The wind of
change blowing across the country again resonated on Saturday in many
states that the ruling PDP has governed since the return of civil rule
in 1999.
Results monitored by LEADERSHIP indicated that Benue, Niger, Jigawa and
Katsina States have fallen to the winning streak of APC, whose
presidential candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari, won the March 28
presidential election against the incumbent, President Goodluck Jonathan
of the PDP.
In the governorship and house of assembly elections, a similar pattern
of the “historic change” was seen in most of the states hitherto
considered PDP strongholds...
Although final
figures are still being compiled by the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC), our correspondents reported that the APC was
“progressively leading” in most of the polling units monitored.
In Niger State, the APC candidate, Abubakar Bello, was jubilant and
excited members of the party were seen celebrating across the state’s 25
local government areas.
In Benue, the successes of Senators Barnabas Gemade and George Akume in
the National Assembly election also rubbed off on the APC candidate for
the state, Samuel Ortom.
Ortom resigned from the cabinet of President Goodluck Jonathan to
contest the state’s number one job. He was maintaining a comfortable
lead in 18 of the 23 local governments at press time.
At the Government House polling unit, Ortom scored 145 votes to beat his PDP opponent, Terhemen Tarzoor, who polled 119 votes.
Also at Annunne Market Square Polling Unit in Tarka local government area, the APC polled 324 votes to PDP’s 14 votes.
However, Tarzoor is said to have polled a total of 152 votes at the
Ankpa Ward Polling Unit, an area where he grew up, to Ortom’s 150 votes.
Contrary to expectations that PDP’s Jimi Agbaje backed by the
non-natives of Lagos State will replace Governor Babatunde Fashola of
Lagos State, the APC candidate, Akinwunmi Ambode is conveniently
coasting home to victory.
Results from the polling units indicated that Agbaje scored higher in
Igbo-dominated communities like Amuwo Odofin and Oshodi/Isolo, but he
lost by win margins in most polling units of Lagos East Senatorial
District and Alimosho which have the largest populations in the state.
Ambode was said to be in firm control of at least 15 of the 20 local
government areas of the state.
Plateau also surprisingly favoured APC from the unit-by-unit analysis.
In Imo State, Governor Rochas Okorocha also cast off the state-sponsored
rigging of the presidential election against his party, the APC, in the
state to launch into an early lead, ahead of closest rivals, Emeka
Ihedioha (PDP) and Capt. Emmanuel Iheanacho (APGA).
Also, Kaduna State, which had been ruled by PDP for 16 years, had Malam
Nasir el-Rufai of the APC ahead of the incumbent governor, Mukhtar Yero,
who hinted that things might not work his way.
Shortly after accreditation in Zaria, yesterday, Yero told his
supporters and the entire people of state to accept the outcome of the
election, whichever way it went.
Similarly, in Katsina, former speaker, House of Representatives and
candidate of the APC, Alhaji Aminu Bello Masari appeared to cut short
the winning streak of the PDP in the state since 1999.
President-elect Buhari was in Katsina on Thursday to attend the final
rally for APC’s governorship and state House of Assembly candidates in
Saturday’s elections, and he pleaded with the people of his home state
to vote for his party’s candidates.
Jigawa has also returned to the APC fold with results indicating that a
majority of the House of Assembly seats as well as that of the governor
went to APC. The state was governed by the All Nigeria People Party
(ANPP) before the PDP took it over in 2007.
A similar situation is also playing out in Kebbi State as the APC
governorship candidate, Senator Atiku Bagudu, is coasting home to
victory and leading the PDP candidate Gen Sarkin Yaki Bello, in most of
the local government areas of the state.
Why My Wife Didn’t Accompany Me To Vote – Jonathan
President Goodluck Jonathan went to polling unit 039, Ward 13 in Ogbia Constituency 3 yesterday without his wife, Dame Patience.
The development was the first time the couple would be the first time
the couple would not be voting together since the return of democracy in
1999.
Jonathan had arrived at 1:50pm unaccompanied by Dame Patience. Jonathan
explained her absence: “We used different aircraft. She was supposed to
be here. And we’ve been expecting her and we hope she will still
come. The only problem is whether she will meet up with the
accreditation period. But, she is supposed to be on her way.”
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