ESSAY
By Reuben
Abati
When aggrieved
politicians within the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) decided to join forces
with members of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), the Congress for
Progressive Change (CPC), the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) and the All
Progressives Peoples Alliance (APGA) to form the All Progressives Congress
(APC) in 2013, they had well-defined, if not so clearly stated, even if poorly
conceived objectives: to send President Jonathan out of power, displace the PDP
which had clearly become a dominating hegemonic party, exert vengeance and
offer the people an alternative.
*Reuben Abati |
The triumph of the APC in the 2015 elections
resulting in victory at the Presidential level, in 23 states out of 36, and
also in the legislature, state and federal, was propelled on the wings of the
people’s embrace of this slogan of change. Change became the aphrodisiac of Nigeria ’s
search for democratic progress. The new party’s promises were delivered with so
much certainty and cock-suredness. Those who were promised free meals were
already salivating before casting the first vote.
The permanently opportunistic players in
The displacement of the PDP gave the impression that
The ruling APC has not been able to live up to expectations. In less than two years in power, it has been behaving not like the PDP, but worse. Not a day passes without a pundit or a party member or a civil society activist suggesting that the only way forward is the formation of a new political party. There are over 30 registered political parties in