The ruling party warned public office-holders on the platform of the APC to choose between campaigning for Tinubu’s ticket or resigning their appointments from the party-led administration.
Ajaka’s call comes as a reaction to the public display of apathy towards Tinubu’s presidential candidacy by the Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige.
The minister, who spoke in an interview on Channels TV’s Politics Today, had hesitated when asked if he would endorse his party’s candidate or his fellow kinsman and successor, Peter Obi of the Labour Party in the 2023 elections.
He said, “I’m not active in politics for now because I am facing national assignment,” he said, when asked his preferred candidate between the APC’s Tinubu and the Labour Party’s Peter Obi.
But the party image-maker said Ngige’s action was unbecoming of a sitting minister in a government of the ruling party.
“It is expected of a serving minister in an APC government to be a trusted apostle of Tinubu’s presidency in 2023, who along with other party leaders, laboured to ensure the enthronement of the same government in 2015 which they are now serving in.
“Chief Ngige and other APC appointees, especially in the federal cabinet should not forget in a hurry that they are holding onto the party’s mandate, hence, the need to protect it with whatever it requires, but if they can no longer protect the interest of the APC in the public and that of our presidential candidate (Tinubu), I think the honourable thing to do is to step aside from the government formed by the APC.”
The APC Deputy National Publicity Secretary expressed concerns that such statement coming from one of their ministers could generate bad blood among the APC rank and file.
Ajaka called on the President to call his cabinet members to order and obtain their commitments to deliver the APC in 2023.