In what it yet another sign that the leadership crisis in the All Progressives Congress (APC) may be far from over, leaders of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) yesterday met in Abuja to insist that the next national chairman of the ruling party must be Senator Umaru Tanko Al-makura, a former governor of Nasarawa State.
This even as President Muhammadu Buhari is said to have since endorsed Abdullahi Adamu, one of Al-makura’s predecessors who governed Nasarawa from 1999 to 2007, for the job ahead of the party’s national convention holding on March 26.
But the defunct CPC members, rising from their meeting in Abuja, insisted that the next chairman of APC must come from their bloc as one of the legacy parties that formed the ruling party.
CPC and the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) were the core legacy parties that combined to birth the APC in 2013.
The group also insisted that at the March 26 national convention and given the infighting that has depleted the fortunes of the party, only Senator Al-makura possessed the magic wand to address the many ills plaguing APC.
Spokesperson of the group and secretary of the defunct CPC leaders, Chief Okoi Ofem Obono-Obla, along with the national coordinator, Malam Salihu Yusuf, stated their position at the meeting in Abuja.
According to them, the defunct CPC chieftains collectively endorsed the aspirations of Senator Umaru Tanko Al-makura as the next chairman of APC.
Okono-Obla, a former presidential aide, while outlining what he termed “some of the party’s self-inflicted misfortunes” such as the loss of Bauchi, Zamfara, Rivers states, among others, in 2019 elections, stated that if something was not done, the party might lose the next general election.
“We believe if something is not done, the party may lose the next general election. The party has floundered to the extent that there is an almost total breakdown of law, order, discipline and cohesion, all ingredients that are fundamental for the success of every political party that wants to win election.
“There is chaos in the party that has manifested glaringly in its inability to conduct a national convention for two years or more.
“The lack of leadership of these past years has seen the fortunes of the party nosedive to the extent that three months to the primaries for nomination of candidates for the 2023 general elections, there is no national working committee that will issue guidelines for the conduct of primaries.
“We, therefore, advocate for the election of a leadership that will return the party to its core values.”
“The next national chairman must come from one of the legacy parties that coalesced to form APC.
“We categorically demand that a member of one of the legacy parties that came together to form APC, be the next national chairman of APC.
The group further stated it endorsed Almakura’s aspiration “not out of emotion or sentiment or primordial grounds but holds fervently that in this period, he is the most qualified of all those who have shown interest to lead the party because of who he is”.
The former presidential aide described Al-makura as “an embodiment of the finest values and leadership capabilities.
“He is an administrator par excellence, accomplished businessman, legislator, party manager, mediator, conciliator and a progressive and patriotic Nigerian.”
He assured that Al-Makura would return the party to her original focus of championing genuine progressive change in Nigeria.
On the division within the defunct CPC bloc given that two of its chieftains Mustapha Salihu and Senator Al-makura have conflicting interest in the APC chairmanship slot, Okono-Obla said “anybody can have the interest to contest but we have settled for Al-makura.”