President Goodluck Jonathan has questioned the
March 28 presidential elections which proclaimed General Buhari as the winner.
Punch reports that President Jonathan on Thursday
questioned the results of the March 28 presidential election, saying “the
Peoples Democratic Party couldn’t have got those kinds of scores” it had in
some places.
Speaking shortly after receiving the report of the Senator
Ahmadu Ali-led PDP Presidential
Campaign Organisation at the Presidential
Villa, Abuja, Jonathan, advised that since the general elections were
over, the country must be allowed to move forward. He said that apart from
himself quickly conceding defeat to the All Progressives Congress’s candidate,
Muhammadu Buhari, many PDP members also made sacrifices because they were
persecuted in the course of electioneering.
Jonathan said, “The problem is not whether we lost the
elections, that is history, but how do we consolidate our party and move
forward? If we are committed and we work hard, definitely the PDP will bounce
back. The PDP is still the dominant party. If you look at the results, the
difference is just 2.5 million votes and if you look at the areas where it is
perceived that the PDP scored so low, the PDP couldn’t have got those kinds of
scores but the elections are over, so the country first.
“It is not as if Jonathan alone made the sacrifice, it is
all of us. I made the pronouncement but some of us are paying the price. Some
people pay more price than I do, I know how some of you are already being
persecuted and the kind of situation facing you. The key thing is that we must
continue to unite, as a party; we must continue to work hard so that as we go
into subsequent elections in 2019, 2023 and so on and so forth, the PDP will
continue to come up strong. Even in the interest of the nation, we need the
PDP.
“I still believe, though we have lost presidential election,
some National Assembly elections, governorship elections especially in the
North, the PDP is still the dominant party. Let us not judge the PDP by the
results of the elections for the presidential election. Our duty is to go back
and identify areas of challenges so that the party will come up strong and play
the role as a very strong party. The PDP is still the most organised party, is
still the party that is not owned by anybody, is still the party that whatever
you are, you can get to any level with your competencies and so on.”
The President also said that all PDP members who defected to
the APC would return with empty stomachs because the APC leaders would first
settle their members before thinking of those who joined them midway. Jonathan
added that the “food” might have finished before it gets to the turn of the PDP
defectors . However, he urged all the faithful party members to remain
committed to the PDP, adding that even if it was difficult in the beginning,
their aim would be achieved eventually. The president said, “I encourage
members of our party to remain loyal to the party; not to be so disillusioned
because we lost presidential election and decide to go where they think they
will fill their stomachs or something. It is not easy. I have been here for
five years plus, you hardly satisfy even 15 per cent of those who work for you.
“So, those people running and those already cross-carpeting,
they will come back on an empty stomach because they will touch the primary
members of their party before they get to them. They know you are coming
because you are hungry; and before it will get to you, the food will be gone.
So, let us be committed to the party, yes we will have challenges at the
beginning but surely we will get to where we want to be.”
The president said although he did not consult anyone before
calling Buhari on the telephone to concede defeat, he took that step on behalf
of the PDP.
“Yes, I did not consult anybody before I made that phone
call (to Buhari) but I made that phone call on behalf of all of you and on
behalf of the PDP, “ he said.
Jonathan likened the 2015 elections to the nation’s civil
war, saying people would give different accounts of the event depending on the
angle from where they were reporting.
However, he said that because of his privileged position, he
knew about the elections more than any other person. He said the most important
thing was not about his electoral loss, but the need to consolidate the party
and move forward. He said, “The issues of this 2015 elections will be similar
to the civil war because different people gave different accounts of the civil
war.
“The first book on civil war that I read was ‘My Command’ by
Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, which is his perspectives on what he saw and observed.
I recall (Chukwuemeka) Odumegwu-Ojukwu’s own was ‘Because I’m Involved.’ I know
that the issues of the 2015 general elections, may be after few years when
political scientists will write, we will get different perspectives.
“If you ask the various observer groups, each will give you
a different perspective. Even among ourselves whenever we talk sometimes I
laugh when people draw some of their analysis but by my privileged position, I
know a little more about the elections than others.
“But the key thing is not whether we lost or won but that
Nigeria as a nation must move forward. Political parties can only thrive when
there is peace and stability in the country. If there is military intervention
all the parties will disappear.”
The president further encouraged the members saying that
despite the loss that the PDP had suffered in all the elections, it remained
the dominant party in the country. He also expressed joy that countries that
brought ships to Nigeria and were waiting to evacuate their citizens in case
post-election crisis broke out did not have any reason to do so.
Attributing the PDP’s loss to conspiracies and betrayals
from people trusted by the party chiefs, the Chairman of the Board of Trustees
of the PDP, Chief Tony Anenih, said, “There is a lot to be done. We need a very
vibrant and strong party that can stand in as a strong opposition party; a
party that can stand well in the next election. That party has to be put in
place now. I believe that we are on the right path.”
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