Monday, May 26, 2025 - Former Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Babachir Lawal, has dismissed the recent endorsement of President Bola Tinubu for a second term by governors of the All Progressives Congress (APC) as irrelevant. Speaking in an interview with the Nigerian Tribune on Sunday, May 25, Lawal described the move as “immaterial” and said the coalition of opposition leaders he belongs to is focused solely on the Nigerian electorate, not political officeholders.
On May 22, all 22 APC governors publicly backed President
Tinubu as the party’s sole presidential candidate for the 2027 election.
However, Lawal, a prominent figure in the opposition coalition aiming to unseat
the APC, downplayed the significance of the endorsement. “Let the governors
continue to defect, we don’t care,” he said. “If we wake up one morning and
heard that all the 36 states governors and the FCT are in APC, we don’t care.
It is immaterial. They have only 37 votes; maybe we can add their families.
Maybe you get 1,000 votes. The voter is what we are targeting, and the voter is
the victim of the system we are against.”
Lawal emphasized that the coalition’s strategy is to appeal
directly to the Nigerian people, particularly those who have suffered under the
current administration. He stated that efforts are ongoing to build a credible
alternative to the ruling party and that the coalition is operating with
intentional discretion to protect its plans. “We don’t take photographs. We
don’t take minutes of meetings. We take time to make sure that information on
strategies doesn’t leak,” he said.
The former SGF added that his continued presence in Abuja
rather than on his farm despite it being planting season, is evidence of his
commitment. “I must be an idiot if I leave my most important vocation to take
coffee and snacks,” he quipped. “Whoever says we aren’t serious doesn’t know
who the people are, because they don’t know who they are.”
Recent reports suggest that the coalition is considering
adopting the African Democratic Congress (ADC) as its platform to challenge the
APC in 2027. However, this plan appears to face obstacles following Peter Obi’s
announcement on Saturday, May 24, that he will contest the next presidential
election under the Labour Party, which he represented in 2023. Lawal did not
directly address Obi’s decision but insisted that the coalition remains
confident and purposeful. “At the appropriate time, we will go public with what
we are doing,” he said.
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