All Progressives Congress’s National Executive Committee has directed all states wishing to adopt ‘direct primaries’ to write officially to the national secretariat of the party to confirm this.
The party’s NEC also, Thursday, adopted the direct primary method for the selection of its presidential candidate, while states will be allowed to choose which of the methods best suits their peculiarities.
All these were part of the resolutions reached by the party’s second highest decision-making body after its NEC meeting in Abuja on Thursday.
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Governor Simeon Lalong of Plateau made this known while briefing the media at the end of the party’s sixth National Executive Committee meeting on Thursday in Abuja.
NAN reports that President Muhamnadu Buhari is APC’s preferred presidential candidate, as he has been endorsed by different organs of the party for a second term.
Lalong explained that the Constitution of the party “provides for either direct, indirect or consensus, but for the presidential election, we all agreed that we will adopt direct primaries.
“Also, a recommendation was made by the National Working Committee (NWC) that states should adopt the indirect mode, but there may be situations that this might be difficult in the states, looking at their peculiarities.
“But the general option is that we go in for indirect option but any state that has a problem and will want to deviate is at liberty to write, following the normal process, with a resolution from the State Executive to the National Executive,” he said.
Lalong said that the NEC meeting also discussed the mode and guidelines for the 2019 general election, funding and the necessity for unity within the party following recent defections by some members.
He, however, added that rather than affect the party negatively, the gale of defections had strengthened it more.
The governor disclosed that the party’s NWC had been mandated to look into issues of electoral sequence that was raised after deliberations in line with the Electoral Act.
He also stated that a standing committee had been set up to look at the party’s funding for the coming elections, and stated that automatic ticket for party members was not discussed at the meeting.
“We didn’t discuss the issue of automatic ticket, but we discussed that yes, patriotic and loyal party members should be rewarded but not necessarily with automatic ticket,” he said.
Lalong said that meeting also looked at the issue of N21 million Expression of Interest and Nomination Form fee for governorship aspirants in the party as proposed by the NWC.
He said the cost was debated and was left to the party’s NWC to consider the views expressed and come up with “a reasonable figure”.
Credit: punchng.com