Mimiko, Fayose, SouthWest leaders to decide PDP chairmanship on Monday
Governor Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo State,
his Ekiti State counterpart, Mr. Ayodele Fayose, and other leaders of
the Peoples Democratic Party from the South-West, will meet in Akure,
the Ondo State capital on Monday, to pick a consensus candidate among
those running for the office of the national chairman of the party.
The national convention of the party
will hold in Port Harcourt, Rivers State on August 17 where national
officers of the main opposition party are expected to be elected.
Ahead of the convention, the Expanded
National Caucus of the party had zoned the office of the national
chairman to the southern part of the country.
Leaders of the party from the entire
southern region met at Port Harcourt on Thursday where they said the
office should go to the South-West, which is the only zone out of the
three zones in the region, that had yet to produce the national chairman
of the party.
Already, two formidable candidates from the zone have openly indicated their interest in the race.
The candidates are a former Deputy
National Chairman of the party, Chief Bode George and a former Minister
of Education, Prof. Tunde Adeniran.
But while George had paid the mandatory
N1m nomination fee and picked his nomination form at the party’s
temporary secretariat in Abuja, Adeniran said he would pick his own on
Monday.
There are rumours that other candidates are still consulting and could pick their nomination forms from this week.
Those who were believed to be nursing
the ambition are, a former governorship candidate of the party in Lagos
State, Mr. Jimi Agbaje and a former Minister of Youths and Sports, Prof.
Taoheed Adedoja.
George and Agbaje are from Lagos State while Adeniran and Adedoja are from Ekiti and Oyo States respetitively.
The Akure meeting is believed to be
crucial as other offices apart from that of the national chairman which
had also been zoned to the region, would be shared.
The two offices are that of the National Treasurer and Deputy National Publicity Secretary.
The meeting, it was gathered, would also allocate the state or states that should produce the zonal vice chairman.
A former Minister of Transportation,
Chief Ebenezer Babatope, who confirmed that invitations had been sent to
those expected to be at the meeting, described it as crucial.
Babatope said that the meeting would
afford the members of the party to critically peruse the credentials of
those interested in the offices, especially that of the national
chairman.
He said, “All of us are going to Akure
on Monday where we are going to discuss on those that will represent us
at the national headquarters of the party in Abuja.
“Now that we have the opportunity to
present the national chairman, we must present someone that is
acceptable to the generality of members of the party and also, such a
person must represent us well.”
Meanwhile, a group within the Peoples
Democratic Party, Concerned Stakeholders, has kicked against the recent
zoning arrangement of the party which ceded the national chairmanship
position to the South-West.
It asked the party’s delegates to boycott the convention of the party scheduled to hold on August 17.
The group, in a statement issued by its
patron, Prof. Tayo Adeyemi, on Saturday, said the zoning arrangement was
illegal and was tantamount to moving the goalposts.
It said the PDP’s constitution did not specify the extent of the power of the caretaker committee.
According to the group, the ambiguity in
the provisions of the constitution is a good reason for the party’s
leadership to be careful.
The statement partly read, “What are the
criteria for candidates vying for the post of the national chairman?
This is the problem of the PDP.
A national post must have laid down
criteria.
Candidates vying for such a position must have spent a
reasonable number of years in the party, must never have been indicted
by the anti-graft agencies and must have never served any jail term
“It is, therefore, unfortunate that
after the chairmanship race commenced and it was obvious that some
candidates were getting unpopular , the usual manoeuvring which cost
the PDP the woeful loss at the 2015 election has commenced again. Any
attempt to suppress the common will of the people would result in a
total disintegration of the party.”
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