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Why I Think Atiku May Win This Election. / Fear That Atiku May Pick PDP Ticket Forced APC To Throw Race Open / Why Atiku May Lose 2019 Presidential Election – PDP Governor [Premium Times] (2) (3) (4)

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Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by Marchman: 5:21pm On Jan 05, 2019
The PREMIUM TIMES’ story, “Why Atiku may lose the 2019 presidential election” made very good reading. Quoting an obviously unhappy Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governor who did not give his name, the article revealed troubling insights into the party’s chaotic run for the presidency.

The key issues highlighted in the story are lack of consultations by the PDP presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar; the choices of Peter Obi as the vice presidential nominee and Dr. Bukola Saraki, the Senate president, as the director-general of the campaign council. Other grievances include the alleged marginalisation of party leaders, who stuck with the PDP during its lean years; the supposed faulty campaign structure and lack of proper messaging by the campaign.

These are indeed serious problems, especially the lack of consultation by the presidential candidate and feeling of neglect by the PDP old guard, who did not defect to the ruling party when it was the vogue to do so. This sense of alienation can lead to apathy of party leaders and their supporters and cost the PDP significant votes, particularly in its strongholds of the South-South and South-East. The issues raised by the faceless PDP governor, no doubt, are grim and can very well cost the party the presidential election.

However, none of these concerns are insurmountable. On Obi, the vice presidential nominee, there is little anyone can do about him now. He has been nominated and the time frame allowed for the substitution of candidates has elapsed. But then, he has pulled his weight by demonstrating that he could be an effective VP with his vast knowledge of the economy. By most neutral and objective analyses, he won the vice presidential debate, which also featured Professor Yemi Osinbajo, the current vice president of Nigeria, thereby giving the party a bounce.

It should be given that Atiku Abubakar would spend most of his time consulting party leaders across the country, doing deals and assuaging frayed nerves; in short, demonstrating that he is ready to win and lead! That’s what presidential candidates do. They do the grind, not run to Dubai every now and then to lap up luxury and cool-off.

That said, no challenge the Atiku campaign is going through compares with that being faced by President Muhamadu Buhari. The man has no record to run on and has put together a tattered coalition held together by the illusion of inheriting power in 2023.

In 2015, the momentum was definitely in favour of Candidate Buhari. It was clear as day that Nigerians were fed up with the Goodluck Jonathan government, giving his inability to rise up to the challenges of the time, mainly insecurity and corruption, coupled with what was generally regarded as an uninspiring and underwhelming leadership. His government was tagged ‘clueless’ as Nigerians dreamt of a change.


Buhari was well placed to take advantage of this widespread disaffection as the candidate of the biggest ever coalition put together by the opposition. Supported by a well-heeled communication team, the APC presidential candidate ran an effective campaign, promising to fix Nigeria and deliver a much better country than the one he sought to wrest from the PDP. His manifesto had the solution to all of our ills. On paper, that is. From corruption and good governance to insurgency and insecurity; health to agriculture, and issues in the Niger Delta to the economy, the Buhari policy document was comprehensive and had well thought out solutions to some of the challenges that had plagued our country for years.

The election is therefore Atiku’s to lose. No campaign is perfect. Donald Trump of the U.S. ran one of the most chaotic campaigns ever, yet won the election, mainly by feeding off the citizens’ disgruntlement with the status quo. Atiku can do the same, chirping off the so-called integrity of Buhari and reminding Nigerians how badly the man has done the job he was elected for.


A few examples will suffice. On corruption and good governance, Candidate Buhari promised to “show personal leadership in the war against corruption and hold all the people who work with me to count.” On insurgency and insecurity, he pledged to “give special attention to the welfare of our armed forces and their families, lost heroes and their families and the victims of insurgency”, as well as “Provide of the best and appropriate military and other materials the country needs to combat insurgency and religious violence, kidnapping and rural banditry.”

The document was that comprehensive and covered every sphere of our national life. And no doubt, went a long way in convincing many Nigerians that Buhari was the real deal and was prepared for the arduous task of leading Nigeria into a more stable and prosperous future. Nothing could presently be further from the truth. It has turned out that there is a huge gap between the candidate, Buhari and the man who took over the leadership of the country after the election. Sadly for Nigeria, Candidate Buhari was dressed in borrowed robes.

On being elected, the true Buhari emerged as he ran the most bigoted, nepotistic, exclusive and incompetent government, the like of which we have, perhaps, never seen in the history of our country. The man is provincial, lacks energy and has the penchant for surrounding himself with shady characters from his part of the country. Oby Ezekwesili, the former minister and now presidential candidate put it better when she described the president as lazy, one who enjoys the trappings of his job but not the hard work that comes with it.

The consequences have been dire for the country, which went into recession the first full year Buhari came to power. Since then it has been down the hill for the economy. Over 11 million jobs have been lost since the president took over and hundreds of businesses have shut down and left the country. Nigeria became the poverty capital of the world in 2018; that is, the country with the highest number of extremely poor people. The government has funded the last three budgets with loans and bonds, and consequently, our external debts have risen by over N11 trillion in the last three-and-a-half years. All the indices are bad and growing worse under Buhari.

Security, which arguably is one of the bases on which Buhari got elected, has deteriorated so much that at no other time in the history of Nigeria have we had more deaths as a result of killings by non-state actors. In Zamfara and much of the North-West region, unidentified marauders murder almost at will. The Boko Haram militants have resurged in the North-East and taken over several communities. Several local governments in Borno are no-go areas as the insurgents are fully in charge there. Our soldiers, just like before, now continuously complain about the lack of arms and ammunition to tackle the insurgents. With Buhari nothing has changed, except for worse. Like in the case of pillaging armed herdsmen, who have sacked community after community in the North-Central region and barely got any real pushback from the commander-in-chief.

As such, Buhari, knowing he does not have a record to run on, is relying heavily on his coalition-of-the-corrupt, the never-do-well, the-PDP-disgruntled-and-rejects, the-any-government-in-power (AGIPS), the-2023-hopeful, and in fact, anyone who can assure him of even 10 votes. The man is so desperate to get another chance at ruining, sorry running, Nigeria that he does not even pretend to having integrity or fighting corruption anymore. That’s why he could not move against the governor of Kano State, Abdullahi Ganduje, who was caught stuffing dollar bribes into his babariga recently. That’s why his new found friends are people like Senator Godswill Akpabio and Orji Uzor Kalu who have gigantic corruption cases on their neck. And that is why he is powerless to call his wife to order even when the woman has set up a parallel campaign council.

The election is, therefore, Atiku’s to lose. No campaign is perfect. Donald Trump of the U.S. ran one of the most chaotic campaigns ever, yet won the election, mainly by feeding off the citizens’ disgruntlement with the status quo. Atiku can do the same, chirping off the so-called integrity of Buhari and reminding Nigerians how badly the man has done the job he was elected for.

https://opinion.premiumtimesng.com/2019/01/04/why-atiku-may-win-by-tope-ajayi/

5 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by latexxbro(m): 5:25pm On Jan 05, 2019
God Save Nigeria God Bless Atiku.
Let's vote wise and leave tribe out of the election for our own good please.

5 Likes

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by 35824L: 5:32pm On Jan 05, 2019
They want to fleece Atiku of much of his dollars before telling him the truth.

6 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by Abfinest007(m): 5:32pm On Jan 05, 2019
old news
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by servercodes001: 5:35pm On Jan 05, 2019
Tufiakwa

1 Like

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by ShySteady(m): 5:39pm On Jan 05, 2019
The man who pretends to be Nigeria's president is not Buhari but a psychopath who derives pleasure from the killings of Nigerians, enjoys corruption to drunkenness and condones nepotism in the mist disgusting form.

Otherwise, the Buhari who vehemently campaigned for our votes in 2015 would never do any of the above mentioned because of his deep-rooted discipline and character as a non-nonsense former military officer and an incorruptible honest man with high integrity to defend.

Three years on, he has lost it all.

After the elections next month, if it holds, we would heave a sigh of relief and collectively say:

"How has the mighty fallen because of greed and not in protecting the interests of his fellow countrymen"!

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by Mitchewww(m): 5:41pm On Jan 05, 2019
Abfinest007:
old news

What makes it old news please.

I had to click the source.

2 Likes

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by socialmediaman: 5:47pm On Jan 05, 2019
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by docadams: 5:54pm On Jan 05, 2019
Has this bias analysis removed the flaws in the Atiku campaign structure.

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by Nobody: 5:56pm On Jan 05, 2019
He has already won.
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by ZombieTAMER: 6:05pm On Jan 05, 2019
Who will vote for Buhari ??























































Nobody.......

2 Likes

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by KingOfAllIgbos: 6:11pm On Jan 05, 2019
grin

Q: Why Atiku may win ?

A: Because Asian jails are considering releasing all piglets in custody.

Maybe then their population would be sufficient to swing the vote grin

4 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by KingOfAllIgbos: 6:14pm On Jan 05, 2019
Frankly though, Buhari has been a massive failure and been below expectations

But Atiku must be really bad if he can't manage to dislodge PMB.

He has a snowball's chance in Hell. His defeat to Buhari will end his political career

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by Mitchewww(m): 6:21pm On Jan 05, 2019
If he can't win Buhari.

Its over finito for him.
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by Shikini: 6:22pm On Jan 05, 2019
HOW TO END CORRUPTION IN NIGERIA

Nigeria must stop re-electing their presidents.

Buhari has done his best harassing former PDP government on corruption.

This 2019, let us give PDP a chance to retaliate by also exposing corruption under Buhari

In 2023, we again sack PDP and return APC to probe the outgoing PDP govt

The cycle continues and at the end of everything, Nigeria is better off. Corruption will die a natural death

3 Likes

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by Guestlander: 6:27pm On Jan 05, 2019
Chipping away at someone's integrity, that only makes sense if you have something damaging against the person. If you have to manufacture false stories then your own integrity will be in tatters.

And may I add the PDP has been churning out falsehoods at a relentless pace.

Profoundly
Dishonest
Party

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by Foolishbuhari: 6:27pm On Jan 05, 2019
Talk about a very factual report, there you have it! The author couldn't have said it any better
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by Shikini: 6:52pm On Jan 05, 2019
KingOfAllIgbos:
Frankly though, Buhari has been a massive failure and been below expectations

But Atiku must be really bad if he can't manage to dislodge PMB.

He has a snowball's chance in Hell. His defeat to Buhari will end his political career
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by nickxtra(m): 6:57pm On Jan 05, 2019
Marchman:


The PREMIUM TIMES’ story, “Why Atiku may lose the 2019 presidential election” made very good reading. Quoting an obviously unhappy Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governor who did not give his name, the article revealed troubling insights into the party’s chaotic run for the presidency.

The key issues highlighted in the story are lack of consultations by the PDP presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar; the choices of Peter Obi as the vice presidential nominee and Dr. Bukola Saraki, the Senate president, as the director-general of the campaign council. Other grievances include the alleged marginalisation of party leaders, who stuck with the PDP during its lean years; the supposed faulty campaign structure and lack of proper messaging by the campaign.

These are indeed serious problems, especially the lack of consultation by the presidential candidate and feeling of neglect by the PDP old guard, who did not defect to the ruling party when it was the vogue to do so. This sense of alienation can lead to apathy of party leaders and their supporters and cost the PDP significant votes, particularly in its strongholds of the South-South and South-East. The issues raised by the faceless PDP governor, no doubt, are grim and can very well cost the party the presidential election.

However, none of these concerns are insurmountable. On Obi, the vice presidential nominee, there is little anyone can do about him now. He has been nominated and the time frame allowed for the substitution of candidates has elapsed. But then, he has pulled his weight by demonstrating that he could be an effective VP with his vast knowledge of the economy. By most neutral and objective analyses, he won the vice presidential debate, which also featured Professor Yemi Osinbajo, the current vice president of Nigeria, thereby giving the party a bounce.

It should be given that Atiku Abubakar would spend most of his time consulting party leaders across the country, doing deals and assuaging frayed nerves; in short, demonstrating that he is ready to win and lead! That’s what presidential candidates do. They do the grind, not run to Dubai every now and then to lap up luxury and cool-off.

That said, no challenge the Atiku campaign is going through compares with that being faced by President Muhamadu Buhari. The man has no record to run on and has put together a tattered coalition held together by the illusion of inheriting power in 2023.

In 2015, the momentum was definitely in favour of Candidate Buhari. It was clear as day that Nigerians were fed up with the Goodluck Jonathan government, giving his inability to rise up to the challenges of the time, mainly insecurity and corruption, coupled with what was generally regarded as an uninspiring and underwhelming leadership. His government was tagged ‘clueless’ as Nigerians dreamt of a change.


Buhari was well placed to take advantage of this widespread disaffection as the candidate of the biggest ever coalition put together by the opposition. Supported by a well-heeled communication team, the APC presidential candidate ran an effective campaign, promising to fix Nigeria and deliver a much better country than the one he sought to wrest from the PDP. His manifesto had the solution to all of our ills. On paper, that is. From corruption and good governance to insurgency and insecurity; health to agriculture, and issues in the Niger Delta to the economy, the Buhari policy document was comprehensive and had well thought out solutions to some of the challenges that had plagued our country for years.

The election is therefore Atiku’s to lose. No campaign is perfect. Donald Trump of the U.S. ran one of the most chaotic campaigns ever, yet won the election, mainly by feeding off the citizens’ disgruntlement with the status quo. Atiku can do the same, chirping off the so-called integrity of Buhari and reminding Nigerians how badly the man has done the job he was elected for.


A few examples will suffice. On corruption and good governance, Candidate Buhari promised to “show personal leadership in the war against corruption and hold all the people who work with me to count.” On insurgency and insecurity, he pledged to “give special attention to the welfare of our armed forces and their families, lost heroes and their families and the victims of insurgency”, as well as “Provide of the best and appropriate military and other materials the country needs to combat insurgency and religious violence, kidnapping and rural banditry.”

The document was that comprehensive and covered every sphere of our national life. And no doubt, went a long way in convincing many Nigerians that Buhari was the real deal and was prepared for the arduous task of leading Nigeria into a more stable and prosperous future. Nothing could presently be further from the truth. It has turned out that there is a huge gap between the candidate, Buhari and the man who took over the leadership of the country after the election. Sadly for Nigeria, Candidate Buhari was dressed in borrowed robes.

On being elected, the true Buhari emerged as he ran the most bigoted, nepotistic, exclusive and incompetent government, the like of which we have, perhaps, never seen in the history of our country. The man is provincial, lacks energy and has the penchant for surrounding himself with shady characters from his part of the country. Oby Ezekwesili, the former minister and now presidential candidate put it better when she described the president as lazy, one who enjoys the trappings of his job but not the hard work that comes with it.

The consequences have been dire for the country, which went into recession the first full year Buhari came to power. Since then it has been down the hill for the economy. Over 11 million jobs have been lost since the president took over and hundreds of businesses have shut down and left the country. Nigeria became the poverty capital of the world in 2018; that is, the country with the highest number of extremely poor people. The government has funded the last three budgets with loans and bonds, and consequently, our external debts have risen by over N11 trillion in the last three-and-a-half years. All the indices are bad and growing worse under Buhari.

Security, which arguably is one of the bases on which Buhari got elected, has deteriorated so much that at no other time in the history of Nigeria have we had more deaths as a result of killings by non-state actors. In Zamfara and much of the North-West region, unidentified marauders murder almost at will. The Boko Haram militants have resurged in the North-East and taken over several communities. Several local governments in Borno are no-go areas as the insurgents are fully in charge there. Our soldiers, just like before, now continuously complain about the lack of arms and ammunition to tackle the insurgents. With Buhari nothing has changed, except for worse. Like in the case of pillaging armed herdsmen, who have sacked community after community in the North-Central region and barely got any real pushback from the commander-in-chief.

As such, Buhari, knowing he does not have a record to run on, is relying heavily on his coalition-of-the-corrupt, the never-do-well, the-PDP-disgruntled-and-rejects, the-any-government-in-power (AGIPS), the-2023-hopeful, and in fact, anyone who can assure him of even 10 votes. The man is so desperate to get another chance at ruining, sorry running, Nigeria that he does not even pretend to having integrity or fighting corruption anymore. That’s why he could not move against the governor of Kano State, Abdullahi Ganduje, who was caught stuffing dollar bribes into his babariga recently. That’s why his new found friends are people like Senator Godswill Akpabio and Orji Uzor Kalu who have gigantic corruption cases on their neck. And that is why he is powerless to call his wife to order even when the woman has set up a parallel campaign council.

The election is, therefore, Atiku’s to lose. No campaign is perfect. Donald Trump of the U.S. ran one of the most chaotic campaigns ever, yet won the election, mainly by feeding off the citizens’ disgruntlement with the status quo. Atiku can do the same, chirping off the so-called integrity of Buhari and reminding Nigerians how badly the man has done the job he was elected for.

https://opinion.premiumtimesng.com/2019/01/04/why-atiku-may-win-by-tope-ajayi/
I really want Atiku to win, but am afraid of the national treasury.

1 Like

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by SaiAtikuTill203: 6:58pm On Jan 05, 2019
35824L:
They want to fleece Atiku of much of his dollars before telling him the truth.
Mr integrithief buharilooter is a scammer

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by tuniski: 6:59pm On Jan 05, 2019
docadams:
Has this bias analysis removed the flaws in the Atiku campaign structure.

I guess buhari's campaign structure is perfect! Be looking for perfection while majority of citizens are already resolved to send buhari back to daura!
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by SaiAtikuTill203: 7:01pm On Jan 05, 2019
nickxtra:
I really want Atiku to win, but am afraid of the national treasury.
Buhari means doom... Voting him again is inviting the apocalypse to armagedon and expecting quietude. . .
NEVER EVER AGAIN
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by tuniski: 7:18pm On Jan 05, 2019
Guestlander:
Chipping away at someone's integrity, that only makes sense if you have something damaging against the person. If you have to manufacture false stories then your own integrity will be in tatters.

And may I add the PDP has been churning out falsehoods at a relentless pace.

Profoundly
Dishonest
Party
Buhari is a goner!
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by grandstar(m): 7:27pm On Jan 05, 2019
The article is partially grounded on denial

It says Buahri has nothing to run on is just wrong! The infrastructure projects that are visible is the unwritten manifesto of his party.

Whether the economy is growing by an average of 1% over the past 3 years means nothing to many rooting for him as that shows he is performing. It translates to them as either dividends of a good governance a governance they feel beats the PDP years.

That is why a man like Festus Keyamo that is well read supports him. There are many like that. I met a property developer who lashed out at me for condemning the poor economic performance of this government. He said I was an ingrate who did not appreciate the strides the government has made

Many Yoruba's are voting for Buhari because they like his integrity. They also see Atiku is a crook!

For Atiku to win he simply has to lecture the electorate on what 3% economic growth rate means (that's the projected growth rate for next year which is very poor.

Also inform them why the country plunged into a recession showing displaying articles by Soludo and others condemning his statist policies. Inform them that the infrastructure works is founded on massive borrowings which their children's children will continue to pay

A lot of support for Buhari is based on ignorance and not on real facts.

Another 4 years of Buhari will be disastrous for the economy. The past 4 years are just a tip of the iceberg. His next 4 years will expose the rest of the iceberg as he will not be up for re-election again

Any renewed war against corruption may ruin the economy as he believes that "that fight corruption and the economy will be unleashed"

The government eyes will water at the potential billions it can recover from corrupt politicians to mend the economy

2 Likes

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by Nobody: 7:28pm On Jan 05, 2019
Atiku nibo?

Oríkì Buhari (apá kínní)

Intigrity tí kò lẹ́gbẹ́
Ẹkùn ọkọ ''corruption''
Akatakítí, akìtìkata
O gbórí Ọbásanjọ́ ṣe 'dájọ́ Àtíkù
Tó bá jẹ ti ká ṣe òdodo
Ọkọ ''Aishatu'' Ajikẹ ni
''The last man standing'' nínú olóṣèlú

Wọ́n nà án, ó sunkún
Ṣùgbọ́n ojú ẹ ò ṣ'omi
Òun wa nà wọ́n
Wọ́n wá ń t'omi lójú bíi t'egbére
Ògbólóògbó sọ́jà
Tí ń f'agbádá ṣè̀ 'jọba

Wọ́n bú u, bú u
Etí rẹ fẹ́ẹ̀ di
Atúwọnká níbi wọ́n tí ń dáná irọ́
Àfìgbà tó́ dókè òkun
N letíi jagun to kọ̀rẹ́ẹ̀kìtì padà

Wọ́n pa á, pa á, kò kú
Ẹni t'Ọlọ́hun O pa
Igba Obi o le è firọ́ rán ní sàárè
Bi Buhari ò kú
Obituari Jubrin náà lẹ̀ ó máa lẹ̀ kiri

Buhari o
Ṣé kí n kúkú kì ọ lọ 'lé àwọn bàbá rẹ?

#GBAM!

Ẹ ''watch out'' fun ''part 2''
Ẹ kú ojú lọ́nà

2 Likes

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by docadams: 7:42pm On Jan 05, 2019
tuniski:


I guess buhari's campaign structure is perfect! Be looking for perfection while majority of citizens are already resolved to send buhari back to daura!

Make una de there they send him on social media. I expected a tougher race not this hibernating mode from the the main opposition party. PMB will eventually retire to Daura in 2023.
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by jchioma: 8:20pm On Jan 05, 2019
Atiku will win Buhari fair and square!

1 Like

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by tuniski: 11:56pm On Jan 05, 2019
docadams:


Make una de there they send him on social media. I expected a tougher race not this hibernating mode from the the main opposition party. PMB will eventually retire to Daura in 2023.

And you have a loose race Ain't it? Well, you are learning new political realities! This race is not only tight, but buhari is a goner. No be by gragra!!!!
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by docadams: 1:21am On Jan 06, 2019
tuniski:


And you have a loose race Ain't it? Well, you are learning new political realities! This race is not only tight, but buhari is a goner. No be by gragra!!!!

He is the King on the throne that your principal covets.
If you think unseating an incumbent President happens at your beck then you have to wake up from your reverie. Atiku and PDP marriage is so perfect undoing their objectives. On the one hand, the candidate is noted to be one with a questionable upbringing and an adult life steeped in corruption and avarice and on the other, a party that serves as the temple of the Devil. Hope you are not expecting Nigerians to have a sudden amnesia to all their sordid past .The PDP is crumbling. It's only natural to retire it from service.

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by tuniski: 1:35am On Jan 06, 2019
docadams:


He is the King on the throne that your principal covets.
If you think unseating an incumbent President happens at your beck then you have to wake up from your reverie.

Stop this incumbency myth! GEJ was incumbent and lost and don't start the rant of buhari is not GEJ. He is infact easier to defeat!
Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by Ratello: 1:51am On Jan 06, 2019
tuniski:


Stop this incumbency myth! GEJ was incumbent and lost and don't start the rant of buhari is not GEJ. He is infact easier to defeat!
That was a perfect response comrade

1 Like

Re: Premium Times: Why Atiku May Win by docadams: 2:16am On Jan 06, 2019
tuniski:


Stop this incumbency myth! GEJ was incumbent and lost and don't start the rant of buhari is not GEJ. He is infact easier to defeat!

Thank you for acknowledging the obvious fact no matter how much you tried to wish it away. GEJ mismanaged incumbency. He crumbled in the heat of battle The other important factor is that the PDP of today can never equal the APC of 2015 and vice versa. This is why any confidence that you derive from this your logic should perish instantaneously

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