Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso yesterday said he will not step down for
anyone in the race for the presidential ticket of the All Progressives
Congress.
The Kano State governor is among APC’s four
presidential aspirants, the others being retired General Muhammadu
Buhari, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar and Mr Sam Nda-Isaiah.
Since Senator Bukola Saraki announced he was shelving his ambition to
be president last week, Kwankwaso is reported to have come under
pressure to step down for Buhari in order to avoid rancour in the party.
There have also been calls for consensus candidacy in APC such that other aspirants would back the former Head of State.
But Kwankwaso told journalists in Kano yesterday he was staying in the race and was not under pressure to quit for anyone.
He also expressed preference for conducting primaries to going for consensus.
“I’m not under any pressure to step down for anybody. In fact nobody
asked me to step down for anybody and doing that will not be even good
for the party,” he said.
“You see many people are used to either
small parties or let me say medium-sized parties where people sit down
and choose somebody in a room. Now we are talking about APC mega party
which is not ANPP, CPC, APGA or ACN.
“It’s a collection of all
and we always tell people to look at the example of PDP. From 1999 to
2011, each election they had to go for primary elections not arranged
election, but real elections.
“Even when we have sitting
presidents in 2003 and 2011, there were elections, serious elections.
And that’s why the PDP has been winning all along and all others who are
making arranged elections are losing elections.
“As you can see
as fate would have it, now PDP has decided to do their own primary in
the Villa and the APC is going to the field. That shows us clearly that
APC will win elections and the PDP will lose election in 2015.”
On the consensus arrangement, he said, “We have always been consistent,
but you see many people who are soliciting a president for this
consensus, many of them are having in mind that when people go and sit
down they will give it to their candidate. That’s consensus to them
that’s the main issue.
“And I believe that since this party is
very strong, all candidates should go round the country and campaign,
bring in more hands, more people. And that’s exactly what we are doing.
In the last few weeks many people joined APC because of me and they will
continue to join especially if I have a ticket.
“Most of the
guys in the PDP, the good ones, are my friends and certainly once I
declare and get a ticket, they will cross over to APC or stay there and
work for me. One of the advantages that I have is that it is not only
APC that will vote, the PDP will also vote for me in the general
elections.”
Kwankwaso said he was confident the party will remain
united after the primaries, and pledged to support any candidate who
gets the ticket.
“If I win the primary election, I will be very
happy and other contestants will work together, we are very close, all
the three or four of us. And of course if anyone wins elections we will
support him,” he said.
Kwankwaso urged for free and fair
elections. “And that’s why we are saying to INEC and other people that
they must not go and take dictations from the villa and come out and
write figures because that will not be acceptable,” he added.
The governor said his formal declaration earlier slated for tomorrow has now been rescheduled for Tuesday in Abuja.
He said the delay was because of the refusal of the Federal Government
to grant him permission to use the Eagle Square for the event.
“It was the issue of venue that made me to change the date of my formal
declaration because they did not give us approval to use the Eagle
Square. It is now going to be on the 28th of this month. We are still
looking for venue but if they don’t give us we will declare on the
streets of Abuja because most of the venues are owned by them,” he said.
Source: #DailyTrust_News.
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