Omisore and Aregbesola |
In this piece, TUNDE ODESOLA examines the variables that may determine Osun governorship election on Saturday
Next Saturday’s governorship election in
Osun State is on all lips for various reasons which include the
ridiculous and the altruistic. The election, like the bulbous aquatic
creature, octopus, could be hinged on eight legs. What do the Osun
election and the octopus have in common? The octopus has eight legs just
as Osun governorship election is taking place in the eighth month of
the year. Considered as the world’s most intelligent invertebrate, the
octopus has a wide range of techniques through which it thwarts
attackers. In like manner, the Independent National Electoral Commission
has devised some strategies to thwart plans by unscrupulous politicians
to rig the election as INEC chairman, Prof Attahiru Jega, on Wednesday
vowed that the Osun election cannot be rigged. The virtue of the octopus
was brought to the fore at the FIFA 2010 World Cup in South Africa when
Paul, the Octopus, made stunning accurate predictions that brought him
global attention as an animal oracle.
Unlike Paul the Octopus, proffering an
accurate prediction for the all-important election would be a Herculean
task but a little journey down history lane and a look at emerging
political issues could open a window into where the pendulum might
likely swing on August 9. The eight legs of the octopus include:
The real battle
Although Osun is the epicentre of the
election battle, the battleground is Nigeria and the ultimate prize is
the Presidency. The election is about Jonathan and Maj-Gen. Muhammadu
Buhari, the likely presidential candidate of the APC. The election is
about the North seeking to reinvent itself in a reordered Nigerian
polity, where it is fast losing hold on power. Jonathan, however, seems
to be having an edge with the gale of impeachments hitting
APC-controlled states, the North-East insurgency diminishing the
possibility of conducting elections in the region and the recent victory
of the PDP in Ekiti.
South-West perception
The Jonathan presidency is largely
perceived by the Yoruba as anti-South-West with the lopsidedness in
federal appointments against the people of the region. Only, the post of
the Chief of Staff, a non-constitutional and non-executive role, is the
highest a Yoruba ever got in the Jonathan presidency. Leaders like PDP
Board of Trustee member, Chief Ebenezer Babatope, have dismissed the
insinuation that the president had treated the Yoruba with disdain,
insisting that the President has appointed some Yoruba persons into
important offices. Speaking during his defection on Tuesday, Oyinlola
lamented that Jonathan did not appoint a Yoruba into any of the top
posts in the country. He also said, “Omisore is greedy. I don’t know who
killed Bola Ige o. The person nominated by Omisore to replace me as
national secretary of the PDP was with him in prison (when he was
standing trial for Ige’s murder); the person he nominated as minister of
police affairs, (Jelili Adesiyan), was with him in prison too. The
person who is being nominated to run for Osun-Central senatorial
district post (Kunle Alao) was also with him in jail. The state chairman
of the party, (Gani Olaoluwa) was also with him in jail? It is only his
deputy governorship candidate (Adejare Bello) that did not go to jail
with them. Are we saying that if you don’t go to jail you can’t lead?
The inability of the Jonathan administration to solve the problems of
insurgency and insecurity has become an albatross for the PDP.
Osun political history
Historically, the emergence of Isiaka
Adeleke in January 2, 1992 as the first executive governor of Osun State
on the platform of the Social Democratic Party, a party peopled by
self-styled progressives, and the ascension of Bisi Akande to power as
governor in May 29, 1999 on the ticket of the Alliance for Democracy set
the political foot of Osun on ‘progressive lane.’ But when Olagunsoye
Oyinlola, a former Military Administrator of Lagos State, whose father
was an ardent Action Group supporter, emerged governor in May 29, 2003
on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party, the political landscape
of Osun was set to be dominated by the ‘conservatives,’ an appellation,
by which the PDP is largely called. However, there is an insignificant
line of difference between the ideologies of the PDP and the All
Progressives Congress as defection by politicians from both political
parties is as easy as stepping through a door. Actions by politicians of
the two leading parties depict lookalike Siamese twins.
When a Court of Appeal sitting in Ibadan
sacked the Oyinlola administration in November 2010 and proclaimed Rauf
Aregbesola as governor, the statewide thunderous jubilation and
excitement that greeted the sacking showed that the electorate was done
with the PDP. The mass appeal of the APC as a political brand in Osun
came to the fore during the 2011 general elections when the party,
operating under the name of Action Congress of Nigeria, swept all
elective posts even as its presidential candidate, Nuhu Ribadu, thumped
the eventual winner, President Goodluck Jonathan, in the state. Osun was
the only state in the South-West where the former Chairman of the
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission boss won in the federation.
In the 2011 Osun-Central senatorial
election, the candidate of the ACN, Sola Adeyeye, defeated Oyinlola by
80, 526 votes, scoring 129, 527 votes against the former governor’s 49,
001 votes. The candidate of the PDP in Osun-East senatorial election,
Iyiola Omisore scored 51, 315 votes while ACN candidate, Jide Omoworare,
scored 119, 852 votes, leaving a marginal difference of 68,537. Like
Oyinlola, Isiaka Adeleke conceded defeat in the Osun-West senatorial
race as he congratulated ACN candidate in the election, Mudashiru
Hussain, who defeated him by 44,881 votes with Adeleke scoring 77,090
votes and Hussain scoring 121,971 votes. Displaying a rare sense of
sportsmanship, however, Oyinlola, Isiaka and Omisore accepted the result
of the election and congratulated the winners.
Emerging variables
Certainly, a lot of water has passed
under the bridge since 2011. The PDP, whose members were booed on the
streets after the ouster of the Oyinlola administration, has come on
powerfully onto the political scene. The APC no longer maintains a
vice-like grip on Osun politics as a result of some of its policies and
the resurgence of the opposition under the leadership of Omisore, who
has spent resources and time to build and maintain the party’s
structure. Omisore said that the APC had opened a campaign of calumny
against him by continuously labelling him as the killer of the slain
Minister of Justice, Chief Bola Ige, despite being discharged and
acquitted by a law court because the party knows that it stood no chance
against his popularity and acceptability.
The demolition of several buildings in
the capital city, Osogbo, did not go down well with the people of
Osogbo, whose support for Aregbesola was colossal. Also, the religious
chaos caused by the wearing of the ‘hijab,’ a face covering by Muslim
students in Christian secondary schools and the attendant resistance by
Christian faithful left the public image of the government with a black
eye. Similarly, the merging of public schools and the evolution of a
single uniform for all public schoolchildren drew the ire of a large
number of Osun people, who saw the policies as bad and ineffective. Some
groups protested the school merger, saying it would erode the heritage
built by proprietors and old students of such schools. The
infrastructural achievements of the Aregbesola administration in the
three geopolitical zones of the state cannot be overlooked, however.
The peopling of the state executive
cabinet with members, who are relatively not known to the masses, is
another reason why people are not happy with the administration just as a
good number of such members do not connect with the electorate as local
politicians would. This coupled with the global economic meltdown and
the attendant shrinking of federal allocation has made the masses to
call on Aregbesola to stop ‘tarring roads’ and embark on ‘tarring
stomachs.’
Massive deployment of military men for
the election has not gone down well with the people of the state, who
detest the siege mentality foisted by the soldiers. The deployment may
be counter-productive for the ruling party, whom many see as being
behind the action. Aregbesola is being seen as a victim of PDP-led
Federal Government highhandedness and he has been gaining voters’
sympathy on this account.
OYES
The establishment of the Osun Youth
Empowerment Scheme and the employment of 40, 000 youths as volunteers is
seen as a deft stroke by Aregbesola to not only engage youths but also
to increase his support base. The PDP criticised the scheme, which it
described as servitude, promising to make Osun youths gainfully employed
if elected into office.
Obasanjo, Oyinlola, Adeleke, Akinbade factors
Although former President Olusegun
Obasanjo is still in the PDP, his political loyalists are in the APC.
The National Chairman, South-West APC, Segun Oni, who is a former
Governor of Ekiti State, is an Obasanjo loyalist. The same thing goes
for Oyinlola, who accused Jonathan of not trusting him despite his loyal
service to the PDP. Investigation shows that the PDP wields
considerable influence in Odo-Otin, prior to Oyinlola’s defection. His
defection is likely to affect the fortunes the PDP in Odo-Otin, in
particular. Known for his control of Ede and Egbedore councils in
particular, the defection of Adeleke was a big minus for the PDP, whose
leaders he accused of beating him up and threatening to kill him. Also,
the defection of a former Secretary to Osun State Government under
Oyinlola, Fatai Akinbade, to Labour Party has been a big talking point
of the election because Akinbade is seen essentially as a grass-roots
politician with numerous supporters.
The PDP is wont to say it is not missing
any of its past leaders who had defected. Specifically, Omisore said,
“Aregbesola lost this election over a year ago. The PDP is winning the
election. If they (defectors) were with us before and we lost, maybe it
is time we changed our tactics so that we could win. You can’t continue
to give the same drug to a patient that is not getting well.” The state
Chairman of Osun PDP, Gani Olaoluwa, and the party’s Director of
Publicity, Research and Strategy, Diran Odeyemi, said the party will not
miss any member who defected just as he described Oyinlola as a
“political traitor, who is never consistent.”
APC, Tinubu factors
The APC has been lampooned by the PDP as a
party that thrives on the imposition of candidates and also of being
under the iron-grip of its national leader, Bola Tinubu. If the Osun
election was held four months ago, it would have been a close call
between the two leading parties. But the APC, in the last few weeks, has
been able to settle areas of disaffection among the populace which
include payment of salary arrears, payment of pensions and compensation
to people whose buildings were demolished in the urban renewal scheme of
the government. A national leader of the PDP, Bode Goerge, called
Tinubu the Emperor of Bourdillon, “whose daughter must be Iyaloja, whose
wife must be a senator, whose in-law must be in the House of Reps; who
must control everything. But the people are wiser now.”
Voter statistics
Both Aregbesola and Omisore hail from
Osun-East senatorial district with the former hailing from Ilesa while
Omisore hails from Ife. Ijesa communities have six councils which
include Oriade, Obokun, Ilesa-West, Ilesa-East, Atakumosa-East and
Atakumosa-West with a voter population of 241, 807 while Ife communities
with Ife-Central, Ife-East, Ife-North and Ife-South having a voter
population of 266, 891. However, the massive support of Aregbesola in
Osogbo local government councils with 182, 250 voter population cannot
be overlooked.
When addressing a stakeholders’ forum,
which included Aregbesola in Osogbo, on Tuesday, Jega expressed
satisfaction that 70.13 per cent of the voter population had collected
the Permanent Voter Cards translating into 986, 117 voters. He assured
that INEC will conduct credible election in Osun.
Pray, who among the 20 candidates in the
election would Octopus Paul have picked if he were still alive? May be
Paul would have been able to tell if the election would be greeted by
violence and bloodshed.
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