In a statement signed by the Coordinator of the Group, Ahmed Sani Kabara, the party said its stalwarts will not miss the former speaker as “his presence is of no impact, so would his absence be”.
The statement reads “as far as we are concerned, and this is open secret for anyone to verify, Ghali Na’abba has never been of any use to PDP, rather it is the party that has done everything to him; lifting him from a nobody to national fame. It therefore amounts to betrayal and biting the hands that feed him for him to now dump the party.”
It futher stated “the former Speaker is known both in the local chapter of the party and the national level to exhibit traits that are self-centred and invariably unhealthy for a democratic setting. Someone who always wants to lord himself over people should have himself to blame when the table is turned against him.”
According to the group, the former Speaker lack both “local grip and national gravitas” as to be missed by the party at any level.
The group recalled that Na’abba “woefully lost his re-election bid to the House of Representatives in 2003 despite occupying the number 4 seat of the House Speaker. And afterwards, he is not known to have promoted any candidate at any level that eventually succeeds. When he vied for the Senate ticket in 2011, he could not garner any appreciable votes.
“Reading through Na’abba’s so-called letter of resignation one comes across someone who is gone too deep in the self-destruct path of arrogance and self-indulgence and cannot afford to be a follower despite being a paper-weight politician,” the group adds.
The Coordinator of the Kano PDP Frontiers therefore assured President Goodluck Jonathan and the leadership of the PDP to not be worried about the decision of the former Speaker “as big name is not the same thing as big influence”.
Defection from one party to another is now the in-thing in the political system of Nigeria, arty members tend to move from the loosing arty to the winning party.
However, PDP has lost a large number of members to other political parties.
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