There are plans underway for the creation of a new party by former President Olusegun Obasanjo, which will rival the ruling party come 2023, POLITICS NIGERIA has reliably gathered.
According to sources, the new party will accommodate aggrieved members of the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC, and those of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.
The party will be flagged off with some former Governors from different parts of the country.
This would be the former President’s comeback to party politics since he torn his PDP membership card and resigned from active ahead of the 2015 general election.
Although Obasanjo has been playing a major role in the emergence of political office holders, through his weight and influence after the 2015 episode, he has not been a card-carrying member of any political organisation.
In the plan to get a new party, Obasanjo is hoping to harvest many key members of the two major political parties, both laden with different crises.
It was also gathered that the ex-President seeks to leverage on the potential rancour that would ensue in the ruling APC after the conduct of its primaries.
This is plausible, analysts say, considering the outcome of the APC governorship primaries in Anambra state that saw to the emergence of Senator Andy Ubah.
Political gladiators in Anambra including the Alor-born Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, have alleged that the primary was marred by infractions, seeking the conduct of another.
More so, different branches of the APC have been enmeshed in crises in recent times resulting from the controversial registration and revalidation exercise that took place nationwide.
On the other hand, the PDP, is struggling to find its footing as many members have continued to dump the party for APC.
Despite the reconciliatory efforts of the committee headed by former Senate President, Bukola Saraki, to make peace amongst warring factions, the party is still in crisis.
I’ ABUA JOSEPH OGBOR from C.R.S is 100% ready for that,carry me along.
What future for the entire black race judging by the way Nigeria has been messed up for sixty years. When Joseph Conrad sailed past the Gulf of Guinea on his way to the old Belgian Congo, he never showed the slightest interest in that part of the world. He never realized that the things within the old Belgian Congo that inspired his novel, Heart of Darkness would be played out for real in Nigeria over a hundred years later.