Politics
Merger Plans: PDP, NNPP, Five Others Form Coalition
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Merger Plans: PDP, NNPP, Five Others Formed Coalition
By Musa Musa
In a bid move to form a merger, not fewer than six political parties including the leading opponent party PDP formed a coalition.
Involved in the coalition are the African Democratic Congress (ADC), the Allied Peoples Movement (APM), the Social Democratic Party (SDP), the Young Progressives Party (YPP) and the Zenith Labour Party (ZLP).
The movement tagged ‘the Coalition of Concerned Political Parties (CCPP)’ was formed in Abuja yesterday at a meeting attended by leaders of the seven political parties at the National Secretariat of the SDP.
Addressing journalists after the meeting of the seven political parties, the chairman of the SDP, Shehu Gabam, clarified that the coalitionists neither a merger nor wait for s against thInter-Partyty Advisory Council (IPAC).
Also speaking at the meeting, the acting National Secretary of the PDP, Setonji Koshoedo, who represented the acting party’s national chairman, Umar Damagum, explained: “This coalition wants to offer strong opposition for the good of NigeriaWe must to offer alternative solutions to government policies.”
On his part, the national chairman of the ADC, Chief Ralph Nwosu, said the idea behind the coalition “is to strengthen our democracy. We have seen that people in government are trying to stiffen viable opposition.
Equally, the national chairman of the APM, Yusuf Dantalle, said there were other parties in the coalition that were not at the meeting.
Apart from Gabam, Koshoedo, Nwosu and Dantalle, other representatives of the political parties present at the event were: the acting national chairman of the NNPP, Abba Kawu Ali; the national publicity Secretary of the YPP, Egbeola Martins and the national secretary of ZLP.
On the immediate demands of a new coalition,
Gabam said the coalition urged the judiciary to strengthen their conviction towards delivering judgments that can stand the test of timereferringce to the recent judgements of the Court of Appeal on Zamfara, Nasarawa, Kano and Plateau states, where the candidates of the coalition members lost out to the candidates of the ruling party.
Commenting, a renowned political scientist, Professor Kamilu Sani Fage, said the decision to insist on a coalition and not t merger could best be described as mere semantics and an attempt to test the waters or fly a kite by the parties involved.
Fage said the reason for this could not be unconnected with the fact that three and half years to the 2027 general elections was a long time that the zeal may die down before then and that the ruling APC could start to work early on tearing the merger apart.
He said the coalition was rather late in one sense and too early in another sense because many people had called for this to happen before the 2023 General Election and the results had shown that if the PDP hadn’t approached the election with a divided house, it would have wrestled power from the APC.
He said the major challenge ahead of the coalition or merger now would be that of the ego of the presidential candidates of the parties.
Fage added that the absence of the LP in the coalition could also become an issue because of the support its presidential candidate, Peter Obi has built up along ethnic and religious lines going into the 2023 elections.