NDUBUISI ORJI writes on efforts of leading opposition political
parties in the county to form an alliance to tackle the ruling Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2015 general election.
Ahead of the 2015 general elections, major opposition parties in the
country are making frantic efforts to forge an alliance or merger. The
objective is to form a granite opposition that will be strong enough
to defeat the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and ultimately
displace it as the ruling party in the country.
This is understandable. PDP has dominated politics in majority of the
states and the centre since inception of the current democratic
dispensation to the consternation of the opposition parties. Besides,
the thinking is that none of the existing political parties in the
country today can effectively defeat the PDP all by itself hence the
need for an alliance among the opposition.
Earlier in the year, the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and the
Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) unfolded plans to form an alliance
before 2015. Other parties in the alliance talks were the All Nigeria
People Party (ANPP) and a faction of the All Progressive Grand Alliance
(APGA)
While confirming the alliance between the key opposition parties, the
National Publicity Secretary of the ACN, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, in an
interview with a national daily had stated that the alliance was the
only way to wrest power from the PDP.
“The merger of our party, ACN, with the CPC, the ANPP and a splinter
group of disenchanted members of the PDP will soon come into being very
soon. I can assure you, the leaders of the parties have been meeting to
consider the proposal, as the only way we can rescue this country from
the PDP,” he had stated.
The ACN spokesman is convinced that the success of the alliance or merger would be the end of the PDP in the country.
According to him, “Millions of Nigerians eagerly await this alliance
in the hope that it will put an end to the PDP’s misguided leadership.
It is collective prayer that the ACN and the CPC put self interest
aside, agree on a power sharing formula, and wrest power from PDP come
2015.”
Similarly, the CPC National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Rotimi Fashakin,
said the success of the alliance would sound the death knell for the
PDP.
He said, “CPC’s alliance with its coalition partners is on course. It
is a patriotic endeavour and that explains why the parties in the
coalition are determined to make the alliance talks bear the desired
fruit. There is the need to arrest the precipitous drift of the PDP.”
But for the PDP, the desire of the opposition to wrestle power from
it through an alliance is mere wishful thinking. A PDP chieftain and
immediate past National Publicity Secretary of the party , Professor
Rufai Aikali believes that the planned alliance will end in futility.
According to him “They can continue making alliances and counter
alliances but because they are not united to provide any alternative for
this country, to PDP, they are not likely to make any substantial
progress.”
However, Aikali says members of his party cannot take anything for
granted because “one of the greatest mistakes anybody can make is to
overestimate his own ability or underestimate the capability of his
enemy or his opponent.”
Like Aikali, the national publicity secretary of the PDP Chief Olisah
Metuh, dismissed the proposed alliance with a wave of the hand. In a
recent press statement , he said, “We hear of alliances and mergers
every day. That is not new. Let us wait for 2015. Do you think Nigerians
are fools? Do you think that Nigerians do not take notice of the
character and tendency of individuals and political parties?
“The PDP is the only party that is committed to the continued existence of Nigeria and the welfare of its people.
“At the appropriate time, they will decide whether to entrust their
great nation into the hands of regionalists, doomsday prophets and
pro-anarchists or to the safe hands of the PDP. Basic common sense will
prefer the latter.”
Past Alliances
Actually, this is not the first time the opposition parties will be
planning an alliance against the PDP since the inception of the fourth
republic. It will be recalled that in the 1999 general election, the All
Peoples Party(APP) now the All Nigeria Peoples Party and the Alliance
for Democracy (AD) presented a joint ticket.
After they lost the election, both parties went their separate ways.
There were also efforts by a coalition of opposition political parties
to form a mega party before the 2011 general election, but that move
ended in a fiasco.
Also, attempts by the ACN and CPC, which incidentally are the prime
movers for the new alliance, to forge a common front in the 2011
presidential poll ended abruptly without any tangible results
whatsoever, because of ego and personal interests.
Obstacles to the planned alliance
However, in spite of the optimism of the leadership of the ACN and
CPC on the success of the alliance, many people believe that personal
ambition will not allow the alliance to work. Those who share these
thought, are quick to point to the aborted alliance between both parties
in the 2011 polls.
It would be recalled that the pact between the ACN and CPC in 2011
presidential polls collapsed over disagreement on who becomes Vice
President should the alliance win the election. ACN leaders had wanted
the CPC Vice Presidential candidate, Pastor Tunde Bakare to sign a
post-dated resignation letter, that will see him resigning from office
few days after swearing in, so that somebody from the ACN will fill in
the office. His refusal to sign the letter crumbled the alliance, and
both parties went to the polls independently and lost to the PDP.
Analysts believe that personal interests and individual ambitions
will get into the way of the current moves as was the case in the past.
The National Chairman of the Labour Party (LP) Dan Nwanyanwu
shares the view that the selfish interest of some of those in the
alliance will not allow it thrive. The LP leader told a National Daily
recently that “some of them are looking for how to expand where they
were. Some will attend such a meeting, and what will be on their mind is
selfish interest. Though I am not trying to write off the alliance
plan, I know that some of the characters who are involved in this
alliance/merger talks can never push it to the end. They are greedy, not
ready to be objective and because they are considering their money
which, of course, they cannot defend.”
The former governor of Kaduna State, Alhaji Baralabe Musa holds a
similar view. He told Daily Sun in a recent interview that greed and
cash and carry politics has made it impossible for opposition to work
together .
Musa said there was no possibility for the opposition parties uniting
at this stage. He pointed out that “ from all indications, as at now,
we should not rely on the possibility of their uniting. We should expect
continuation of the irrelevance of the opposition parties, because
every Nigerian has a prize tag. You have problem with him only if the
price is not right. There is a lot of money available to the government
in power, and they use this money mindlessly to buy people.”
However, the National Publicity Secretary of the ANPP, Mr Emma
Enukwu, said it was the ruling party that has been scuttling moves by
the opposition to unite but he says the opposition parties are ready for
the PDP this time around.
The Sun