A new challenge appears to be looming in the horizon for the fledgling
All Peoples Congress (APC) as there are fears within the
yet-to-be-registered party that the expected decampment of serving
governors elected under the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) could lead to
a new power struggle in APC.
The APC hierarchy is expecting 23
governors from the ruling party to join its rank as soon as its
registration as a political party by the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC) is achieved.
However, an APC source who spoke
to Sunday Tribune in Abuja on the condition of anonymity, feared that if
this happens, the decamping PDP governors would outnumber the founding
governors of the APC and were likely to have greater influence in the
running of its affairs.
The source said that coming from the PDP,
the incoming governors were also likely to stick together which could
lead them to think along a line different from the original members of
the APC.
“That is why we believe that great care must be taken in
accepting the PDP governors whose mission is yet to be clearly
defined,” the source volunteered.
Another source who was
apprehensive that the APC would face numerous challenges on its way to
becoming a political party, said: “let me add to it that even if they
scale through the difficulties they currently face, they will have to
deal with a couple of other issues.”
This, according to the
source, includes how to change the constituent parties including the
Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP)
and the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) from there regional
mentality to a national outlook like the PDP.
The source also
observed that while the governors from the regional parties would always
be willing to negotiate, the breakaway PDP governors might not be
amenable to negotiation.
Meanwhile, the Peoples Democratic
Movement (PDM) is hoping to cash in on the expected exodus of governors
from the PDP to reposition itself within what they see as “the new PDP.”
A top member of the PDM confided in Sunday Tribune in Abuja on
Saturday that it was quietly working on a new direction for the movement
formed by the late Major General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua.
According
to the PDM source, “there is an internal debate on whether PDM should
become a party or remain a movement spurred on by their strength and
number but the general consensus seems to point towards a further
consolidation of the movement and an affinity with the new PDP, unless
it rejects them.”
The source remarked that PDM, which it said
boasts of the membership of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar and the
Chairman of the PDP Board of Trustees (BoT), Chief Tony Anenih, had
already turned itself into a third force in the political scheme of
things as its members were scattered among the major political parties
in the country.
“The only reason why it has been reactivated is
because the members, though inside the PDP, feel isolated, at least, at
the state level. This links directly with the governors and here is
where PDP under Jonathan and the new PDM can find synergy. They both
need weaker governors.
“Wherever they decide to go, their impact
will be felt. Apart from PDP, nobody has a national structure in every
ward and LGA in the country except PDM. Atiku (Abubakar) would be better
off working with PDP than APC because the Northern governors will not
be trustworthy and (Bola) Tinubu who was said to have done a deal in
2007 and 20111 may do one in 2015.”
In what appeared to be an
approval of the ongoing effort to instill discipline in the PDP, the PDM
source was of the view that the present crisis in the party might
eventually work out in favour of President Goodluck Jonathan.
It
posited: “PDP needs to define its friends and identify its enemies. The
Governor’s Forum debacle may not have been bad for Jonathan after all.
Now he knows who he can trust, who can deliver and who will fight him
till the end.
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