Anambra governor 2013?
Today,
a sizable portion of the 1.87 million voters in Anambra State is
expected to participate in the election of a governor for the
22-year-old state. Some of the candidates of the many political events,
who emerges as governor, would take promise of office on March 17,
2014.
The
last time the folks of Anambra voted was on Feb 6, 2010, over fifty
percent of the voting populace could not discover their names in the
voters'register. At the conclusion of the day, just about 300,000 people
voted, a little significantly less than 20 per cent of the voting
population.
But today, all of the members in the election have
qualified that the voters'enroll is in good shape following a few
reviews by the Independent National Electoral Commission.Continue
The race had been long and windy for most
of the candidates. But at the end of the day 23 men, no woman, are on
their marks, getting ready for the final dash across the finishing line
today.
Up till Thursday last week, when the
Supreme Court declared former student leader, Tony Nwoye as being
eligible to contest, one of the major political parties, the Peoples
Democratic Party, was not certain about whether it would eventually
present a candidate for the election.
So, it turned out a relief for the PDP
that finally, Nwoye would, would be its standard-bearer in the election.
Whether the late entry would take a toll on the party’s performance in
the election is a matter to be determined by the electorate. Some other
political parties have issues similar to the PDP’s as there are subtle
disputes over candidatures.
Issues that could shape the election
Four years ago, the issue of zoning of
the governorship was not on the agenda. Of the six top contenders for
the office of the governorship then, three of them; Dr. Chris Ngige
(Action Congress), Peter Obi (All Progressives Grand Alliance) and Uche
Ekwunife (Progressive Peoples Alliance) were from the Anambra Central
Senatorial Zone, the other three, Prof. Chukwuma Soludo (Peoples
Democratic Party), Andy Uba (Labour Party) and Nicholas Ukachukwu (Hope
Democratic Party) were from the Anambra South Senatorial Zone; and this
was not considered a serious issue during the election. In this
election, however, zoning became prominent after the people of Anambra
North Senatorial Zone declared that nobody from the zone had been
elected governor since the state was created in 1991 Thus began the
clamour for Anambra North to produce the governor.
Incidentally, Anambra North zone is the
least developed in terms of infrastructure and human resources. Their
leaders had reckoned that the zone’s limited access to government must
have been responsible for the slow development of the area. They,
therefore, moved that for them to support any political party such a
party must zone its governorship candidacy to Anambra North.
After many meetings and declarations by
political leaders from the zone, the state Governor, Peter Obi, was sold
on the idea of Anambra North producing the next governor of the state.
He repeatedly explained that his position
was in the interest of equity and fair play. After an initial
resistance from some members of his party, the governor had his way and
member of the party, Chief Willie Obiano, emerged at APGA candidate.
The PDP eventually elected its own
candidate, Mr. Tony Nwoye, from Anambra North, a development that thrown
the race wide open given the fact that the two other prominent
candidates, Ngige and Ifeanyi Uba of the Labour Party come from Anambra
Central and Anambra South respectively. Those who have argued against
zoning have said that allotting the position of governor to zones in
rotation could divide the state along sectional lines. They have also
said that zoning had the potential of promoting mediocrity over merit.
Also, they argued that zoning had never been an issue within Anambra
political class, which had always contested the governorship of the
state irrespective of zones.
‘Godfather politics’ also came up for
debate during the electioneering. Apart from the candidate of the Labour
Party, Ifeanyi Uba, and that of the Progressive Peoples Alliance,
Godwin Ezeemo, who are believed to be personally funding their
elections, virtually all the other candidates have godfather figures
behind them.
Instructively, none of the candidates
actually appeared with blueprints on how to end the major concerns of
the people, which are mainly insecurity, provision of water and poor
state of roads.
At a point the campaigns degenerated into
mudslinging and destruction of the campaign posters and billboards of
opposing candidates.
Then came the political debates organised
by broadcast organisations and interest groups in the state. These
debates exposed the public speaking capabilities of the candidates.
At the end of the campaigns, certain
messages came out about the agenda of the five leading candidates.
Obiano of APGA kept emphasising his resolve to continue with the
programmes of Governor Peter Obi anchored on the Anambra Integrated
Development Strategy. He, however, added a four-sector development
agenda anchored on industrialisation, agriculture, oil and gas and
education.
Ngige of APC, who was governor between
2003 and 2006, anchored his campaign on the need to return him as
governor to complete the developmental programmes, he initiated when he
was governor. Ubah of the LP promised to deploy his entrepreneurial
skills to attract development to the state, a similar campaign approach
by Ezeemo of PPA.
The PDP candidate, Tony Nwoye, whose
candidacy was only secured barely a week before the election, scarcely
made out a programme of action. He did not participate in any of the
political debates. His camp spent most of the time left consulting
traditional rulers, opinion leaders and the respective leaders of their
town unions. Whichever way the people vote today will depend on the
sentiments of where the candidate comes from, political party
affiliation and pecuniary factors. While the Catholic Church played an
influential role in past elections, the Church’s influence might not
make much difference this time around because all the top contenders are
Catholics who have contributed substantial support to the church.
Chances of the major contenders
To many observers, the election is too
close to call. Some people have predicted that the winner might not
emerge at the first ballot, given that the eventual winner will not only
have to win the majority of votes cast, but will also have to have a
spread of votes, winning at least 25 per cent of the votes in 14 of the
21 local government areas. The way it looks, it is only the PDP and APGA
candidates that can have the needed spread given the nature of their
support base, which cuts across the entire state. APC looks good to
garner huge votes and if it wins the majority vote, its win might be
flawed in spread of votes. APC’s candidate has a cult following among
the masses, he is most popular in the two Idemili local government
areas, which incidentally have the highest voting populations.
Banking on the incumbency factor, Obiano
of APGA could come out with a good spread of votes and he is expected
to lead in local governments like Anaocha, where the governor comes
from, Anambra West, Ogbaru, Onitsha North, Onitsha South, Awka North,
Njikoka and one of the Orumba local government areas. Anambra East where
both the PDP and APGA candidates come from could be fairly shared by
the two parties. The PDP candidate, Nwoye is blessed with a large
membership base of the PDP which is spread across the state. He is most
likely to win in Ayamelum, Oyi, Dunukofia and Ihiala. The divisions
within the ranks of the party may create problems for him in Nnewi South
and Aguata.
The Labour Party candidate, Mr. Ifeanyi
Ubah, is very likely to win in his home local government, Nnewi North
and Ekwusigo. He will have sprinkling of votes across a few other local
government areas, considering that his party has little traditional
support bases across the state. The fifth candidate is Godwin Ezeemo,
who has been very active in the field and whose philanthropic gestures
might win him some good support from the voters. But his impact may not
be very strong, even in his home local government, Aguata.
Significance
The governorship election in Anambra
State is significant for a number of reasons. One of them is that it is
one state where the influence and clout of the ruling party at the
federal level, the PDP, has been cut down drastically. In the last
election held on February 6, 2010, the PDP came a distant third behind
the Action Congress of Nigeria and the All Progressives Grand Alliance.
In other states, it has been PDP winning or coming second.
Curiously, PDP is the party from which
virtually all the other parties emerged following irreconcilable
differences within the ranks of the party.
Since 2003, the governorship election in
Anambra State has always presented a keen contest among four or more
parties, thus giving the electorate a wide range of choices to make.
In 2003, it was APGA represented by Peter
Obi, ANPP represented by George Muoghalu, Alliance for Demcoracy
represented by the then Governor Chinwoke Mbadinuju and PDP represented
by Dr. Chris Ngige. The election was manipulated in favour of the PDP.
But the court reversed that three years later and declared Obi the
winner. Since then the governorship election in Anambra State has
elicited passionate attention.
Home to some the world’s most creative
entrepreneurs, Anambra, however, presents a picture a poorly governed
state, whose abundant human and material resources had often fallen in
the hands of wrong managers.
Former Vice-President Alex Ekwueme, who
is one of the founding founders of Nigeria’s present democracy and a
prominent citizen of the state when asked to identify the problem with
Anambra State, said: “Anambra State is all chiefs, no Indians.” It is
an indication that there cannot be an effective leadership in a
community where everyone considers themselves good enough to lead, and
not to follow. The incumbent governor, Peter Obi, shocked by the parlous
state of affairs in Anambra since it was created raised a poser in his
campaign posters in 2003; “Is Anambra Cursed; or Are We the Cause?” The
eight years he spent governing the state would have given him an answer,
which he is yet to make public.
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