Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Details Of APC, New PDP Meeting In Sokoto: Parties To Close Deal Before November 20

It is no longer news that the leadership of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the breakaway faction of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) otherwise known as the New PDP have been engaged in talks toawards a possible alliance.

Both parties met on Tuesday in Sokoto after the inauguration of the state owned University of Sokoto to deliberate on the eventual fusion of the two groups.

But for Major Gen. Mohammadu Buhari, whose decision to attend the university inauguration was impromptu as he only conveyed his acceptance of the invitation on the very morning of the event, key leaders of the APC and the New PDP were in attendance.

Details from the meeting indicates that the defection of the seven aggrieved governors that make up the New PDP to the APC may be in a matter of weeks, following an enlarged closed door meeting of the stakeholders of the two parties held at Government House, Sokoto, after the opening of the state university for which they were all in attendance in the state capital.

READ: APC, New PDP Alliance: Buhari, Tinubu To Visit Lamido, Kwankwaso Today

READ: APC Leaders’ Meeting With G-7 Governors Unsettles PDP

The meeting which took place at the Sokoto Government House Abusidiqu.com gathered, deliberated on the modalities through which the New PDP governors will shift loyalty and base to the APC, a source said.

“I can tell you that all the New PDP bigwigs that you reported were at the university event later met with the APC leaders, excluding Buhari, to prepare for the reception of the governors in about a fortnight,” he said. He also said the process would be fast-tracked to coincide with the membership drive of the APC scheduled to begin soon.

From every indication, the New PDP governors would soon close a deal with the APC before the commencement of the party’s membership registration exercise already fixed for flag-off on November 20.

But, the ongoing political realignment between the APC and the seven aggrieved governors of the PDP has raised apprehension among some members of the opposition party.

Concerns over negotiations between APC and the estranged PDP governors came just as APC yesterday took a swipe at the PDP Chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, over his assertion that President Goodluck Jonathan will rule till 2019, describing it as nothing but an empty boast aimed at ingratiating himself to the president.

It was gathered from party sources that one of the conditions being canvassed by the seven PDP governors before they could join the APC was that they should be allowed to control the party structures in their states.

For instance, as a condition precedent the G7 governors was a guarantee that they would be given a chance to bring along with them their political structures as a way of retaining their relevance in the new platform.

However, the condition has not gone down well with some APC stalwarts, especially in Adamawa, Niger and Kwara States, where these party members have kicked against the wholesome hand over of the existing APC structures to the G7 governors.

According a source, the apprehensive APC members have said they would prefer that the seven PDP governors be given such concessions on an individual merit, adding that some of these governors no longer commanded substantial followings outside the PDP. But a top official of APC dismissed the argument of the members of the three states, describing them as selfish and not targeted at the common good of the party.

“If these members are sincere to themselves they would have realised that they are not in a good position to win elections in those states. It is nothing but selfish interest that is driving their agitation and they would soon realise that they are living in the past,” he said.

The official said though the APCs leaders who attended the inauguration of the Sokoto State University on Tuesday had planned to tie up issues with the governors during their meeting in the state, there were still loose ends to be tied.

abusidiqu

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