
Nigeria’s ruling party battles disunity over 2023 election candidate (Credit: Google)
- Nigeria’s ruling APC party begins primaries to select a candidate for election.
- The opposition PDP chose veteran Atiku Abubakar for next year’s election.
- Muslim presidential candidates to chose a Christian vice president.
Nigeria’s ruling APC party began primaries On Monday, to select a candidate for the 2023 election, with President Muhammadu Buhari pushing to overcome party divisions.
Delegates from the All Progressives Congress met in Abuja a day after gunmen killed at least 21 people in an attack on a church in the southwest, a bloody reminder that security is a major election issue.
With no clear frontrunner, the APC’s divisions have widened, particularly since the opposition People’s Democratic Party chose veteran Atiku Abubakar as its challenger for next year’s election.
Among the runners are former Lagos governor and APC strongman Bola Tinubu, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, former transport minister Rotimi Amaechi and Buhari’s loyalist Senate president Ahmad Lawan.
Buhari, who steps down after his two terms allowed in the constitution, has given no public support to a preferred candidate to govern Africa’s most populous country.
But he has urged the party’s local state governors and party leaders to back a strong candidate and “recognise the importance of the stability and unity of the party”.
Voting is expected on Tuesday, but party intrigue over the candidate had already begun.
Buhari met with a powerful group of northern state governors on Monday for consultations before the primary vote, where they insisted the APC candidate should be from the south, according to a statement from the presidency.
Read more: 21 people killed in church attack in southwest Nigeria: Official
“Allow the delegates to decide. The party must participate, nobody will appoint anybody,” Buhari said in a statement.
Part of the APC’s debate is over so-called “zoning” — an unofficial agreement among political elites that Nigeria’s presidency should rotate between candidates from the south and north.
That accord is meant to act as a form of power-sharing balance in a country almost equally split between the mostly Christian south and the predominantly Muslim north.
After northern Muslim Buhari, most observers have expected the presidency to return to a candidate from the south.
But the PDP chose Abubakar, a wealthy northern Muslim, former vice president and political stalwart who will be making his sixth bid to win the top political post.
The opposition’s choice to ignore “zoning” has triggered speculation over how the APC’s candidate will appeal to the north, where voter numbers and participation are traditionally higher.
The APC itself is an alliance of smaller parties who came together to secure Buhari’s victory in 2015 and has often struggled with internal strife.
“They need the strong hand of an incumbent president,” said Chidi Odinkalu, Nigerian analyst and lecturer at the Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy in Tufts University.
“The APC does not have… the internal governance mechanisms to manage the physics that you let loose when all those forces come together.”
Another consideration for the APC will be an unwritten accord for Muslim presidential candidates to chose a Christian vice president on their ticket and vice versa.
Among the APC leading hopefuls, Tinubu is a southern Muslim, Osinbajo is a southern Christian pastor and Amaechi, a Christian is from the southern oil region while Lawan is the only leading APC northern Muslim candidate.
Tinubu, who was instrumental in helping pull APC ranks together and bringing Buhari to power, last week caused waves with a blunt claim to the presidency.
“I helped Buhari to be president. I met him in Kaduna and convinced him to run after he had given up on his bid,” Tinubu said. “It is my turn to be president.”
The two main candidates will battle for the presidency next February as Nigeria struggles with a 12-year-old jihadist insurgency in the northeast and attacks by criminal kidnap gangs in the northwest.
Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, is also still recovering from the global pandemic and feeling the impact of the Ukraine war which has pushed up fuel and food prices across the continent.
The PDP dominated Nigeria’s politics for a decade and a half following the country’s 1999 return to democracy after years of military rule.
Abubakar, a long-time political operator, served as vice president during the first government formed after the military dictatorship ended.
However, the APC was able to end the PDP’s dominance in 2015, with Buhari promising to use his security credentials as a former military man, as well as to combat widespread corruption.
Read more: Gunman attacked a Catholic church in southwest Nigeria about 50 people were killed
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