National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief John Odigie-Oyegun may soon be relived of his job owing to “loss of confidence” in him by top leaders of the party.
Saturday Sun gathered that the party’s top guns met with President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday night.
The agenda was the crisis rocking the party in the National Assembly, the role of the national chairman and how to move the party forward.
At the end of the meeting it was resolved that the chairman would be asked to go. According to an insider, the meeting held him solely responsible for the crisis, believing that he has not “discharged the responsibilities of his office creditably”, especially since the incident of May 9, 2015 at the National Assembly.
And outside the Presidential Villa, loyalists of the party’s national leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu in the NWC have constituted themselves into a vanguard for Oyegun’s sack. It is believed that these loyalists control the NWC as a body.
Their grouse with Oyegun is that “he allowed the leadership crisis in the National Assembly to fester to the point where the Senate President and Speaker Yakubu Dogara routinely ignored party directives…”
Besides that, Saturday Sun checks indicated that Oyegun’s letter to Saraki and Dogara on the afternoon of Tuesday, June 23, detailing the party’s preferred candidates as principal officers, “was supposed to have been sent, at least, a week earlier,” an impeccable source obliged
However, according to him, “the chairman delayed writing the letter because he was trying to make the NWC see reasons as the matter could still be resolved amicably…”
Another source disclosed that on three occasions, members of the committee Tinubu impressed it on Oyegun to convene meetings where it was agreed that he should publicly call the APC caucus in the Senate and House of Representatives to order with a firm directive to obey party directives on filling the leadership positions in both chambers.
“Rather than write the letter, the chairman told his colleagues that it was better to settle the matter informally, without recourse to writing letters,” the source said.
He added: “Also the chairman was of the opinion that the lawmakers should be allowed to have their caucus meetings, which had been convened in the Senate, before deciding the next step.
“On Tuesday, without allowing the APC Senate caucus conclude its meeting, the NWC piled pressure on Oyegun and demanded a vote on the matter. Oyegun knew that the NWC was against him and at that point, accepted to write the letter to Saraki and Dogara on the party’s preferred candidates for the vacant principal officers positions.”
Saturday Sun learnt that some members of the Senate Unity Forum were reportedly at the party secretariat to collect the letter, but were prevailed upon to let the party’s Director of Administration deliver it to the two presiding officers.
The letter arrived Saraki’s office on the fourth floor of the Senate’s new building while he was presiding over the APC caucus meeting on the third floor, where it was agreed that the caucuses, rather than the party, should choose their leaders.
Regardless, Saturday Sun gathered that another group in the party, outside the NWC, is calling for «soft landing» for Oyegun. “We don’t want the PDP to make APC a laughing stock. Already, they are saying the party is not ready for governance…He may be given soft landing like an Ambassadorial job or any other political appointment they deem fit. But for now, party leaders and the Presidency have lost confidence in him.”
Before the Thursday meeting, however, it was learnt that in addition to plotting Oyegun’s removal, some party leaders may have also concluded plans to move against Senate President Bukola Saraki.
They would accuse him of engaging in “anti-party activities.”
To make the alleged “anti-party activities” stick, a top member of the party in the Presidency was said to have complained bitterly and referred to Saraki’s election on Tuesday, June 9 as “a coup, a ‘legislative coup’ against the party. There’s no other name for it.”
In that regard, the party is considering severe sanctions against him also because of “his association with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and the election of Senator Ike Ekweremadu as his deputy, he said”
Another case against Saraki is that he refused to follow the party’s directives on candidates for the remaining four principal officers position should be filled.
It was also gathered yesterday morning that, in addition to the alleged anti-party activities against the Senate President, it was also alleged that the national chairman was able to do his (Saraki’s) bidding because “he (Oyegun) had some other influences from the Senate President and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar,” said the party member.
Based on these, the NWC was mandated to investigate the weighty allegations against the two (Saraki and Atiku) and turn in a report on the investigations “as soon as possible.”
Consequently, a small committee was set up to conduct the investigation. In carrying out this mandate, the committee was expected to invite the two personalities for clarification of the allegations.
However, it was learnt that when the letters inviting the two men were sent to Oyegun to sign as head of the NWC, he allegedly refused to sign them.
In earlier interview the embattled chairman granted Saturday Sun, he denied being pushed to conduct the mock election precedent to the My 9, 2015 elections of NASS officers
Here’re excerpts of the interview:
What is the atmosphere in the party since the conduct of the National Assembly election?
Well, the atmosphere is returning to normal. It isn’t quite normal yet. We are still in the process of calming ruffled feathers. We are still in the process of wondering what to do about the breach of party discipline.
But what is important is what everybody has agreed on; that what has happened has happened. We must move on, we must reconcile all our members in the National Assembly and get on with the issue of distributing the principal positions of leadership. So, that is in process.
Are you still going to sanction the Senate President and the Speaker as it was reported?
In the course of events, there have been appreciation by them that things have not gone very well and as we meet, all these issues will be addressed and when necessary, restitution has to be made. But this will not be part of an overall resolution of the issue.
Some national officers of the party took different positions on the matter. Are you going to sanction them like the Deputy National Publicity Secretary who lambasted Alhaji Lai Mohammed?
(Cuts in) And myself too!
Are you going to sanction him?
That is being looked at from a disciplinary point of view.
So, he will be disciplined?
I won’t say he is going to be disciplined. He would be called to explain why he did what he did. It is possible we may pardon him if he has good, enough reasons, but he has to explain to the party.
Have you really sat down to consider why he took that position?
No. He is an adult. He can tell us what happened and why he did what he did.
There are insinuations that you were coerced by the Lagos forces to conduct the mock election against your earlier position that you were not going to do that. Is it true?
I am sorry I am not capable of being coerced by any group or any individual or whatever. That is not possible at all. I want to make that very, very clear.
Are you afraid that the crisis in the party may consume you as APC National Chairman?
No, I am not.
Apart from the fallout of the National Assembly election, do you think there are enemies within the party who want you out?
I am not aware of any enemy.
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