings in Ogun

You may also like

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.