Atiku’s Defection To PDP Does Not Exclude Me From Running – Makarfi
The Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Caretaker Committee, Senator Ahmed Makarfi, has said he could still contest the party’s presidential ticket in spite of the defection of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar to the party.
In an interview in the current edition of The Interview magazine, Makarfi said, “Atiku left before, he’s on his way back before the (party’s) Convention.”
It is widely believed that Atiku may be gunning for the PDP’s presidential ticket.
In response to a question about his own interest, Makarfi said, “I have heard the rumor, it has been there since 2007…I have thought of it. By the time I leave as caretaker committee chairman on the 9th or 10th, there’ll still be ten months to the party primaries. By any law or the party’s guidelines, I’m not excluded.”
In a statement, the MD/Editor-In-Chief of The Interview, Azu Ishiekwene, described the edition as “the most revealing disclosure yet of the inner workings of the opposition trying to come to terms with its uncertain future.”
Even though the PDP has zoned its presidential ticket for 2019 to the North, Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti is playing the wild card.
Makarfi told The Interview that Fayose’s declaration of interest in the party’s presidential ticket, “is uncalled for and unhealthy.”
Apart from his comment on the build up of interest in the party’s presidential ticket, Makarfi also said the PDP was expecting a harvest of defections, after Atiku’s move from the ruling All Progressives Congress.
“For some strategic reasons,” he said, “don’t expect a lot of people to move to the PDP now. People are in APC for different reasons. Wait for the time when everybody will be on his own, you will see the influx of people into the PDP.”
He spoke on the bitter contest for the party’s chairmanship, probably the most dangerous threat since the Supreme Court ruling saved the party from extinction; and on his rival former Governor Ali Modu-Sheriff, whom he said had sponsors in the APC.
Makarfi, who came close to being the PDP’s presidential nominee in 2006, revealed for the first time how former President Olusegun Obasanjo schemed him out, even though an internal party assessment had returned him as the most favorable candidate.
Also in this edition, former resident electoral commissioner for Ondo and Lagos states, Akin Orebiyi, shared insights on his experience, while ex-Nigerian national team captain, Segun Odegbami, revisited the COJA scandal, describing it as “the looting of our commonwealth.”
Ikeogu Oke, the NLNG Literature Prize winner explains, in great detail, why it took him 27 years to write his winning entry.