Politics

My Co-Anambra Guber Aspirants Leaving PDP are Being Unfair

PDP affair

Anambra governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Mr Valentine Ozigbo has said that his fellow Anambra governorship aspirants who contested and lost the primary election of the party, and moving to other political parties are being unfair.
Ozigbo who spoke to journalists yesterday in Awka said such former aspirants of the PDP are not leaving the party because of lack of attention, or because the primary election was manipulated, but because they have made up their minds to leave.
Two out of the 15 aspirants who contested the primary election alongside Ozigbo; Dr Godwin Maduka and Dr Obiora Okonkwo had last week resigned from the PDP, and also announced their re-entry into the governorship race on other platforms.
But Ozigbo reacting to this said: “We have visited all our co-aspirants, trying to urge them to join forces with us to help PDP win the state.
“We first visited Senator Ekwunife, then we went to see Chris Uba. We visited him because he had said that if an aspirant from the south (senatorial zone) emerges, he will abandoned his court cases.
“We met him, we met all the other aspirants. I did this fence-mending because the problem of the party has always been anti-party activities by its members, arising from rancour during primary election. We needed to cage that, that was why I embarked on the visits.
“If you hear anyone is leaving PDP, it is not lack of attention. PDP intervened, some governors intervened, but they have made up their minds to leave. It is unfair, but I’m certain that the bigger number of people are still with me. If two people leave, you will agree with me that we have lost nothing,” Ozigbo said.
Speaking also on rumours that some godfathers in the state had foisted a deputy governorship candidate on him, the immediate past Chief Executive Officer of Transcorp PLC noted that he has from the very day he joined the race been his own man.
“From the outset, I knew what I wanted..I told everyone plainly that I will choose a woman as my running mate, and that she will be an Anglican. I did just that.
“I knew that if I make you, or you (pointing at journalists), you will want to control my actions, so I decided to finance my own election. That is not to say that I will not listen when elders of the party speak to me.
“Just like Mr Peter Obi who came in as governor and did his best because he had no one dictating to him, I am in the race all by myself, and no one is financing my election. I made it so, so that I can be as independent as I can.
“I went to the primary venue almost like an orphan, but one with God is majority. We saw clearly through my victory that I’m a destiny child. The primary election was transparent enough, and some of you here witnessed it. I don’t know what they mean about protesting, but I urge us all to come together and win the state.”

By Ifeizu Joe

Ifeizu is a seasoned journalist and Managing Editor of TheRazor. He has wide knowledge of Anambra State and has reported the state objectively for over a decade.

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