Goodluck Jonathan’s Greatest Mistake – Vincent Ogbulafor Opens Up

3 Min Read
Former President Goodluck Jonathan

Former President, Goodluck Jonathan, has been blamed by Chief Vincent Ogbulafor for the loss of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) during the 2015 general election.

The former chairman of the PDP blamed Jonathan for the party’s loss, saying that if Jonathan had supported a northern candidacy, the party would have been victorious.

Ogbulafor added that Jonathan’s decision was the cause of PDP’s failure which has in turn led the party to its current leadership tussle.

He said: “The person who caused the failure of PDP is Jonathan. PDP had internal democracy, a zoning pattern which worked for them for 16 years, and we agreed at a meeting that power would stay in the North for eight years before it returns to the South for another eight years.

“You will not say Yar’Adua ruled for eight years; not even for four years, because he was sick. The best thing Jonathan would have done was to bring a Northerner and make him President and agree that when he finishes, power will come to the South and if it is him again, then he will contest.

“Doing that, the North will be happy; that was my feeling, and that was why I said that power is still in the North because we agreed eight years each for the two zones. So that is where the power tussle began and that was the downfall of PDP. When we refused to follow our guidelines, we derailed and there was no more internal democracy.

“When I said power would remain in the North, Jonathan did not like it and they made sure they unseated me. I left. That is when I knew that PDP was in for trouble, and that was when the diarrhoea started.

“But it has happened: same Katsina State where Yar’Adua is from. Immediately I left, Jonathan had five PDP chairmen in one year. It is unheard of and that is when the problem started, and it has continued to degenerate.

“When Tony Anenih, Chairman, Board of Trustees resigned, when Muazu resigned, I commended their guts and I said these men want PDP to survive because they quietly exited.

“I advised then that the National Working Committee, NWC, of the party should resign because they had led PDP to failure, but they were more interested in the money they were sharing; they failed to heed my advice and that led PDP to where we are today.”
 

 

Share this Article
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.