Presidential candidate of the New Nigeria People Party, Rabiu Kwankwaso, has given reasons why Nigerians of northern extraction will not support the Presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Peter Obi, in the 2023 presidential election.
Kwankwaso noted that the northerners would find it challenging to support a candidate from the South-East region based on the animosity northerners believe their kinsmen are facing in the region.
The former Kano state governor stated this on Sunday while responding to questions surrounding the proposed merger between the NNPP and the LP on Channels TV.
“The northerner voters have made up their minds on what to do; certainly NNPP, nobody can change it,” he said.
Although Kwankwaso said he would not mind the opportunity to become a vice president since he has no job at the moment, he explained the rationale behind contesting the presidential election and a candidate and not a running mate to a south-easterner.
“Unfortunately, there are many issues in the South East, and a northern voter is the worst-hit in this issue of maladministration in this country,” he asserted. “But even under that circumstance, a northern voter also believes that he is better with one united Nigeria.
“Therefore, most of the things that are happening in the South, especially in the South East; people are not comfortable with that and as long as you have somebody from there in any party, it will be very difficult for the northern voters to vote, and that’s the situation now.”
Kwankwaso stressed that an alliance with Obi was highly likely with the aim of coming together to work as a family and give Nigerians an alternative to the PDP and the APC.
He said, “We have seen the situation in the country today in terms of economy, in terms of security, in terms of education and infrastructure … and the voters of this country are yearning for a change and I believe we will only be fair to ourselves if we come together and bring out a real alternative for the people of this country and I am happy to say that even at the moment, the NNPP, even though very new in some ways – just about four months – is everywhere in this country.”
On the party to be used should an alliance is formed, the presidential candidate responded, “I believe that there are so many modalities that can be worked out, it’s just a matter of getting the right calibre of people to sit down and look at the situation as it is.
“The major issue as it stands today is the issue of who becomes the president and who becomes the vice president and I believe this is the time really to advise – especially those who are positively behind the candidate of the Labour Party – that for me, I have seen an opportunity for the South East to be relevant in the next dispensation.”
“In PDP, they (the South East) are completely out, and so in the APC. The only opportunity now is the NNPP. I believe it is in the interest of the Labour Party and the NNPP, and even in the interest of this country.”