Former Vice President of Nigeria Atiku Abubakar has formally announced his
defection to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
The former vice president announced this on Sunday afternoon in a live
video broadcast on Facebook, less than two weeks after he left the ruling
All Progressives Congress (APC).
“The key to creating job is a strong economy and that is why we are
currently lacking,” he said.
“So today, I want to let you know that I’m returningg home to the PDP, as
the issues that led me to leave it have now been resolved.”
Explaining why he left the APC on November 24, he accused the party of
failing to spearhead the rebirth of a new Nigeria as promised among other
reasons.
Atiku had also claimed that the APC has adopted arbitrariness among
similar practices, as well as failed to carry the youths along in
governance.
“While other parties have purged themselves of the arbitrariness and
unconstitutionality that led to fractionalisation, the All Progressives
Congress has adopted those same practices and even gone beyond them to
institute a regime of a draconian clampdown on all forms of democracy
within the party and the government it produced,” he had said.
Hours after the former vice president announced his resignation from the
APC, the PDP had said his doors were open for him to return to the party.
PDP National Publicity Secretary, Dayo Adeyeye, who addressed a news
conference recently in Abuja, said they would gladly welcome the former
presidential candidate if he decides to return to the party.
“Being a founding father of PDP, and because we have an umbrella that is
big enough to accommodate everybody; our doors are wide open for him
(Atiku) to come back to his home without any preconditions.”
But the APC spokesman, Mr Bolaji Abdullahi, said in a statement that they
were not worried about the exit of Atiku from their party.
Abdullahi said the APC wished him good luck in his future political
endeavours, saying the party would not miss him except it was able to
ascertain that a substantial number of members left with the former
chieftain.
“A loss of fortune is in numbers. So, if we are able to see the number of
people that followed the vice president to his new party, that is when we
will begin to worry but we have not seen. So, when we see we will know
whether we need to worry or not. It is about numbers,” he had said.