Monday, 23 May 2022

OJASOPE POLITICAL ANALYSIS: APC CHANCES TODAY, AT 39 WEEKS TO ELECTION

The political landscape in Oyo State is becoming more interesting and the level of apprehension waning down among the party members but tension among the aspirants and candidates are very high as the political parties rush to meet the INEC deadline. The All Progressive Congress, though the main opposition party in the State has gained more serving legislators, contrary to what used to be exclusive benefit of the ruling party in the State. APC has gained one more Senator to claim the three senatorial seats and one State House of Assembly Honorable to make the total of six APC Legislators as the only female member crossed from ADP to APC..
The APC and PDP are in the close shave for the 2023 general elections as political parties because APC now has 11 of the 14 Federal House of Representatives seats in Oyo State, 6 out of the 32 seats of the State House of Assembly and all the 3 senatorial seats. It is interesting then that the PDP as the ruling party has not gained any serving official in this political dispensation. With about 39 weeks to the election, the PDP is already on the defensive but the APC still has much work to do to maintain the present tempo.
The governorship ticket is understandably in the pocket of Senator Teslim Folarin because he controls the party structure in Oyo state since the state congresses. This has made many of the gladiators in the APC very unhappy because they believe he came from nowhere to snatch it from the true party members. You may not like Senator Folarin but one thing I told him to his face in his Abuja residence is his superb ability for intraparty scheming. We must admit he is specially endowed in this area and the results are evident. However, elections victory is a different ball game; though he has won senatorial elections 3 times, he must repeat the same feat for the gubernatorial in 2023 to become the all time electoral champion in Oyo State; no one has record of three term senator and capped with gubernatorial victory. 
The BVAS technology for the election management by INEC; biometric capturing, accreditation and results upload has raised the hope of better outcome for free and fair 2023 elections. With this, results of candidates' reputation, hardwork and social capital can be commensurate with the votes garnered at the polls. With candidates emerging well over 30 weeks to election, the result is more in the hands of the candidates and not the party. So in 2023, candidates who are consistent in good conducts, good staying potentials and financial resources will win the State, Federal of Assemblies elections because the personalities will make major difference in these elections. However, for the Senatorial and gubernatorial elections, circumstances and situations within the state can turn the table around. Particularly unguided utterances and offences against institutions. This gubernatorial outcome can also affect the prospect of the State House of Assembly election and vice versa; a strong candidate for State Assembly will produce a positive bandwagon effect for the Guber in his constituency and if otherwise, negative effects. The Governorship candidate can produce tsunamis in some areas but it doesn't appear any of these gubernatorial aspirants can pull such for now, not even the governor can boast of such for now.
We must not conclude the chances of the APC in Oyo State without discussing the effect of the Presidential candidate on the national Assembly elections; a Southwestern Presidential candidate in APC might cause a great tsunami in the Southwest if there is a strong narrative to sell the candidate. That is, who emerges as the candidates of the political parties can also greatly impact the outcome of the National Assembly elections. Remember in 2015, the "Change" mantra and the Buhari tsunami brought many federal legislators into office and many of them couldn't win reelection. 
Finally on the analysis, the Oyo South senatorial election has always been the indicator of how the Gubernatorial election would go. The antecedents show it's the party that wins the Oyo South senatorial election that wins the Gubernatorial election. So Senator Kola Balogun has another date with destiny; maybe his victory will herald another Gubernatorial victory or it's Mogaji Olasunkanmi Tegbe that will perform the feat for the incumbent Governor. The other political parties can spring surprises too because the electorate are beginning to see both APC and PDP as same content but in different packages. 
Next week, we shall be looking at the senatorial seats and starting with Oyo South. This analysis is as things stand today but we shall review them as the circumstances change and how they might affect the chances. Things are looking good for the APC and other opposition parties as of today but in the coming weeks, only God can determine what would happen then. The Oyo state elections into the State house of assembly and Federal Representatives are free for all, depending on the candidates and their tenacity.
QUOTE: To succeed in life in today's world, you must have the will and tenacity to finish the job.  -Chin-Ning Chu

Rotimi Johnson -Ojasope ANIPR, FPD-CR

Sunday, 22 May 2022

APC, PDP, AND THE SPIRIT OF GODWIN ODIJE. - Festus Adedayo


The story of football dribbling wizard, Godwin Odiye, is told almost like a legend in Nigerian football. A former Nigerian international defender, Odiye’s football career began to lustre when he signed on to play with the third division league side, Nestle and thereafter, National Bank of Lagos. While he featured in the Nigerian national football team that played FIFA World Cup qualifying matches and the 1976 and 1980 African Cup of Nations finals, Odiye’s football achievements paled into insignificance when put beside a 1977 calamity that his foot wrought on the field of play. Gradually, all his remarkable footballing sensations, beginning with playing left-half back for St Finbarr’s College and Academicals in 1975, took flight, to be replaced in national memory by the unpalatable optics of how he scored an own goal against Nigeria in a 1978 World Cup qualifying match against Tunisia.
On the field of play this day, November 12, 1977, was national exhilaration. Though the fans were cross with the football federation over a hike in ticket fees, the hope of a Nigerian win was infectious on the field of play. Having played 0-0 in the first leg in Tunisia and requiring just a 1-0 win in Lagos, Nigerians had begun to fantasize about seeing Nigeria in the World Cup in Argentina as all hope was stacked in favour of the Eagles. The venue was the National Stadium, Lagos.

However, in the real sense, Nigeria’s fate hung on the precipice. Nigerians were glued to their television sets. Fans ecstatically sang praises of the Green Eagles. National coach, Father Tiko, was on edge. All of a sudden, as a Tunisian forward lobbed the ball from the right-hand flank of the Nigerian goal mouth and goalkeeper, Emmanuel Okala waited to dive for it, Odiye headed the ball off rhythm into the Nigerian national side’s net, away from the reach of Okala. A ghoulish silence reverberated around the whole of Nigeria. It was as if a lethal bomb had been shot into national space. It was an Odiye infamy.

As national fate hung dangerously on the field of play in November 1977, between now and next weekend, the fate of Nigeria hangs precipitously in Abuja as Nigerians wait in limbo for the two leading political parties – APC and PDP’s party primaries. At the venue of those primaries, those who would take charge of the affairs of Nigeria in the next four years would be decided, from the House of Assembly, House of Representatives, Senate, governors to the President of Nigeria.


As Odiye and his ten other playmates held Nigeria’s social fate in their hands, Nigerian politicians hold the Nigerian national fate today. Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, derogatively nicknamed Maradona, for the sleek, fickle hold he had on governmental policies and the dispensable way he disposed of what was sacrosanct, also dribbled Nigeria’s national fate like Odiye’s football. Following Babangida, Nigerian politicians of today have dribbled themselves and dribbled Nigeria so well that, faced with their own goalkeeper, they may likely score an own goal.

Having seen through the veil of the failure of military rule and the lies inherent in its salvationism in close to 30 years of hijack of power, it is fast dawning on Nigerians that party politics will make or mar the country. Unfortunately, politicians seem to have elected to do the latter.

In clear terms and without mincing words, Nigeria has been a huge democratic letdown in the last 23 years of the Fourth Republic. In 23 years, we should have a visible path of development that politics has burrowed for Nigeria. Alas, no. As the years go by, politicians mutate from the bad, and ugly to the worse in terms of quality representation. Vices of governance and quality of representation dip daily like the fog light of a faulty car.


Like Odiye, the man in whose hand is placed the make-or-mar ball is Muhammadu Buhari. Unlike Odiye, who had a sparkling football career until the devil loaned his foot for a fee, however, Buhari has elicited no governmental sparkle, In the words of Salman Rushdie in his Satanic Verses, even the serial visions and expectations that Nigerians had of a Buhari presidency immediately became shifting realities in no long time. Since he entered the field of play and was handed the ball in 2015, Buhari’s governmental character has left much to be desired. As he dribbles the ball with little perspiration, Buhari still has the opportunity of playing a redemptive shot that could reposition, rewrite and reconfigure his years in office. As a cleric once preached at a handing over of pulpit ceremony, it is more glorious to inherit the office of a total failure, an oloriburuku than for an oloriburiku to inherit one’s office. What can compare with the latter is the fatality of a madman given free rein in the handling of his mother’s remains. In his maddening frenzy, he could even decide to make a barbecue of it.

Red pointers indicate that, in his magisterial arrogance and self-righteous audacity, Buhari may act like the proverbial madman above in the choice of who succeeds him. He may just as well barbecue the time-worn power-sharing equilibrium that has acted as the glue that twines Nigeria together.

Since the 1966 hijack of power by the military, the concept of power-sharing has engaged students of Nigerian government and politics, as well as Nigerians as a whole. With soldiers’ oligarchic hold on power through the veil of military rule, the tension between Northern and Southern Nigeria on power holding was immense. From General Yakubu Gowon to Murtala Mohammed, Muhammadu Buhari, Ibrahim Babangida, Sani Abacha to Abdulsalami Abubakar, a tokenistic offering only came the way of southern Nigeria through Olusegun Obasanjo in 1976. With the annulment of the June 12, 1993 election won by MKO Abiola, it became apparent that the oligarchic military regimes had no space for equitable power-sharing with the rest of Nigeria. The resultant southern rebellion and sabotage of the Abacha regime, which came by the name of NADECO, thus became a fait accompli. The harangue of the northern military hegemony masqueraded as a military rule was so intense that, when Abubakar inherited government at Abacha’s demise, an odd but equitable power-sharing equation was forged which ensured that only the south contested against the south in the 1999 presidential election.

What is power-sharing? According to Adigun Agbaje’s ‘The ideology of power sharing’ in Federalism and Political Restructuring in Nigeria, (Kunle Amuwo et al, eds) power-sharing is a system of power rotation among disparate ethnic and regional blocs, with the aim of producing a symmetrical relationship in deeply divided societies. It is a weapon to combat the existing structure of power inequalities.

Since 1999, adherence to this power-sharing calculus has been followed by government after government. When Obasanjo was leaving office in 2007, he handed over power to a northerner in the person of Umaru Yar’Adua. He had very strong suasion to anoint Peter Odili of the South as his successor. When death cut short Yar’Adua’s stay in office, the constitutional requirement of his succession was followed, necessitating a southerner, Goodluck Jonathan, to be in office till 2015. At the departure of Jonathan, a welter of support, spearheaded by southerners who believed in the chastity of his unwritten covenant, ushered in a Buhari who, with the benefit of hindsight, was Nigeria’s greatest error of the Fourth Republic, and who, by May 2023, would have spent eight years in office. Equity, morality, justice, fidelity to and adherence to the power-sharing module and seamless geopolitical blocs’ relationship dictate that Buhari should follow through with this principle and ensure that the south takes over power from him.

But, no. Those who claimed to have had one on one discussions with the weirdly taciturn Buhari have said that up until now, he has stuck to the unwritten testament of his covenant with southern APC bigwigs, pre-2015, that he would ensure power shift to the south. Even as the disturbing cacophony from the chorus of Babelian presidential sprinters to Aso Rock began to emerge, said to have been stage-managed by Buhari power apparatchik, it was said that Buhari still utters that terse, barely audible abidance by the code of his covenant. However, this week, the devil of northern politicians’ arrogance of power, fueled by that indecipherable Northern monolith, will likely take hold of Buhari’s heart. And before we know it, like Odiye, Buhari would score an own goal against the Nigerian democratic future.

There are very strong conversations in Aso Rock and invariably, in the north, against Buhari abiding by his sworn covenant. One, I have once disembowelled in an earlier offering (2023 conspiracy theory of how Dino Melaye’s god may be our God), to the effect that ceding power to the south could expose the nakedness of a north that is ravaged on all fronts – poverty, insecurity, hopelessness and all sorts – and for which power is the only thriving industry. Second, and which is being canvassed by northern APC zealots, who mask their northern hegemonic drive in the cloak of party ascendancy, is that APC stands the risk of losing power to PDP if it fields a southern candidate. This, they say, looms if PDP picks the seasonal presidential contestant, Atiku Abubakar, as its flag-bearer.

If Buhari and his power canvassers then carry the day, in 2023, Nigeria may yet again have a northerner in Aso Rock, after an eight years of rancid rule. On the surface, this may be a catapult slingshot slung by a small child hunter on the proverbial Iroko Oluwere tree. Iroko, Chlorophora excelsa, is a tree that Yoruba mythology submits, stomachs within its bowels a spirit called Oluwere. Nothing on the superficial speaks to any blowback coming the child’s way for this impudent sling at the great tree god. In any case, the north can logically explain why its child had pelted the Iroko tree with a catapult slingshot. One, as I have explained overleaf, is the concern for the fate of the north and party, the APC. Second is a belief that the monolithic north is a behemoth which cannot be upstaged. Thus, even if the south replies with any offensive riposte by way of votes apathy at the polls in the 2023 election, this can be contained by the humongous votes that always come from the Almajiri of the north. However, like the child who stoned the Iroko and runs away, he should be reminded that the Oluwere’s anger is slow, measured and most times, does not come timeously.


Buhari’s drab eight years have made the logic of another northerner in Aso Rock in 2023 gross injustice and a slap on the face of the rest of Nigeria. It can never be seen as another northerner coming to repair the wound and the scar of the Buhari years’ misrule. It will come across as symptomizing the continuation of nepotism, northern hegemony and the standoffish disposition of Buhari to the rest of Nigeria. While the manifestations of this audacity, like the anger of the Oluwere, may not come in one fell swoop, they will surely come. As French philosopher, Voltaire said, those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities. Southern Nigeria didn’t come to the juncture of NADECO in one day. It was the culmination of several injustices.

I want to end this sermon by citing Baba Adebayo Faleti’s song in Saworoide. a 1999 political drama film which was produced and directed by respected cinematographer, Tunde Kelani. Faleti, now deceased, was a Yoruba translator, broadcaster, TV exponent and pioneer of the first television station in Africa, Western Nigeria Television (WNTV). Just as Buhari and travellers in his boat are on the verge of doing, a tripodal ancient pact between Jogbo town, its citizens and their kings, which was reified with the aid of a brass bell in a ritual process, is under serious threat. A newly installed king, King Lapite, seeks to cheat and circumvent the process, with the connivance of some chiefs but eventually meets his waterloo. As this bedlam is about to take place, Baba Adebayo Faleti bursts into a warning song whose purport is evergreen for those who believe that they can cheat processes without a blowback. He sang: “Yio ma l’eyin, oro yi o ma l’eyin, ajantiele…” translated to mean, there will be repercussion, this act will beget repercussions.

I hope those who are arrogantly trying to cheat the process of power-sharing are listening?

Monday, 16 May 2022

OJASOPE POLITICAL ANALYSIS: 40 WEEKS TO GO; HOW GSM MIGHT RE-ENACT THE JINX


The peculiarity of Oyo State politics makes it a typical Nigeria or mini-Nigeria; that is why I tell people if you can survive Oyo State politics, you can survive it any other part of Nigeria. The popular jinx in Oyo State is the "no second term victory for Gocernors" but the late Governor Abiola Ajimobi broke it when he won his second term election in 2015. The People's democratic party in Oyo State started very well but it seems managing the landslide electoral victory has become overwhelming to the party leadership. Let's see the strength, weaknesses and challenges of the ruling party in Oyo State.

THE STRENGTH: The PDP came into office with very strong goodwill from the populace and great expectations from the party members. I knew this could be very overwhelming and I had a premonition PDP might squander the goodwill if there are no good plans to sustain it. Building governance on the goodwill means eliminating previous trust deficit, more confidence in government and synergy of populace with government for true dividends of democracy. The greatest strengths of the ruling party in Oyo State are regular payment of salaries, gratuities and tangible infrastructures. These are notable but not necessarily translating to votes in Oyo State. The peculiarity of Oyo State is that the votes are through the political stakeholders, not directly through the electorate; I don't know how they succeed in it but it's where the majority of the stakeholders tilt that the votes go. So it's possible to know the outcome of the elections before the voting; not due to rigging but because of antecedents. The character of the Governor however suggests regular payment of salaries and projects can not be guaranteed in his second term because when he knows people are not needed, his attitudes change

WEAKNESS: The Oyo State PDP has a major weakness now and that is the personality of the Governor; he is very vindictive and not a team player. His character flaws have done more to frustrate people from the party. Many of the party stalwarts that worked together to secure the victory, the Governor has frustrated from the party. It is not all about appointments and contracts, it is relevance and sense of importance. However, the body language of the Governor suggests his wit and money won the election for him, not the people and that has become his greatest undoing. In my words; "Governor Seyi Makinde is destroying Engr Seyi Makinde electoral prospects". In Oyo State, the major political stakeholders are the determinants of the elections because when they are united, no manipulation can succeed against their preferred candidate. When they were united against Akala in 2011, even the PDP leaders cooperated and betrayed their leaders at the collation centers. The people loved Chief Bola Ige because of great performance and free education but he still lost the election for reasons attributed to election fraud. When the majority stakeholders tilt somewhere, vote buying can be futile. This is my opinion based on antecedents but Jehovah rules in the affairs of men.

CHALLENGES. 1. The greatest challenge before the ruling party is how to negotiate compensation with those who lost out in the primary elections because they know the Governor has no value for loyalty or faithfulness. The assurance of getting benefits from the government after the victory cannot hold water because Governor Seyi Makinde has demonstrated beyond reasonable doubts that after the victory, he doesn't reckon with the workforce again. This is a major disadvantage in bargaining with aggrieved members who might want to leave the party after unsuccessful primaries.

2. NO GENTLEMAN AGREEMENTS AGAIN: Gentleman agreements worked the last time because not many of the election workforce had one on one meeting with the governor but his usual saying that the labourer is worthy of his reward was more than enough to motivate many. Engr Seyi Makinde was a quintessential gentleman and many people were willing to trust him but regrettably many were disappointed after the elections. The principal stakeholders of the coalition parties were the first to start complaining and many of the PDP stalwarts witnessed the enthronement of strangers to the struggle and they became very weary. Many of the expectant appointees will still rise to attack me, believing maybe it will earn them the much coveted appointment. Others will come and defend their food and demonstrate loyalty but "what I have written, I have written", it is left for those who have ears to take heed. Internet doesn't forget and these words shall be witness against them one day. The 2023 election promises to throw up many surprises but only God can decide in whose favor this would be.

3. Another challenge is the grandstanding against the Olubadan by the governor. Yes the ruling elites in Oyo State belong to different political parties but they respect the Olubadan so much and would always rise to defend the institution (not the person) against public insults or embarrassment from any quarter. The withdrawal of Senator Kola Balogun ticket for Mogaji Tegbe has caused a lot of ill feelings towards Engr Sunkanmi Tegbe though he is a Mogaji too. It is not the person of Tegbe they have issues with but how he emerged and the attitude of the Governor during the process. In my opinion, Governor Seyi Makinde made reelection of Senator Kola Balogun easier and that has made his own reelection less likely. Oyo South is very strategic and it has never happened in Oyo State that the winner of Oyo South would not be same party with winner of the Governorship election. The governor has done more lately to re-enact the jinx Ajimobi broke than consolidating on the breaking. He has been anointed for the second term but I believe sometimes that the anointing can lead one into the wilderness when the time for the enthronement has not come. It was after David was anointed that he killed Goliath (great performance) but that only made him become a fugitive. I am not a prophet of doom but since there is so much time before the general elections, things can still turn the other way, contrary to my analysis if the Governor can get the mercy of God because he has mismanaged the people God gave him due to unforgiveness and vindictiveness. The Yorubas say: "it's the elder that forgives easily that enjoys great followership." Keeping malice, not communicating well and setting the followers against one another have become the style of Mr Governor and this would be a huge challenge as the election draws closer. 
PDP in Oyo State has the potential but the sentiments are not in the favor of

The peculiarity of Oyo State politics makes it a typical Nigeria or mini-Nigeria; that is why I tell people if you can survive Oyo State politics, you can survive it any other part of Nigeria. The popular jinx in Oyo State is the "no second term victory for Gocernors" but the late Governor Abiola Ajimobi broke it when he won his second term election in 2015. The People's democratic party in Oyo State started very well but it seems managing the landslide electoral victory has become overwhelming to the party leadership. Let's see the strength, weaknesses and challenges of the ruling party in Oyo State.

THE STRENGTH: The PDP came into office with very strong goodwill from the populace and great expectations from the party members. I knew this could be very overwhelming and I had a premonition PDP might squander the goodwill if there are no good plans to sustain it. Building governance on the goodwill means eliminating previous trust deficit, more confidence in government and synergy of populace with government for true dividends of democracy. The greatest strengths of the ruling party in Oyo State are regular payment of salaries, gratuities and tangible infrastructures. These are notable but not necessarily translating to votes in Oyo State. The peculiarity of Oyo State is that the votes are through the political stakeholders, not directly through the electorate; I don't know how they succeed in it but it's where the majority of the stakeholders tilt that the votes go. So it's possible to know the outcome of the elections before the voting; not due to rigging but because of antecedents. 
WEAKNESS: The Oyo State PDP has a major weakness now and that is the personality of the Governor; he is very vindictive and not a team player. His character flaws have done more to frustrate people from the party. Many of the party stalwarts that worked together to secure the victory, the Governor has frustrated from the party. It is not all about appointments and contracts, it is relevance and sense of importance. However, the body language of the Governor suggests his wit and money won the election for him, not the people and that has become his greatest undoing. In my words; "Governor Seyi Makinde is destroying Engr Seyi Makinde electoral prospects". In Oyo State, the major political stakeholders are the determinants of the elections because when they are united, no manipulation can succeed against their preferred candidate. When they were united against Akala in 2011, even the PDP leaders cooperated and betrayed their leaders at the collation centers. The people loved Chief Bola Ige because of great performance and free education but he still lost the election for reasons attributed to election fraud. When the majority stakeholders tilt somewhere, vote buying can be futile. This is my opinion based on antecedents but Jehovah rules in the affairs of men.

CHALLENGES. 1. The greatest challenge before the ruling party is how to negotiate compensation with those who lost out in the primary elections because they know the Governor has no value for loyalty or faithfulness. The assurance of getting benefits from the government after the victory cannot hold water because Governor Seyi Makinde has demonstrated beyond reasonable doubts that after the victory, he doesn't reckon with the workforce again. This is a major disadvantage in bargaining with aggrieved members who might want to leave the party after unsuccessful primaries.

2. NO GENTLEMAN AGREEMENTS AGAIN: Gentleman agreements worked the last time because not many of the election workforce had one on one meeting with the governor but his usual saying that the labourer is worthy of his reward was more than enough to motivate many. Engr Seyi Makinde was a quintessential gentleman and many people were willing to trust him but regrettably many were disappointed after the elections. The principal stakeholders of the coalition parties were the first to start complaining and many of the PDP stalwarts witnessed the enthronement of strangers to the struggle and they became very weary. Many of the expectant appointees will still rise to attack me, believing maybe it will earn them the much coveted appointment. Others will come and defend their food and demonstrate loyalty but "what I have written, I have written", it is left for those who have ears to take heed. Internet doesn't forget and these words shall be witness against them one day. The 2023 election promises to throw up many surprises but only God can decide in whose favor this would be.

3. Another challenge is the grandstanding against the Olubadan by the governor. Yes the ruling elites in Oyo State belong to different political parties but they respect the Olubadan so much and would always rise to defend the institution (not the person) against public insults or embarrassment from any quarter. The withdrawal of Senator Kola Balogun ticket for Mogaji Tegbe has caused a lot of ill feelings towards Engr Sunkanmi Tegbe though he is a Mogaji too. It is not the person of Tegbe they have issues with but how he emerged and the attitude of the Governor during the process. In my opinion, Governor Seyi Makinde made reelection of Senator Kola Balogun easier and that has made his own reelection less likely. Oyo South is very strategic and it has never happened in Oyo State that the winner of Oyo South would not be same party with winner of the Governorship election. The governor has done more lately to re-enact the jinx Ajimobi broke than consolidating on the breaking. He has been anointed for the second term but I believe sometimes that the anointing can lead one into the wilderness when the time for the enthronement has not come. It was after David was anointed that he killed Goliath (great performance) but that only made him become a fugitive. I am not a prophet of doom but since there is so much time before the general elections, things can still turn the other way, contrary to my analysis if the Governor can get the mercy of God because he has mismanaged the people God gave him due to unforgiveness and vindictiveness. The Yorubas say: "it's the elder that forgives easily that enjoys great followership." Keeping malice, not communicating well and setting the followers against one another have become the style of Mr Governor and this would be a huge challenge as the election draws closer. 
PDP in Oyo State has the potential but the sentiments are not in the favor of the party just because the Governor has become "I must shine alone leader". Nothing is cast in concrete and it is Jehovah that is the Governor over the nations. 

QUOTE: “It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it. If you think about that, you’ll do things differently.” – Warren Buffett, investor
 
Join me next week for the analysis on the Oyo State APC. 

QUOTE: “It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it. If you think about that, you’ll do things differently.” – Warren Buffett, investor


Rotimi Johnson -Ojasope ANIPR, FPD-CR

Monday, 9 May 2022

OJASOPE POLITICAL ANALYSIS: 41 WEEKS TO GENERAL ELECTIONS: WILL A THIRD FORCE EMERGE?



The 2023 general elections promises to be an election like no other for the main fact that candidates would have emerged for more than 6 months before the election. This is good for INEC but delicate for the candidates; ample time for campaigns and reconciliations but the peculiarity of Oyo State politics also suggests many candidates would have lost the elections before the date due to bad conducts. Also note, the financial implications of the 2023 elections will be huge on the candidates at all level because of the length of time between emergence and the elections.  In my opinion, the race is open to anyone who has what it takes to get to the finishing line.

SDP, NNPP, LABOUR, ACCORD and maybe Zenith Labour Party are the fundamental political parties with coalition prospects; whether before the election or coalition for governance after election like it happened briefly during Gov Ajimobi's first term with Accord. Please don't get me wrong, these political parties have the prospect of pulling surprises but that depends more on the candidates they field for the offices and the peculiarities of the constituencies. As for Governorship, who says the candidate of one of these parties can't be the beneficiary of coalition?

The Governorship and Presidential candidates of these political parties will determine a lot of things for the parties; the direction and electoral prospects. In Oyo State politics, some aspirants have become brands and if such find their ways into any of these parties, they have great chances of winning because there is ample time to create all the awareness and do great mobilizations.

If Accord Party could make such impacts in 2011 though coming up few weeks to the general elections, then if such scenerio presents itself with a strong personality, pleasant surprises are looming.

NNPP: the New Nigeria People's Party is relatively new in Oyo State but since their arrival in Oyo State polity in the last few weeks, they have been making waves and experiencing influx of aspirants and aggrieved members from the PDP. NNPP is an underdog but they can't be undermined, particularly in any of the Ibadan Local Governments where they are very strong. Please note; it's the crisis in PDP and the violence meted out on the party leaders by suspected agents of PDP that have aided their publicity.

ACCORD: They have not being in the news lately and the awareness for their preparations for the 2023 elections is low but I know they exist and also preparing for the contest. Many internally displayed aspirants are not looking in that direction because of the low publicity but if they step up their game, they will receive their share of nomadic aspirants before the close of the transfer window. Please note; we don't know who Accord will go into accord with but they might as well be in unitary Accord but with no one.

LABOUR: This has almost gone into extinction in Oyo state and I can't remember reading or hearing anything about this party in the last two years. However, because the general election is still far and in politics, we know the unexpected can happen to change the direction of the game, it's better not to rule out the resuscitation of the party. Please note: whoever wants to use this party must rely on past glory to launch it back into public awareness and need strong personalities as candidates or party leaders.

SDP: This party has come to stay but it only gets popular during the election season. The Social Democratic Party has established itself as the next political party in the South West after the APC and the PDP. In Oyo State, they are beginning to attract bigwigs and notable aspirants; this will quickly promote the party and it's becoming the emerging Third Force in Oyo State but we shall see if they can sustain the tempo for the next few weeks. SDP in Oyo State lost it's tempo after Engr Seyi Makinde dumped it for PDP late 2017 but recent entrance of hawks into the party has greatly brightened it's prospect ahead of 2023

THE OTHER PARTIES: There are other political parties; AA, ADP, APGA, AD, ADC but it doesn't appear if they are seriously preparing to contest in the 2023 general elections. This might not even have any coalition value because of their shadowy relevance. Please note; the ADC has become an appendage of PDP in Oyo State and it is not likely to field candidates in the elections against PDP although the Coalition that brought them together can also tear them apart.

Next week, we shall be looking the chances of the Oyo State ruling party as things stand 40 weeks to the general elections. 

QUOTE: "Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that you, too, can become great.”
– Mark Twain
Rotimi Johnson -Ojasope (ANIPR, FPD-CR)
Public Affairs Analyst & Political Public Relationist

ELDER OYELESE: RENEWED HOPE MUST BEGIN AT THE GRASSROOTS, FULL EXECUTION OF LG AUTONOMY CRUCIAL.

ELDER WOLE OYELESE CALLS FOR FULL EXECUTION OF SUPREME COURT JUDGMENT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENT AUTONOMY. Says Renewed Hope Must Begin at the Gras...