PDP: GODSDAY ORUBEBE CALLS FOR REFORMS IN OPEN LETTER TO PARTY CHAIRMAN, UCHE SECONDUS,
Dear Sir,
Weathering the Storm: Marching Into
A Better Nigeria
1.
I
crave your indulgence on the premise of our relationship, working close together
in the interest of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), to address you through
an open letter. As the National Chairman of our great Party, your stewardship
in its affairs have ramifications for its survival as a vibrant representation
of Nigerians’ aspirations for a greater country. It will also affect your
legacy to restore honour and virtue to the PDP as an ideological force in the
social, economic and political development of Nigeria.
2.
Seeking
Closure:
To borrow the term used by then President Barrack Obama when his Party lost
woefully to the opposition in the 2010 American mid-term elections, the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP), our bastion of hope and renewal for Nigeria, received a
“Shellacking” in the 2015 Nigerian general elections. Our internal efforts to
diagnose what happened identified imposition, impunity, arrogance and greed as
the biggest factors responsible for the unprecedented defeat in the history of
Nigeria.
3.
As
the first political party in our nation’s history to move from governance to
opposition, our Party moved into uncharted territory and we struggled to find
the right strategy and response to this monumental challenge. The current state
of our great Party following last year’s convention leaves troubling thoughts
about our readiness and resolve to march forward with vigor, courage and
sustainable ideas to lead Nigeria into a future that coming generations will be
proud to take ownership.
4.
To
achieve this, we must accept the mistakes of the PDP during the sixteen years
we held reign over Nigeria’s social, political and economic affairs. We must
acknowledge our missteps and draw lessons from those failures. We must also
ensure that we take credit for everything that went right. Under our
leadership, Nigeria recorded economic progress and made giant strides as a
proud member of the Comity of Nations. We opened new sectors of economic
participation and created millions of jobs in areas that were deemed
impossible. We were architects of the biggest wealth generation the nation has
ever seen. We brought back hope in the Nigeria project and restored pride among
Nigerians as citizens of a country ready to pull its weight for its people. We
moved women inclusion in leadership positions further than any other party in
our nation’s history. It was also the PDP that gave the country the most number
of freest and fairest elections in our history.
5.
Despite
our set back in the 2015 polls, we must be proud of what we have achieved and
be ready to lead again for a better Nigeria. We must re-tool and re-imagine on
a bigger scale, through innovative and creative ways, the best solutions to our
nation’s challenges. The PDP must become a warehouse of ingenuity and a default
place for ideas to thrive on the future of Nigeria as a successful and
undivided entity. At a time of hopelessness, division, hunger, confusion and
disillusion, we must be a voice of hope, a guiding light and force of
resilience where every Nigerian has an equal opportunity to achieve their
dreams.
6.
A
House of Cards:
Unfortunately, our Party is still lost in depression and suffering from a
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). We have gone from a Party of pride to a Party
of shame and gradually receding into the abyss of political reality. For the
simple reason that the nation is witnessing calls for the rise of a “third
force”, we are fast becoming a shadow of ourselves. The PDP’s failure to come
out of its shell has left a national opposition vacuum, within which, we have
witnessed wanton disregard for the rule of law and the wellbeing of ordinary
Nigerians.
7.
Chairman
sir, we are gradually drifting towards the factors of imposition, impunity,
arrogance and greed that brought us to this sorry state. We are not building a
culture of democratic representation within the party. We are also not
providing concrete answers to the challenges of the country; neither is the PDP
consciously working to re-invent itself as a party that is rid of its past
mistakes. We have not demonstrated the required seriousness to have a
successful outcome in the 2019 general elections. Such success will be
predicated on our collective goals as a Party and our strategic aspirations to
once again become the ruling party.
8.
An
uncoordinated marshaling of our members and supporters into the 2019 general
elections will leave the PDP with a second and deeper bout of depression and
PTSD that we may not survive. The Party is gradually coming under the control
of certain individuals who are exhibiting dangerous levels of undemocratic
behavior, threatening the entire fabric of the Party. We must take a cue from
the idea of democracy itself; no single individual, force or group can be
greater than the collective interests of a constituted authority. The Party
must become a microcosm of the ideals and values that it intends to market to
Nigerians as the better option in the stewardship of Nigeria’s affairs.
Grandstanding and imposition must give way to a healthy competition within the
party.
9.
Renewal
of Hope:
My Chairman, permit me to remind you that the PDP has lots of examples to draw
from, in our quest to regain stewardship of Nigeria’s affairs. Indeed, after
the woeful loss in the 2010 mid-term elections, the Democratic Party in the
United States of America came back in just two years to win the 2012
Presidential and Senate races. After the 2016 general elections left them in
disarray when they lost the Presidential, Senate and Congress elections, the
Party is once again back to winning ways. Is there a magic formula? No. Through
these down swings, the Democratic Party has worked hard to learn its lessons
and re-position for the next round.
10.
The
culture of impunity and imposition, rampant within the party during its
Presidential Primaries resulted in disunity among its members and supporters. Through
a thorough reflection and a post-mortem analysis, the Democratic Party embarked
on a thorough restructuring reflecting the lessons of the 2016 ballot losses,
including its culture. As the reforms of the Democratic Party continue to take
shape, it has won at least two national elections – Alabama Senate race and
Pennsylvania House race – both of which it was expected to lose. These
victories, while providing big moral boosts to the Party, were outcomes of
painstaking work to steady the ship, plug leakages, purge excesses and restore
hope in its ability to enact policies and legislation that will advance peoples
progress.
11.
Our
party must emulate this courage, to rescue itself from its shadows of defeat
and stop its leakages. We are a Party that is leaking character, morality,
courage, innovation and visionary thought. We must rekindle the light of hope
and regain the trust of Nigerians through painstaking work that requires a true
democratic movement of critical mass. The light will only shine when we are
truly a grassroots Party that creates equal opportunities that will attract the
best minds and hands for a collective nation building campaign.
12.
A
Nation of Giant Strides: Our nation building must encompass honest and open
discussions on restructuring of Nigeria. Our Party must take leadership in
shaping conversation about the social, economic and political progress of the
country. We cannot afford to be dismissed as a finished party in our national
development goals. We must rise to our responsibility of constructive
criticisms as the official opposition party and give voice to the voiceless
across the nation. We must become the defender-in-chief against a
Commander-in-Chief that has continued to lead with wanton disregard for the
concerns of poor citizens.
13.
Nigerians
must be able to see an opposition led by a Party with principles and a clear
agenda to lead the country to greater heights. Our national renewal strategy
must take lessons from our collective mistakes and combine them with fresh
ideas to design a grand strategy for equal gains in our development journey.
The failures of leadership that has brought the country to this precipice under
a government that has made terrible decisions one after the other cannot go
unchecked. My open opposition to the way and manner this government came to
power is vindication for the PDP, that a Party that went to such lengths to gain
power had nothing to offer to Nigerians after all. How do we redeem this
situation without a clear, comprehensive and forward-looking re-positioning of
the PDP?
14.
Rise of the Phoenix: From the ashes of
defeat and wishful relegation, the Peoples Democratic Party must reclaim its
glory and showcase the resilience of mind, perspective and intellect that
brought it victories in four out of five elections. That energy has never left
us. We must now channel it towards a series of reforms that will re-birth the PDP
as a Party that becomes a perpetual part of Nigerians’ political thought. Mr
Chairman, we must reorganize, make our case with the grassroots, empower the
voters, leverage technology and become a people funded movement for this to
happen.
a.
Breaking the Silos: The PDP must become
a Party of one and a Party for all. We must bring to life, the representation
of our logo as a Party that welcomes everyone and every idea under its shade.
We must reorganize the Party to break down the silos of loyalty and allegiance
within the Party. There are too many blocks of influence that must be merged
into a single ideological premise that guides our activities. If we must
survive many cycles of electoral victories and defeat, then our resilience to
change must be engrained in the very idea of being a member of the PDP. The PDP
must become the most important organ, after Nigeria, in political alignments
and calculations to our members. We must provide a pathway of equal opportunities
to the youth, women and other marginalized groups and lend credence to true
definition of democracy. Indeed, the PDP must symbolize a political party by
the people, for the people and of the people.
b.
Grassroots Focus: Our success as a
political Party from now on will hinge on how we engage at the grassroots. We
must become a listening Party that takes the plight of the common person as
serious as we take our quest for leadership. We must build a movement of
grassroots membership with equal representation and a common purpose;
patriotism. Elections in the 21st Century belong to parties that
respond to the needs of the people. They belong to parties that design
solutions to problems that affect the many and parties that exemplify the
principles of fairness and justice for the common person.
c.
Technology: We must make
technology our primary tool on our journey to a better, more responsive PDP.
The PDP must become adept at utilizing technology, not only in canvassing for
votes, but in highlighting the challenges of Nigeria and proffering solutions
to them. Technology opens an immense array of opportunities for the Party to
succeed in opposition and in government. We must actively push for a youthful
leadership that possess the understanding and skills to utilize technology for
political gains. Outside of Social Media, the PDP must invest in technology
that improves our internal processes and become the pathways for the successful
implementation of our strategies.
d.
Voters Empowerment: We must build
serious partnerships with individuals and organizations that work towards voter
protection and empowerment. This will be a highly visible contribution to the
growth and deepening of democracy in the consciousness of every Nigerian. We
must ensure that the PDP fights against voter apathy in the upcoming elections
and play active roles in voters’ registration drives. The PDP cannot afford a
single potential vote to go uncast at the ballots; after all, every vote
counts. Through these partnerships, the Party must ensure that it works to
eliminate voter intimidation and make voter discrimination an anomaly, rather than
remain a norm.
e.
Funding Revolution: One of the biggest
challenges that the PDP faces is balancing its needs for funding with
established egalitarian values and internal systems. If the Party continues to
be held hostage by few major donors, it will continue to find it difficult to
instill the values that will endear us to Nigerians. We must take our appeal to
Nigerians and through our reforms, let the Party truly become a people funded Party.
Small donations from millions of Nigerians will go a long way in the Party’s
financial requirements and will create the necessary atmosphere for true
ownership among members of the Party. This requires a more transparent approach
to the systems and organization of our great Party as well as better openness
on its finances. We must also begin to lobby for true campaign reform that will
ensure that political parties are not beholden to individuals or select groups
of people.
15.
Mr
Chairman, it is my belief that these concerns will be received with open arms
and an open mind. The restoration of the PDP to its position of power will not
happen automatically. It requires our collective efforts to begin that journey
with the conviction that the Party must reform, welcome a youthful involvement
and utilize innovative approaches that not only will improve its chances in
upcoming elections but in the rightful stewardship of the affairs of the
country. It is my expectation that the necessary reforms will be put in place
before it is too late to salvage what we have left. I wish you a successful
tenure and pray for the success of our efforts to rescue Nigeria from its
current state of abyss.
God Bless the PDP
God Bless the
Federal Republic of Nigeria
Yours sincerely,
Godsday Peter Orubebe, CON
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