One of the top contenders for the Senate
presidency, Senator George Akume, and the national leader of the All
Progressives Congress, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, on Wednesday met at the
Lagos home of Tinubu.
Our correspondent learnt that at the
meeting which took place around 3pm, Tinubu told Akume to shelve his
ambition and support Senator Ahmed Lawan, who represents Yobe-North
senatorial district in the 8th Senate.
The battle for the Senate presidency was
between the North-East and the North-Central. Akume, who is currently
the Senate Minority Leader, represents Benue-North senatorial district
in the Senate.
Senator Bukola Saraki, who represents
Kwara-Central senatorial district in the North-Central geopolitical
zone, had also openly expressed his intention to contest the number
three seat in the country.
However, it was learnt that the
leadership of the APC finally decided to zone the Senate presidency to
the North-East following ‘fresh developments’.
A reliable source in the APC told our
correspondent that Lawan had already been backed by the current Senate
President, David Mark, and other members of the Peoples Democratic
Party.
He said, “Tinubu explained to Akume that
Lawan and Senator Mark are very close and already, some members of the
PDP support him. Lawan has a good track record in the Senate and has
been backed by almost all the senators in the North-East who feel the
zone has been seriously marginalised.
“The catch there is that if the APC
members in the Senate do not support Lawan and he wins the Senate
presidency with bloc votes from the PDP and his friends in the
North-East, he will be loyal to the PDP and may sideline us just as the
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, attributed his
victory to the APC back in 2011 even though he was a member of the PDP.
“Mark will definitely do everything
possible to ensure that Akume does not emerge Senate President if we
pick Akume because they are not on good terms. Tinubu told Akume that he
sacrificed his presidential ambition for the sake of the party.
“Tinubu, therefore, urged Akume to settle for the Deputy Senate presidency or Senate Majority Leader.”
The 8th Senate will have 60 APC members while the PDP will have 48. The number of senators in the North-East is 18.
The source said Akume was also asked to
step down because the North-Central, where he hails from, had been
holding the Senate presidency since 2007 while the North-East had never
presided over the upper chamber of the National Assembly since
independence.
He added that giving the North-East the
seat would also be a way of rewarding them for giving the APC the second
highest number of votes during the presidential election.
He said, “The current Senate president
is from Benue State and has been in charge for eight years. Would it be
fair to also handover the Senate presidency to another person from
Benue?
“The President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari, got more than 2.5 million votes from the North-East and this should be rewarded.”
It was learnt that Lawan, who just won a
third term in office, had already been accepted by those close to the
President-elect because he was among those who led Buhari’s presidential
campaign in the then All Nigeria Peoples Party in 2007 in Yobe State.
The source told our correspondent that a
committee comprising Tinubu’s wife, Senator Oluremi Tinubu; Senator
Babafemi Ojudu, Senator Gbenga Ashafa and Senator Ajayi Boroffice had
been set up to meet with the aggrieved parties.
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