Founding fathers should save PDP from collapse – Atiku
Founding fathers should save PDP from collapse – Atiku
Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has called on the founding
fathers of the Peoples Democratic Party to come together to save the
party from crises capable of leading to avoidable implosion.
In a statement by his Media Office in Abuja on Monday, Atiku said he
was particularly disturbed by the worsening polarisation of the party
and internal divisions which might weaken the party structures at the
state and deepen the crisis between the governors and the President.
The former Vice President explained that as one of the founding
fathers of the party, he had a duty to call on other founding members to
rise to the occasion and caution the “forces that are bent on tearing
the party apart and providing the ammunition for self destruction.”
He lamented the failure of the National Executive Council to meet in
line with the provisions of the party’s constitution and the inability
of the “Board of Trustees to rise to the occasion of arresting this ugly
development.”
According to him, the bitter internal divisions within the PDP, has
led to crisis in the party leadership in some states, division in the
Nigeria Governors’ Forum and the suspension of a sitting Governor over
disagreements on principle that could have been avoided if the founders
of the party had added their voices of caution and moderation.
With the challenges of providing good governance and the bid for
re-election in 2015, Atiku noted that the PDP could not afford the
current acrimony as it was undermining democratic structures at all
levels.
Meanwhile, following controversies trailing the NGF chairmanship
election, Majority Leader in the Edo State House of Assembly, Phillip
Shaibu, has urged the Presidency to focus on tackling the myriads of
problem threatening the nation’s developmental, instead of meddle in
who heads the forum.
Despite the presidency distancing itself from the crisis rocking the
NGF, Shaibu in an interaction view with journalists, in Benin on Monday,
urged Jonah Jang of Plateau State, to “be magnanimous in defeat” and
accept the outcome of the election.
“Nigerian has grown beyond do or die politics,” he said.
Describing the fallout of the NGF election as
distraction, the lawmaker said, “What should bother the powers that be
is how to address the challenges in the power sector and job creation through industrialisation.”
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