By Future Bright
WITH the resignation of
the embattled National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP,
the curtain has fallen on the tenure of Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu as the party’s
leader.
The clamour for Mu’azu’s exit was
fuelled by the poor performance of the party which under him for the first time
lost in a presidential election and lost control of the two houses of the
National Assembly.
Mu‘azu became the eleventh national
chairman of the party that was founded in 1998 and the sixth to have worked
under President Jonathan who first came to power in 2010.
Mu‘azu’s emergence was generally
perceived as the final antidote to the two year instability that shadowed the
time in office of the five others that preceeded him. It was as such not
surprising that he was immediately hailed as the Game Changer. He, however, to
the pain of the party members changed the game negatively.
Mu‘azu was alleged to have pulled
back from joining other party leaders in the abusing the All Progressives
Congress, APC candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari and by that incurring the
wrath of those in the inner circle of the president.
Those who preceded him in office
during the Jonathan era were
Prince Vincent Ogbulafor
Prince Vincent Ogbulafor
Chief Ogbulafor emerged as chairman
of the party after Dr. Ahmadu Ali and is remembered as the one who boasted that
the PDP would rule Nigeria for 60 years. Having emerged as chairman of the
party under the tenure of President Umaru Yar‘adua and given the intrigues that
played out during the period of the Cabal, Ogbulafor was alleged in quarters to
have been sympathetic towards the cabal and against the emergence of Dr.
Jonathan as acting president.
Not long after Jonathan settled in
as president, the once forgotten case about a financial case that preceded his
emergence as national chairman was revived and he was dragged to court. Not long
after, Ogbulafor was forced out.
Nwodo
Dr. Okwesilieze Nwodo, a former
scribe of the PDP, was seen to have a deep understanding of the workings of the
NEC having first served as a National Secretary of the party.
Nwodo’s plans of reinventing the
party along acceptable democratic practices and the strained relationship with
the governor of his home state, Sullivan Chime, contributed in cutting short
his tenure as PDP chairman. Particularly, Ogbulafor came up with the membership
registration exercise, a scheme he had earlier convinced the president would
remove the party from the hands of the governors. President Jonathan was said
to have accepted the proposal and flagged off the membership registration
exercise by registering himself. However, once the governors got to know the
purpose of the exercise, they compelled the president to stop the registration
exercise and quickly used the case he had with his home governor, Sullivan
Chime to chase him out of office even at the national convention of the party in
December, 2011.
Mohammed
Dr. Haliru Mohammed Bello, who was
Nwodo’s deputy stepped in and ably marshalled the Jonathan campaign to victory
in the 2011 election. His tenure brought much stability to the party and he was
subsequently compensated with the appointment as a minister.
Baraje
Tukur, Jonathan and Baraje
Alhaji Abubakar Kawu Baraje, who
hails from Kwara State, was never confirmed a full-fledged Chairman and stepped
in following the exit of Dr. Harliru Mohammed and he was there until Dr.
Bamanga Tukur was elected national chairman in March 2012.
After his exit and following the
crisis that broke out in the party in August 2013, Baraje emerged as the
national chairman of the New PDP, nPDP which subsequently fused into the All
Progressives Congress, APC in November 2013.
Bamanga Tukur
Alhaji Bamanga Tukur’s tenure as
chairman of the PDP was characterised with crisis from beginning to the ending.
Tukur like Nwodo, sought to remove the party from the influence of governors
and it was during his tenure that the party for the first time suspended a
governor, Chibuke Amaechi and also suspended another governor, Aliyu Wamakko
supposedly for not answering the chairman’s phone call. The crisis culminated in
the exit of five governors, a development many directly link to the defeat of
the party in the recent general elections.
HIGHLIGHTS OF MU’AZU’S ERA IN
RETROSPECT
- January 19, 2014: Alhaji Adamu Muazu succeeds embattled Alhaji Bamanga Tukur as the eleventh national chairman of the party.
He was picked as a consensus
candidate at a meeting between President Goodluck Jonathan and governors of the
party at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.
- March 28, 2015: Muhammadu Buhari defeats President Jonathan in the presidential election.
- MAY 7,2015: Ekiti State governor, Ayo Fayose accuses Muazu of sabotage, wants him to resign for leading the party to its first presidential election defeat in 16 years.
- May 2, 2015: Muazu accuses Jonathan’s aides of being responsible for the party’s defeat.
He said praise singers and insincere
people misled the President during the electioneering period leading to his
defeat.
- May 6, 2015: Fayose claims to have evidence that Muazu worked for the APC.
- May 7, 2015: Mu‘azu says Fayose’s death wish advert on president-elect, Muhammadu Buhari led to the President’s defeat.
- May 9, 2015: Niger State governor, Babangida Aliyu calls on Muazu to resign.
- May 11, 2015: Muazu says PDP would be buried if he resigns, adding that no organ of the party should try to extricate itself from the misfortune that befell the PDP.
- April 19, 2015: Femi Fani-Kayode calls on Muazu led National Working Committee to resign. He said there was need for a change at the top if the PDP move ahead
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