Kwara State opposition parties in limbo as factionalisation cripples PDP

Kwara is perhaps one of the few statesin the country where the ruling party All Progressives Congress (APC) is enjoying 100 percent control of the elective posts. These include: three Senatorial districts, six Federal Constituencies, and 24 State’s House of Assemblies seats.
Before the Peoples Democratic Party
(PDP) crisis, the united body was
unable to win a single Local
Government Area (LGA) out of the
existing 16 in the state. The party with such calibre of leading politicians like former Minister for National Planning Olanrewaju Abubakar; former Minister for Sports, Ibrahim Bio; former Special Adviser on National Assembly Matters to ex Presiden Goodluck Jonathan, Senator Suleiman
Ajadi; former Chairman, Federal
Character Commission, (FCC) and
Talba of Ilorin, Professor Shuaib Oba
Abdulraheem; former Chief Whip of
the state House of Assembly, Chief
Iyiola Oyedepo; a successful business woman, Hajia Bola Shagaya; a self-acclaimed billionaire, Rahaman
Abdulrasaq; and Senator Sule Ajibola, failed to unnerve the APC.
At present, the PDP in Kwara is
factionalised. While Oyedepo is
leading a group, Sunday Fagbemi is
leading the other.
A keen observer and social critic based in Ilorin, Alhaji Abdulkarim Olola-Kasum, believed that the opposition parties were hapless politically and that it might take a long time for the opposition to become relevant in the state.
According to him, the parties have not been able to assert themselves neither are they taking measures such as meetings, mobilization, sensitisation or activities to check the excesses of the government in power. “It appears that Kwara state is indeed jinxed politically and I can’t see any serious threat coming in the year 2019 against the ruling APC. The PDP is indeed at present not showing any sign of seriousness as a party ready to play a role of a credible opposition,”
he stated. Chief Rex Olawoye who is the state publicity secretary of PDP blamed the development on continuous in fighting within the national PDP with a backlash effect on Kwara. He said “some people within our party in the state are at war with one another over
positions thereby leading to formation of parallel executives.”
But the Labour Party (LP), the Alliance for Democracy (AD) and the United Peoples Party (UPP) hold contrary view on the matter contending that the situation in the state is now different as the opposition parties are better
organized internally.
The governorship candidate of LP in
the 2015 election, Dr. Mike Omotosho argued that the electorates are now more matured on the need to vote for ideologies and party’s programmes adding that once that was done the opposition would have a brighter prospect in future elections.
Omotosho who diligent toured the 16 LGAs of the state before the election said that if it is God’s will, he would one day be given the opportunity to serve the people as governor or through any other capacity.
For Musa Kolawole the flag bearer of
the AD during the elections, “We are
already in talking terms with people of like minds. We must wrestle Kwara from the jaws of those milking it. By the grace of God we shall do this with the cooperation of the people come 2019.”
Speaking on the development,
Oyewumi Ajibola of the Action
Alliance (AA) said that the people haven“learnt their bitter lessons now, and ready to give room for a true change because any failure in this may spell doom for us all.”
“We are preparing well and we
believe that the era of bad governance will definitely allow the people of this state to have a rethink on who should be their leader come the year 2019.
We have new ideas on how to move
our dear state forward. We should
therefore be allowed to implement
these ideas,” added Comfort Kayode of the United Progressives Party (UPP).
Similarly, Oyedepo cautioned against underrating the opposition,
maintaining in an interview with The
Guardian that any political pundit who underrated the strength and plans of the PDP in the coming polls would be doing that at his or her peril. He argued that the party has found it’s bearing in the state and was ready to play the role of a virile opposition party.
“It is good for us that the ruling party
believe that there will not be an
opposition against them in the year
2019. But I am assuring the people of the state of a grand plan to spring up an opposition party never known in the history of the state’s politics. The ringleaders are assembling
themselves. In fact people are already tired of the non- performance of the APC as a party and a party forming the government.
He contended that the opposition
parties have learnt their lessons after the defeat in the last elections stressing that they have come to the realization that there could be no credible opposition without unity among them.
This, he noted necessitated the subtle building of a powerful and credible opposition ahead of the race.
“Besides, we are holding a radio
programme every Thursday in the
state for one solid hour. It is my
pleasure to let you know that we
literally shut down the state for the
one-hour duration of the programme
whenever it is broadcast. Even the
state civil servants are ready for the
future polls; therefore nobody should
delude himself with the wrong notion
that there will not be a credible fight
from the opposition in the elections.
Kwara state is going to be one of the
states to watch out for in the elections,” he stated.
On whether his faction of the PDP,
which is loyal to the Ahmed Markarfi- led group, would be a party to theballeged planned mega party ahead of the elections Oyedepo said: “We are not into any agreement with any mega party. We are PDP to the core and we are not changing our name like a chameleon would do.”
In the same vein, Fagbemi said: “we
are preparing for the elections and we are sure of our success during the polls. We want the people of this state to see us as the credible alternative to the ruling APC. Our aim is to form the next government and by God’s grace, we shall do that.”
The recent history of opposition
politicking in Kwara can be traced to
the Offa-born late Josiah Sunday Olawoyin of the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN). As a
governorship candidate of the UPN in 1979 polls, Olawoyin was a thorn
in the flesh of Alhaji Adamu Attah of
the defunct National Party of Nigeria
(NPN). Although, Attah won the
elections it was not on a platter of
gold.
In 1983, Chief Cornelius Adebayo of
the UPN eventually emerged victoriousbreaping the fruits sowed by Olawoyin some four years earlier. Attempts by Alhaji Mohammed Lawal to play the role of an opposition to the existing political hegemony of the state led by
the doyen of the state’s politics, late
Olusola Saraki, was unsuccessful in the 2003/2004 polls. Ever since, pockets of opposition against the Saraki dynasty has always been crushed.
The spokesman of the APC, Sulyman Buhari described the development as “a great acceptance of the policies and manifestoes of our great party and belief in the philosophies of our astute
and pro-active political leader, Dr.
Bukola Saraki, the Senate President.”
“Opposition or what? I don’t know of
any opposition in a state, the APC has 100 per cent control of the state. They (the opposition) are mere noisemakers or whom other people will simply describe as paper tigers. We will meet them at the polls.”
Nonetheless, while the opposition is
groping in the dark on how to get his
acts together, The Guardian learnt that some persons have stood out among the likely successor of the incumbent Governor Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed who is in his second term in office.
They are: former Minister for Sports
and national spokesman of APC,
Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi; former House of Representatives member, Moshood Mustapha; and a serving member of the House of Representatives, Zakari
Mohammed.
But by the antecedents of the President of the Senate, it may be difficult to zero in on any of them yet. Saraki’s style is to conceal his candidate’s identity until the eleventh hour. He did this for the incumbent (Ahmed) when all eyes were on the biological sister, Gbemisola, some six years ago.
As events unfold ahead the 2019
elections, the people of Kwara are keen to know who and which party would govern them in the next dispensation.
But will the seeming political passivity in the state be beneficial to the people or enhance the socio-political and economic growth of the state?

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