Politics
๐๐ค๐ฉ๐๐๐ณ๐ฎ, ๐๐๐ข๐ ๐๐๐ ๐๐ก๐๐ข๐ซ๐ฆ๐๐ง ๐๐จ๐ง๐๐๐ฆ๐ง ๐๐๐๐๐๐ญ๐ข๐จ๐ง
The immediate-past governor of Abia State, Okezie Ikpeazu and the state party chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Elder Amah Abraham, have chastised PDP decampees as hungry, cannot endure hunger and suffering cosmic consequences.
Addressing Abia South faithful in his Obingwa country home on Saturday, when the state PDP Working Committee paid him a visit, they said the party has learnt its lessons and will not fail again.
Ikpeazu said, โWe did to ourselves what is happening to us. If we want to correct it, we can. When I was hosting the Reconciliation Committee, I told them that their mandate by my own interpretation is not to reconcile aggrieved party people alone. Something is holding everybody, including me. This is because, anybody who has not reconciled himself, cannot reconcile another person.
He advised the reconciliation committee that if they approach anyone and the person refuses, the committee should find a youth to replace the person as a stakeholder.
The loss by PDP in Abia South, he said, is not his making, and assured them that he will fund the election and denied some desertersโ claim that their annoyances were that they ticked and turned around to ask people not to vote for them.
Earlier, Abraham said God has been faithful to the party and had granted them a special grace to be in Government for 24 years.
He described Ikpeazu as a product for national service and should forget contesting any other electionโ, and urged those bickering to come and contest as it is not Ikpeazu that is withholding them, adding that the party is going to conduct one of the freest primaries in the history of democracy in Africa. It is in your place to tell us who to represent you.
Meanwhile, The Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party Abia State, Abraham Amah has explained why the party lost the 2023 general elections in the state.
Amah identified fielding wrong candidates and embezzlement of election funds by party members as major reasons for PDP defeat.
He spoke at Abia North stakeholders and reconciliation meeting held at Abam, Arochukwu Local Government Area of the state.
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Politics
Electoral Reform: Dino alleges senateโs plot to rig 2027 election
Former lawmaker, Dino Melaye Esq, has raised concerns over the Senateโs reported rejection of the electronic transmission of election results.
The move, according to Melaye, is a clear endorsement of election rigging and an indication of a sinister plan to rig the 2027 elections.
In a statement on Friday, the former lawmaker criticized the Senateโs decision, stating that it undermines the credibility of the electoral process.
The African Democratic Congress, ADC chieftain, also stated that the move opens the door for electoral manipulation and fraud.
He further warned that the rejection of electronic transmission of results is a step backwards for democracy in Nigeria.
Melaye called on lawmakers and citizens to stand up against โthis blatant attempt to undermine the will of the people and ensure that future elections are free, fair, and transparentโ.
Politics
Electoral Act: Nigerians have every reason to be mad at Senate โ Ezekwesili
Former Minister of Education, Oby Ezekwesili, has said Nigerians haveย every reason to be mad at the Senate over the ongoing debate on e-transmission of election results.
Ezekwesili made this known on Friday when she featured in an interview on Arise Televisionโs โMorning Showโ monitored by DAILY POST.
DAILY POST reports that the Senate on Wednesday turned down a proposed change to Clause 60, Subsection 3, of the Electoral Amendment Bill that aimed to compel the electronic transmission of election results.
Reacting to the matter, Ezekwesili said, โThe fundamental issue with the review of the Electoral Act is that the Senate retained the INEC 2022 Act, Section 60 Sub 5.
โThis section became infamous for the loophole it provided INEC, causing Nigerians to lose trust. Since the law established that it wasnโt mandatory for INEC to transmit electoral results in real-time, there wasnโt much anyone could say.
โCitizens embraced the opportunity to reform the INEC Act, aiming to address ambiguity and discretionary opportunities for INEC. Yet, the Senate handled it with a โlet sleeping dogs lieโ approach. The citizens have every reason to be as outraged as they currently are.โ
Politics
Electoral act: Senateโs action confirms Nigeria โfantastically corruptโ, โdisgracedโ โ Peter Obi
Former Labour Party presidential candidate, Peter Obi, has condemned the Senateโs refusal to make electronic transmission of election results mandatory, saying the move further exposes Nigeria as a fantastically corrupt and disgraced country.
Obi expressed his views in a statement shared on X on Friday, where he accused lawmakers of deliberately weakening Nigeriaโs democratic process ahead of the 2027 general elections.
He explained that his reaction came after a brief pause to mourn victims of a deadly tragedy in Kwara State, where over 150 people reportedly lost their lives.
โLet us first pray for the souls of the innocent Nigerians lost in Kwara. That painful incident is why I delayed responding to the shameful development surrounding our electoral system,โ he wrote.
Describing the Senateโs decision as intentional and dangerous, Obi said rejecting mandatory electronic transmission was not a simple oversight but a calculated attempt to block transparency.
โThe Senateโs open rejection of electronic transmission of results is an unforgivable act of electoral manipulation ahead of 2027,โ he said.
According to him, the action strikes at the heart of democracy and raises serious questions about the true purpose of governance in Nigeria.
โThis failure to pass a clear safeguard is a direct attack on our democracy. By refusing these transparency measures, the foundation of credible elections is being destroyed. One must ask whether government exists to ensure justice and order or to deliberately create chaos for the benefit of a few.โ
The former Anambra State governor linked the post-election controversies of the 2023 general elections to the failure to fully deploy electronic transmission of results, insisting that Nigerians were misled with claims of technical failures.
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The confusion, disputes and manipulation that followed the 2023 elections were largely due to the refusal to fully implement electronic transmission,โ he said.
He added thatย the so-called system glitch never truly existed.
Obi compared Nigeriaโs electoral process with those of other African countries that have embraced technology to improve credibility, lamenting that Nigeria continues to fall behind.
โMany African nations now use electronic transmission to strengthen their democracy. Yet Nigeria, which calls itself the giant of Africa, is moving backwards and dragging the continent along.โ
He criticised Nigeriaโs leadership class, saying the countryโs problems persist not because of a lack of ideas but because of deliberate resistance to meaningful reform.
โWe keep organising conferences and writing policy papers about Nigeriaโs challenges. But the truth is that the leaders and elite are the real problem. Our refusal to change is pushing the nation backwards into a primitive system of governance.โ
Warning of the dangers ahead, Obi said rejecting electronic transmission creates room for confusion and disorder that only serves the interests of a small group.
He also recalled past remarks by foreign leaders who described Nigeria as corrupt, arguing that actions like this continue to justify those statements.
โWhen a former UK Prime Minister described Nigeria as โfantastically corrupt,โ we were offended. When former US President Donald Trump called us a โdisgraced nation,โ we were angry. But our continued resistance to transparency keeps proving them right.โ
Obi warned that Nigerians should not accept a repeat of the electoral irregularities witnessed in 2023.
โLet there be no mistake. The criminality seen in 2023 must not be tolerated in 2027.โ
He urged citizens to be ready to defend democracy through lawful and decisive means, while also calling on the international community to closely monitor developments in Nigeriaโs electoral process.
โThe international community must pay attention to the groundwork being laid for future electoral manipulation, which threatens our democracy and development,โ Obi stated.
He concluded by expressing hope that change is still possible if Nigerians take collective responsibility.
โA new Nigeria is possible but only if we all rise and fight for it.โ
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