Friday, January 31, 2025 - Lere Olayinka, the Senior Special Assistant on Public Communication and New Media to the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, Nyesom Wike, has accused former Vice President Atiku Abubakar of leading a rebellion against the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.
Olayinka said Atiku’s rebellion in 2014 was responsible for the failure
of PDP to be in power now.
In an interview on Arise Television, the spokesman to the FCT minister
accused the former presidential candidate of frustrating his own party during
his tenure as Vice President.
Olayinka said: “PDP’s issues started in 2003 when Atiku as Vice
President of Nigeria frustrated the PDP’s efforts to win Lagos State.
“That was how the problem started. Because we were able to march on in
government, people did not notice. The problem went on to the extent that a
sitting president, Obasanjo literally had to beg his running mate to be able to
pick his second term ticket.
“The problem started, it got to 2007 and Atiku as Vice President of
Nigeria under a PDP government formed Action Congress, AC, and contested
election as a candidate of AC while still being the Vice President holding
PDP’s mandate.
“It went on like that and in 2014, because somebody was so desperate to
contest an election and insisted that Jonathan will not have a second term, he
led a rebellion and I’m talking about Atiku again, he led a rebellion that took
PDP out of power in 2015. If Atiku did not lead that rebellion of 2014, PDP
would still be in power now.
“So how did PDP’s problem start? In 2015, Atiku campaigned for APC to
take PDP out of power; some people including Wike took the battle of rebuilding
the party on their head, they spent their money, time, and took risk at the
expense of losing their seat as governor. Wike, Fayose and where was Atiku, he
was in Dubai.
“He came back in 2018 and returned to PDP, picked the party ticket and
contested but lost the election. After losing an election, what do you do as
the leader of the party? You stay back in the country to galvanize support,
lead opposition but what did Atiku do? He went to Dubai again and was there for
over two years.
“It was after two years that he came back to start writing letter of
appreciation to those who worked with him.”
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