Can the newly registered All Peoples Congress, APC, truly upstage the
Democratic Peoples Party, DPP, in Delta State? While many will hasten to
say no, others might be slow in
answering if they consider a recent remark in the media by Chief Frank
Kokori, a former member of the DPP, who was quoted as saying that the
emergence of APC meant the possible death of DPP in Delta State. Well,
the fact is that the DPP still remains the party to beat in Delta State.
Kokori’s statement is disturbing given his past principled stand
against corruption, bad leadership and the ruling elites’ disrespect for
the rule of law and cherished democratic principles. Kokori had aligned
with DPP, especially in Delta, because of the correct perception of the
party as one that stands for justice. It is no longer news that Kokori
has now switched camp from the DPP to APC which he considers to be the
bigger party.
What worries discerning observers here is the
dangerous thinking that might is right. Also worrisome is the fact that
nothing else matters to the APC leadership and its new converts in their
determination to win the state by all means. In the calculations of the
APC’s leadership especially in Lagos, the character, the giant strides
and the pedigree of the DPP leadership in the state do not matter. In
fact, the legend and the progressive personality of Chief Great Ogboru,
the de facto leader of the DPP in the state, his travails and sustained
but dogged battle to free the state, obviously count for nothing as far
as the buccaneer in APC is concerned. Democracy is no doubt a game of
numbers and Deltans remain the ultimate decider of who leads them after
an election.
Long before its registration, the APC had nurtured
a renegade group led by the late Senator Pius Ewherido to destabilize
the DPP. The late senator was assisted by Akamukali, the clownish
delusional political neophyte that now claims the national leadership of
DPP despite INEC’s assurance to the contrary. But INEC has since issued
a statement reassuring the party’s members that it “has not recognised
the existence of any faction in the DPP, please.”
Ewherido, who
wanted the APC’s governorship ticket in 2015, had worked assiduously
with Akamukali, who was later expelled from the party, to factionalise
DPP and finally deal it a death blow. Ewherido’s sudden death however
blew this plan apart and threw the likes of Akamukali into disarray. But
the DPP’s popularity has continued to soar, a fact that was visibly
demonstrated recently in Abrakar when the party held a stakeholders
meeting.
APC has two opposing dominant personalities and
groups, Buhari and Tinubu, CPC and ACN. Nigerians already know where
Buhari stands on any issue and his antecedents speak for him. He remains
arguably the most consistent, the most predictable and the most cheated
past Nigerian leader. But he has now become more tutored by practical
experience as a player in the murky waters of Nigerian politics
especially since 1999. Tinubu is different. He has benefitted more than
any other Nigerian in terms of his past positions, his hold on his party
and his overbearing influence on his governors. He has also
tremendously benefitted financially and has become the godfather to his
contemporaries.
Kokori and his co-travellers have to carefully
consider Delta’s idiosyncrasy before pitching their tents with any
outside political groups especially those who disguise their real
intention in the state. They need to be wary of Emperor Tinubu and the
inherent dangers in the APC taking over Delta by stealth. DPP is tested
and it is the original party to lead the state. The fact is south west
is progressive and it supports progressive parties and not individuals.
Kokori is a dogged fighter who should remain steadfast with the
progressive DPP. What he needs to do now is to be a long distance
runner. Kokori should also not forget quickly how the Tinubu camp
abandoned him since the advent of democracy in 1999 despite his
contribution to the struggle for June 12. Despite his gallantry on June
12, Kokori has nothing to show, not necessarily in terms of finance or
political patronage but in terms of being recognised as a leader in his
own right.
Kokori needs to know too that Tinubu, Ibori and
Uduaghan are partners and that they are working together to achieve a
common political objective in Delta State. It is a known fact that the
three of them own the ACN and by extension APC in Delta State. The
calculation is to discredit and weaken the people’s preferred candidate,
Chief Ogboru, and foist the Ibori/Uduaghan candidate on the people of
Delta State using the APC.
This was where Ewherido got it
wrong, he had assummed that the APC would give him its ticket in 2015.
Kokori is towing the same line and he might get it wrong too. He needs
to be reminded that this was the same strategy employed by the trio in
the re-run and the 2011 governoship elections when Omo- Agege, a PDP
member had to contest on the platform of the ACN.
Tinubu led
ACN to Delta to flag off Omo-Agege’s campaign, knowing full well that
Omo-Agege was not even qualified to participate in the re-run. But
because his spoiler’s role would have facilitated the
Ibori/Uduaghan/Tinubu agenda to divide the Urhobo in order to give
Uduaghan a head start, Tinubu and the ACN turned the blind eye. The
rumour then was that Uduaghan would have planned to use the CAN platform
to contest the re-run if the PDP had withheld its ticket.
Deltans know what the DPP stands for in Delta State. They also know that
the APC’s agenda is to preserve the status quo. While Kokori appears
impatient and understandably battle weary, he needs to remember that a
known devil is better than an unknown one. DPP is synonymous with Delta.
Written by Doyin Iyiola, a media consultant based in London.
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