The Peoples Democratic Party has begun reviewing its performance in the March 28 presidential election with a view to arriving at what caused the defeat of President Goodluck Jonathan.
It was gathered in Abuja on Sunday night that top members of the party were of the opinion that some of them in the National Working Committee and National Executive Committee, especially those from the North, covertly played roles that contributed to Jonathan’s loss.
A leader of the party said that such members also connived with the All Progressives Congress to ensure that Jonathan was beaten at the polls.
The source, who asked not to be named, hinted that any indicted members might be shown the way out of the PDP.
The party leader said that many of such members of the party seemed united in their determination to ensure that Jonathan did not win the election.
The source added that it was surprising that strongholds of the PDP in the North such as Plateau, Benue and Kogi states that have large Christian population, could fall to the APC.
He said, “The entire election was lost long before March 28 because northern elements, even those within the PDP, ganged up against President Jonathan. Even some of our leaders in the NEC and NWC are under watch because we believe they also worked against the President.
“There will be a meeting between our chairman, Adamu Mu’azu, and PDP state chairmen during the week, but as it is we do not even trust them.”
The source said some top party officials were already calling for the resignation of some NEC and NWC members to pave the way for the repositioning of the PDP.
Another top PDP source also claimed that “some top northern PDP members who worked against Jonathan will be fished out and expelled from the party.’’
“They have turned the PDP into a southern party and the only way we can survive as a strong opposition is to expel the traitors among us, ” the source added.
He also confirmed that “All the state chairmen and Mu’azu will meet in Abuja on Wednesday (tomorrow) to do a post-mortem.
“They will also strategise on how to win the supplementary elections in Abia, Imo, Kogi and Taraba states.”
When contacted, the National Publicity Secretary of the PDP, Olisa Metuh, said the leadership of the party would “meet on Tuesday (today) and Wednesday and the issue (of anti-party activities) is one of the things we are going to discuss.”
“It is after this that we will know what to do or actions to take,” he added.
A former Senior Special Adviser to President Jonathan on Political Affairs, Ahmed Gulak, had on Friday called for the resignation of the National chairman of the party for failing to lead Jonathan to victory.
He had said, “There is no party chairman of the PDP since 1998 that has led the party to such a disastrous outing. As a result, the national chairman should consider himself one of those who have to give way for the new party to come up. In fact, he doesn’t need to be told to turn in his resignation letter.”
But Mu’azu denied the allegation that he worked against the President during the election, saying it was an “allegation made long ago without any substance.”
He also said that rather than quit the PDP, he would stay behind and reform the troubled party.
Fresh details however emerged on Monday on how the presidential election was won and lost. The PUNCH gathered from a PDP chieftain that his party and the APC devised fresh methods on how to outwit each other three months before the March 28 elections.
The source, who is a member of the PDP NWC, said a key component of his party’s strategy centered around the Permanent Voter Cards.
He said, “The whole thing started in January when we observed that the PVC distribution was skewed. Already, we knew that President Jonathan would not win any state in the North-West which is the biggest geopolitical zone in the country because it has seven states.
“We in the PDP decided to focus on Lagos and other states in the South but the APC connived with the Independent National Electoral Commission when the distribution of PVCs was moved to the local government headquarters.
“APC leaders were allowed to collect PVCs on behalf of their members while the distribution of PVCs in Igbo-dominated areas was frustrated in Lagos. We in turn quickly sponsored some protests in Lagos but by the time the cards arrived, the time was too short for all of them (cards) to be distributed.”
Source: Punch
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