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High Cost Of Forms: Politics Is All About Money – APC

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The ruling All Progressives  Congress (APC) has said “politics is all about money”, stressing that whoever wants to remain in it and contest election on the party’s platform must be ready to spend on its expression of interest and nomination forms.
The Deputy National Organising Secretary of the party, Nze Chidi Duru, in an interview with The Tide’s source in Abuja, said aspirants on the party’s platform must also be ready to canvass their “ideas and philosophies” before the electorate.
Since becoming the ruling party in 2015, after formation in 2013, the APC is known for placing high charges on expression of interest and nomination forms.
Recall that Muhammadu Buhari had while obtaining the APC forms in the build-up to the 2015 general elections lamented the cost of the forms and claimed to have taken a loan to buy them.
The APC is under intense bashing by some Nigerians and stakeholders for placing high fees for expression of interest and nomination forms ahead of the by-elections slated for February 3, 2024. The party has pegged N20 million for its expression of interest and nomination forms for senatorial aspirants, N10 million for House of Representatives and N2 million for state houses of assembly per aspirant.
For the Edo governorship election, the party is collecting N50 million from aspirants for the forms. It collected N100 million from presidential aspirants in 2022, prior to the 2023 poll.
The backlash has gained traction, especially as the leading opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has placed low fees on its forms for the by-elections. It pegged the expression of interest and nomination forms for the Senate, House of Representatives and House of Assembly at N3.5 million, N2.5 million and N600,000 respectively, for the elections.
But reacting to the development, the APC Deputy National Organising Secretary, Duru, said rather than flay the party for the cost of its forms, members and other Nigerians should commend the APC National Chairman, Dr Abdullahi Ganduje, for not increasing the cost of forms, but sustaining the 2022 rates despite high inflation in the country.
He said, “Also bear in mind the political space that we operate. Politics is all about money, it is all about expenses, and if you need to be in it, you should be able to buy the forms, be in the position to also canvass your ideas and philosophies before the electorate.
“All these costs money but APC has shown greater understanding more than any other political party in Nigeria that they did not add one kobo on top of the fee that was charged in 2022 primaries.”
But a Professor of Political Science, Jibrin Ibrahim, however, told our source over the phone that putting aside politics of ideas and principles for politics of money is very dangerous for democracy.
He said, “The calculation is, if you want to be getting millions of naira like senators get, then you should invest some reasonable amount to the party that is creating the opportunity for you.
“What all these means is that they are really engaging in a system of re-enforcing commercialisation of politics; putting aside politics of ideas and principles for politics of money, and that is very dangerous for democracy.”
Similarly, a Professor of Political Sociology at the University of Abuja, Abubakar Kari, said that the development is a direct outcome of systematic monetisation of Nigerian politics in the Fourth Republic, which in turn leads to exclusion.
He said, “It is a sad development, and it is a direct outcome of systematic monetisation of Nigerian politics. We have complained severally, we have pointed out that this Fourth Republic has been characterised by systematic monetisation; money is now everything.
“The direct consequence, of course, is exclusion. So aspirants and people who are desirous of contesting for election are being edged out deliberately; automatically, they are excluded, and this is very undemocratic. Because one of the pillars of democracy upon which democracy reigns is participation.
“A situation where you deliberately exclude people from aspiring, is antithetical, antidemocratic, and a direct affront on one of the major cardinal principles of democracy which is participation. Another pillar of democracy is choice. And this systematic exclusion of people from aspiring also does violence to choice. The choices of the electorate are being unduly restricted.”

 

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Why I Won’t Help Tinubu’s Govt Overcome Economic Challenges – Sanusi

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The 16th Emir of Kano, Muhammad Sanusi II, says he would not help President Bola Tinubu’s administration to correct the administration’s policies affecting the citizens.

Emir Sanusi spoke on Wednesday in Lagos as the chairman of the 21st Anniversary of Fawehinmiism (Gani Fawehinmi Annual Lecture 2025).

The emir stated that while there were “a few points” he could offer to explain the trajectory the administration had taken and how such decisions were predictable, he chose not to do so because “they don’t behave like friends.”

He said explaining the government’s policies would help the government, but he did not intend to assist them due to the way they had treated him.

“I can give a few points that are contrary, that explain perhaps what we’re going through and how it was totally predictable, most of it, and maybe avoidable. But I am not going to do that.

“I have chosen not to speak about the economy or the reforms or to even explain anything because if I explain, it would help this government, but I don’t want to help this government,” the emir said while addressing some of the points made by speakers about the economy.

He added: “You know they’re my friends, but if they don’t behave like friends, I don’t behave like a friend. So I watch them being stooges. And they don’t even have people with credibility who can come and explain what they are doing. I am not going to help. I started out helping, but I am not going to help. I am not going to discuss it. Let them come and explain to Nigerians why the policies that are being pursued are being pursued.

“Meanwhile, I’m watching a very nice movie with popcorn in my hands. But I will say one thing: What we are going through today is, at least in part, not totally, but at least in part, a necessary consequence of decades of irresponsible economic management.

“People were told decades ago that if you continue along this path, this is where you’re going to end up, and they refused to open their eyes. Now, is everything being done today correct? No.”

Emir Sanusi, who was deposed as the 14th Emir of Kano in 2020 by then-Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, the current national chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), was reinstated as the 16th Emir of Kano in 2024 by the New Nigeria People’s Party-led Kano State Government.

His emirship has faced ongoing challenges from forces believed to be backed by the federal government, including federal officials’ continued recognition of his predecessor, Emir Aminu Ado Bayero.

Last month, the police barricaded his palace, with the state government accusing the federal government of orchestrating the action to stir unrest in the peaceful state.

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Reps Loses Deputy Chief Whip

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The Deputy Chief Whip of the House of Representatives, Rt Hon. Oriyomi Onanuga, is dead.

Also known as Ijaya, Rt Hon. Onanuga, who was the member representing Ikenne/Sagamu/Remo North Federal Constituency, is said to have died following a brief illness.

This was confirmed in a tweet on the official X (formerly Twitter) account of the House of Representatives, on  Wednesday night.

Rt Hon Onanuga, who was born in Hammersmith, London, to Nigerian parents on December 2, 1965, was a politician and entrepreneur. She held the position of Deputy Chief Whip in the Nigerian House of Representatives since 2023.

She contested and won a seat in the House of Representatives under the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in 2019. She also served as the Chairperson of the House Committee on Women Affairs and Social Development.

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Aiyedatiwa Dissolves Cabinet, Retains Finance Commissioner, Attorney-General

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Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa of Ondo State has dissolved the State Executive Council.
The State Executive Council members include commissioners, Special Advisers and the Secretary to the State Government, SSG.

Gov. Aiyedatiwa, however, exempted two members of the cabinet from the dissolution due to the critical nature of their duties.

The two commissioners exempted include the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Dr Kayode Ajulo, SAN, and the Commissioner for Finance, Mrs. Omowunmi Isaac.

This was contained in a statement issued by the governor’s Chief Press Secretary, Ebenezer Adeniyan, in Akure, the Ondo State capital.

Mr Adeniyan said in the statement that “All the affected cabinet members are to hand over all government properties in their care to the accounting officers of their respective ministries.

Gov. Aiyedatiwa thanked the executive council members “for their service and contributions to the development of Ondo State under his administration and wished them well in their future endeavours”.

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