The legal challenges facing the party is
coming just as it is becoming evident that the APC may have turned its
attention off the promise it made to forward the recommendations of its
committee on True Federalism to President Muhammadu Buhari.
Following the judgment of the Supreme
Court which annulled all the congresses held in the state, the
leadership of the party sacked the party executives that emerged from
the voided congresses saying it would conduct fresh congresses on a date
to be announced later.
However, kelvinbella crew learnt that the
candidates who emerged from the recent primary elections in the state,
especially the governorship candidate, Tonye Cole, and others who won
their tickets from the indirect primary elections patronised by
factional state executive loyal to the Transport Minister, Rotimi
Amaechi, are yet to know their fate.
They are yet to come to terms with the
implications of Supreme Court judgment and the subsequent decision by
the party to cancel the congresses.
The National Publicity Secretary of APC,
Mallam Lanre Isa-Onilu, said yesterday that the national leadership of
party is currently reviewing the situation, adding that it will make
public its decision soon.
The party spokesman who responded
through telephone, said: “Our legal department will interpret that
aspect of the Supreme Court judgment.”
On whether this will affect the list of
candidates submitted by the party to INEC especially as the deadline for
submission of candidates has expired, Isa-Onilu said: “As far as we are
concerned, we are going to conduct fresh congresses for Rivers State,
and other issues are going to be sorted out by our legal department and
our members will be duly informed.”
However, another reliable source has
said the party may be considering substitution as an option to save it
from losing the chance of participating in the 2019 general election in
the state.
Meanwhile, as preparations for 2019
electioneering takes centre stage, the ruling party seems to have
deprioritised action on recommendations of its committee on
restructuring.
kelvinbella crew gathered from highly reliable
source that the new party leadership feels that the report on
restructuring is not on its priority list.
The immediate past National Working
Committee (NWC) of APC led by Chief John Odigie Oyegun had set up the
committee on True Federalism chaired by the Kaduna State Governor,
Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, to articulate the party’s position on
restructuring.
The party in a bid to starve off
criticism mounted by the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP),
promised to submit recommendations of the restructuring panel to
President Muhammadu Buhari for possible legislative action.
Before the exit of the Oyegun-led NWC, APC had met and approved the recommendations of the restructuring committee.
They said it would go ahead to table the document before President Buhari so that he can present it to the National Assembly.
In its recommendations, the APC
committee on True Federalism had proposed the devolution of powers to
the federating units and some measure of resource control.
It also recommended state police to be
operated alongside the federal police with each force having its own
defined areas of authority.
The committee recommended that certain
items, about 68 of them, be taken off the current exclusive legislative
list and transferred to the concurrent list.
Some of the items include prisons, labour matters and registration of business names.
The El-Rufai committee had also
recommended fiscal federalism, saying mines and minerals, oilfields and
mining, geological surveys and natural gas should be included the in
concurrent list.
0 Comments