APC ticket: I will back whoever Buhari’s anointed candidate – Yahaya Bello
One of the presidential aspirants of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Yahaya Bello, revealed he will agree to back whoever President Muhammadu Buhari’s anointed candidate is.
On Saturday, the president met with the aspirants at the presidential villa, Abuja.
At the meeting, he asked them to “come up with a formidable” consensus candidate before the party holds its primary election.
The Kogi governor, who is also a presidential aspirant, said he will support Buhari’s choice.
“Whoever Mr President will come up with, I’m in 100 per cent in support of that. It is not only me, in the dinner, we had yesterday with Mr President, almost everybody, in fact, 100 per cent of us, who are aspiring, have agreed that whoever Mr President will choose among us we are going to support him,” he said.
Asked if Bola Tinubu, former Lagos governor, was also in agreement, Bello said he was present and did not object.
“He was seated in the meeting and he did not object to it, so If someone speaks on your behalf and you did not have anything in contrary and you keep quiet then it is binding on you,” he added.
Furthermore, Bello said the position of the northern APC governors on zoning the presidency to the south is non-binding.
The Kogi governor described the decision as “self-opinion”.
The northern governors had on Saturday expressed support for a power shift to the south.
Bello said the development is a “recipe” to further divide the country along ethnic and regional lines.
“Going by that statement, if assuming, without conceding, that such statement came from some of my colleagues, it is just self-opinion,” he said.
“It is not binding on Nigerians, it is not binding on me, it is not binding on the party because PGF north is not an organ of the party. It is not binding on northerners and Nigerians, generally.
“Let me quickly sound a note of caution to all Nigerians and advise some of my colleagues who may take it or leave it, that this is just a recipe to divide the country further along ethnic or regional lines.”