Tag: Chief Bode George

  • APC has no structure; it’s a one-man show — Bode George

    APC has no structure; it’s a one-man show — Bode George

    Former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Bode George, has dismissed the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) as lacking any real political structure, describing it as a “one-man show”.

    The elder statesman made the statement on Wednesday during an appearance on Channels Television’s Morning Brief while addressing the possibility of a third political force, such as the Social Democratic Party (SDP), emerging ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    “The APC has no structure; it’s just a one-man show,” he said.

    He emphasised that any meaningful political alternative must prioritise the people and not personal ambitions. “What should come first is the people. Then, our attitude to manage the resources of this country for the benefit of the people. Individualism can never solve this. Personal ambition is a very dangerous, stupid approach to problem-solving.

    “You must give in to something and must allow the freshness in the minds of the people of this country. Governance is about them; power should be from them.”

    PDP will resolve its crisis at next NEC meeting

    Speaking earlier in the interview, George also addressed the internal crisis within the PDP. He expressed optimism that the party’s issues would be resolved at its next National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting.

    His words: “This thing started like a little sore; now it’s almost like a cancer that spreads. It began with the inordinate ambition of individuals; it didn’t just start yesterday.”

    He continued, “The PDP has a system by which we will resolve our problem. The day we have the next NEC meeting, we’ll resolve our problem. So many people have been interpreting the position, laws, [and] constitution of the party to soothe themselves.”

    According to him, the meeting will provide an avenue for honest deliberation. “I believe that when we meet, we will fight, discuss and debate. In the long run, we will come to a unanimous decision because we will now put at the centre of discussion the process established by the founding fathers of the party. Those who don’t like it can take a walk and join another party.”

    He added that the party is aware of those stirring trouble and must act decisively. He warned, however, that if the PDP fails to resolve its issues at the next NEC meeting, “that’s the end.”

  • Bode George to Tinubu: Nigeria’s democracy at risk over Rivers, Natasha saga

    Bode George to Tinubu: Nigeria’s democracy at risk over Rivers, Natasha saga

    Former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Bode George, has warned that the recent developments in Rivers State and the handling of Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan’s allegations against Senate President Godswill Akpabio could threaten Nigeria’s Fourth Republic.

    George, citing historical precedents, said similar crises led to the collapse of the First and Second Republics, arguing that the current presidential system is proving to be worse than military rule.

    In his Ramadan message, he condemned the approval of President Bola Tinubu’s declaration of a state of emergency in Rivers State through a voice vote, calling it unconstitutional. He also criticized the move to recall Natasha from the Senate, describing it as shameful.

    George expressed disbelief at the political turmoil in Rivers, particularly the withdrawal of security from an elected speaker while protecting a deposed one. He also condemned the National Assembly’s ratification of Governor Siminalayi Fubara’s suspension, stating that it lacked the constitutionally required two-thirds majority.

    “In Rivers State, Governor Fubara, his deputy, and lawmakers were suspended, and the National Assembly, without the mandatory two-thirds approval, rubber-stamped this unconstitutional action by voice vote,” he said.

    George also criticized the Senate and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for their handling of Akpoti-Uduaghan’s allegations against Akpabio. He described her suspension and the subsequent recall attempt as a national embarrassment.

    He questioned INEC’s inconsistency, noting that the commission initially rejected the recall process due to procedural irregularities, only to reverse its stance within 24 hours.

    “Look at the gang-up against Natasha in the Senate. Don’t these Senators have daughters? With insecurity, corruption, and poverty ravaging the country, is Natasha’s issue the most pressing? She is a strong PDP member, and we will not allow this humiliation,” he stated.

    George commended Senators Aminu Tambuwal, Seriake Dickson, and Enyinnaya Abaribe for opposing what he described as legislative injustice. He insisted that the approval of the state of emergency in Rivers was unconstitutional since it lacked the required 74 Senators and 240 Representatives.

    “The law is clear. A state of emergency requires a two-thirds majority. What is the meaning of a voice vote? Did they get the numbers before approving it?” he asked.

    George also raised concerns over reports that FCT Minister Nyesom Wike was planning a political rally in Bayelsa State, warning that it could escalate tensions.

    “With what is happening in Rivers, why should Wike be allowed to go to Yenagoa and stoke political tensions? The Kogi State Police Command banned rallies over Natasha’s issue, yet Wike is being encouraged to provoke the Ijaw people. This is a double standard and could lead to further instability.”

    He concluded by warning that the ongoing political turmoil is a sign of what could happen in the 2027 elections.

    “This presidential system we are operating is worse than military rule. What is happening now portends grave dangers for 2027. The federal government must not encourage lawlessness across the country.”

  • Blame PDP elders like Bode George for non-payment of ground rent for 28 years, not Wike – Lere

    Blame PDP elders like Bode George for non-payment of ground rent for 28 years, not Wike – Lere

    People’s Democratic Party (PDP) elders like Chief Bode George, should be blamed for the party’s failure to pay Ground Rent for 28 years, which is the reason for the revocation of the PDP’s national secretariat in Abuja, and not the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Nyesom Wike.

    Senior Special Assistant to the FCT Minister on Public Communication and New Media, Lere Olayinka, said in a statement in Abuja on Saturday, that it was funny that Chief Bode George, who was in the party’s National Working Committee (NWC) that failed to conclude purchase of the Wadata Plaza National Secretariat of the PDP, could come to national television to say “Wike has crossed the red line by revoking the PDP’s national secretariat in Abuja.”

    Bode George, had said during an interview on a television station on Friday, that Wike’s action was an open declaration of war against the PDP.

    Responding, Olayinka said it was painful that elders like Chief Bode George, could chose to play the ostrich on a matter so glaring as the revocation of 4,794 land titles for not paying Ground Rent for as much as 43 years.

    He asked; “Why didn’t the PDP pay Ground Rent for 20 years on its Plot No. 243 national secretariat (under construction), which is the only property belonging to the party among the 4,794 revoked titles? How’s government’s enforcement of the consequences of land title owners’ refusal to pay Ground Rent declaration of war? Should the FCTA under Wike have treated PDP differently from the 4,794 owners of land titles that were revoked over failure to pay Ground Rent?”

    While clarifying that the Wadata Plaza property being used as Secretariat by the PDP was not owned by the party, Olayinka said the property belonged to Senator Samaila Mamman Kurfi, who bought it from Wadata Enterprises Nigeria Limited.

    “The PDP offered to buy the Wadata Plaza property in 2005, and when the Minister’s Consent was sought, the party was asked to pay N26.9 million. The money was never paid.

    “The party wrote a letter to Malam Nasir El-Rufai, the FCT Minister then, to waive the payment, claiming that it lacked the financial capacity to pay, but he (El-Rufai) insisted the party must pay.

    “El-Rufai, who insisted PDP must do the right thing by paying the necessary fees to the government was a member of the party then, and Chief Bode George, who was in the PDP NWC, did not go to national television to accuse him (El-Rufai) of declaring war against the party. And if the owner of did not pay ordinary N2.8 million as 28 years Ground Rent, who is to blame?

    “On the PDP national secretariat at Central Area, is it the fault of Wike that a mere N7.6 million, was owed as 20 years Ground Rent despite that over N21 billion was raised in 2014 for the completion of the building?”

    While counseling Chief Bode George, to start functioning like an objective elder that he should be, the FCT Minister’s Spokesperson said “what should have been done was to seek information, rather than going on television to advertise hatred against a Minister who is simply doing his jobs without looking at people’s faces.

    “If Chief Bode George had sought necessary information and refrained himself from acting out of hatred for Wike, it would have been known to him that also affected by the revocation were government owned institutions like Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC), Borno State Government, Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), National Universities Commission (NUC), Kaduna State Government, Nigerian Port Authority (NPA), News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Federal Ministry of Environment, Nigerian Security Printing and Minting Company, University of Calabar and Nigerian Postal Service and Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN).

    “And like I asked earlier, if Chief Bode George were to be the FCT Minister, would he have treated PDP differently from the other 4,793 land title owners?”

    On loyalty and commitment to the PDP, Olayinka said the results in Wike’s Rivers State and Chief Bode George’s Lagos State from 1998 till date are clear for everyone to see and used as yardstick.

  • ‘They’re making a mistake’ — Bode George faults opposition coalition move

    ‘They’re making a mistake’ — Bode George faults opposition coalition move

    Former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Chief Bode George has faulted some politicians’ plan to form a mega party ahead of the 2027 general election, saying their move is driven by personal ambition.

    Since the former Governor of Kaduna, Malam Nasir El-Rufai, dumped the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) for the Social Democratic Party (SDP), the conversation about forming a mega party that will wrestle power from the APC in 2027 has intensified.

    El-Rufai has invited opposition politicians, including Peter Obi of the Labour Party and Atiku Abubakar of the PDP, to strengthen his new party and make it the main challenger to the APC in the coming general election.

    If El-Rufai’s plan to get top opposition politicians to join the SDP succeeds, it would mark the end of the PDP, a party that ruled Nigeria for 16 years before the APC took over power in 2015.

    However, the idea of the mega party does not seem to sit well with George, who believes the lingering crisis in the PDP should not be grounds for the party to collapse its structure and form an alliance with other fringe opposition parties.

    Speaking on Arise Television on Friday, March 21, 2025, the PDP chieftain said some of those pushing for coalition have the ambition to become president.

    When the PDP crisis started, George warned that the party was not anybody’s private enterprise, but nobody listened to him.

    He warned that the coalition advocates are making ‘monumental mistakes’ and added that no nation or party is without crisis.

    He said, “All those people saying they are going to float a mega party, is there any of them who is not ambitious to be president of Nigeria? Is that the real approach to solving this problem?

    “For me, it started like a little mess at our national convention. Some of us advised that our party is not a private enterprise of anybody, but nobody listened. Then Wike started on his own, and he has gone beyond the red line.

    “Do you think there is any nation or party that does not have a crisis? All these groups who are running around for their personal ambition, they are making a monumental mistake and they are all dancing on the graves of our founding fathers.”

    On the state of emergency controversy in Rivers State, George urged President Bola Tinubu to be very careful.

    He also advised the people of Rivers State to eschew violence and avoid any situation that would further escalate the state’s tense atmosphere.

  • State of Emergency in Rivers: Disrespect for constituted authority – Bode George

    State of Emergency in Rivers: Disrespect for constituted authority – Bode George

    Former Deputy National Chairman of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Bode George, has condemned President Bola Tinubu’s declaration of a state of emergency in Rivers State, calling it a blatant disregard for constituted authority.

    Reacting to the development, George said, “This is absolute Armageddon—total disrespect for constituted authority. The Constitution has been viciously violated.”

    He continued, “We can’t keep quiet. This is recklessness of the highest order. What did Fubara do? As Commander-in-Chief, Tinubu gave Wike soldiers and security agents to destabilize Rivers State. The governor has no control over security agencies, yet he remained calm. Nobody has explained what he did to warrant this dictatorial emergency rule.”

    George likened the situation to past political crises, stating, “This is exactly how it started in 1962 and 1983. It’s a dress rehearsal for what Tinubu wants to do in 2027. The APC wants to take control of all states through unconstitutional means.”

    He questioned the legality of Tinubu’s actions, asking, “Did he get National Assembly approval before his broadcast? What happened in Rivers is the hand of Esau and the voice of Jacob. Why didn’t he declare a state of emergency in Lagos when lawmakers were fighting? Why invite Diete-Spiff and Niger Delta leaders last week if he already planned this?”

    George concluded, “Is Tinubu now becoming a civilian dictator?”

  • PDP Crisis: Call Atiku, Wike to order or we lose all in 2027 – Bode George

    PDP Crisis: Call Atiku, Wike to order or we lose all in 2027 – Bode George

    CHIEF Bode George, a former Deputy National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in this interview, wants two of the main actors in the crisis rocking the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), former VP Atiku Abubakar and Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyeson Wike, to be called to order now, or else the party loses all in the 2027 general elections.

    George, a top leader of the PDP in Lagos State, also speaks on the ‘madness” in the state chapter of the party, saying “they are paying for working for President Tinubu”, among other issues in the polity. Excerpts:

    Can you share your thoughts on this latest crisis in your party?

    I was part of the (PDP BOT) meeting because I was able to join them via zoom. And I have always stated that when you have a problem, if you don’t arrest it on time, it will become cancerous. It will almost consume everybody. I believe the stage in which we are, whatever is happening between the two secretaries, Samuel Anyanwu and a former National Youth Leader of the party, is a reflection of the lackluster approach to solving this problem. I was disgusted.

    I was ashamed that this kind of crisis would get to a crescendo where our public image as a party was being eroded. It was a show of shame, very disgraceful. But I thank the members of the Board of Trustees because those of us who were online, somehow when the free-for-all started, when people were punching themselves and misbehaving, they just cut us off. So we didn’t see it again. But my take is simply this, the contentious matter is the young man, I don’t remember his name, a former Youth Leader who is now acting

    Secretary of the party. He went to the Court of Appeal and the court gave him judgment that he was right to take over the position of the National Secretary. And the National Secretary, Anyanwu, now went to another Court of Appeal that said status quo ante bellum be maintained. It looks highly depressing and very disgusting when you look at the party, a formidable institution, a party that is like an Iroko tree in this country, being decimated because of personal ambition. It bothers some of us that started right from 1998. I have said that resolving this crisis at the midpoint doesn’t make any political sense.

    Let us set up a committee and I’ve made my views known to the BoT. As the Board of Trustees, the custodian of the laws and the regulations, the liabilities and the assets of the party, we must be able to set up a committee to do in-depth analysis. What happened? You don’t solve a problem by starting midpoint and thinking, “oh, you can cover up the other one and you can do this”. All sides to me now, all sides of the divide are making us so angry. And what we were saying is to avoid a terrible public image of our party. People have started saying, “Oh, your party is dead”.

    We say, “No, the party is not dead”. We can disagree without being disagreeable. We should be able to rise above this pettiness. What happened in that National Convention was the beginning of the crisis and, to date, all sides are still very deep in their trenches, firing salvo. It’s not going to help this country. And the national interest of the party must be much higher than the personal interest of any individual. And no individual can ever be bigger than the party. Let these managers rise above this. Let’s call a spade a spade. It’s drifting, and we are drifting very badly, like a rudderless ship. I will remain consistent in my argument. We must go to the beginning of this madness so that it will never repeat itself. And I am happy that the members of the Board of Trustees, the elders of the party, the custodians were there. But the good thing there was that they were able to manage the crisis. If we do not rise above that pettiness, it will expand. And this is

    2025. By the middle of this year, (2027) politics will start. And we keep blaming the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    “It is Nyesom Wike. It is this”. What has it got to do with the price of milk? Let’s get inside and sort ourselves out without mincing words. Nobody, no individual is bigger than the party. And the party is not a private enterprise of anybody. The essence of having the Board of Trustees, the upper chamber of the party, is to be able to sort out crises when they occur. That’s why in the BoT, we don’t do elections. People are appointed based on their experience, their contributions, their knowledge, and their standing in the public. So you heard what the acting National Chairman, Umar Damagum, was saying, that there are some leaders too that are covertly intervening on the side of A or side B. No, please.

    For me, we have to set up a proper committee that would extricate the mess that started on that Convention Day. And we sort it out. Anybody guilty of any serious offences must be dealt with. It is not a private concern. And we have no apologies. If you are a member of an organization, there are rules and regulations of what you should do. So, follow it. If you can’t follow the regulations, and you think you can manoeuvre A or B for your sustenance, then we ease you out.

    The BoT has already set up a committee led by Taminu Turaki to investigate what transpired. Senator Adolphus Wabara (BoT Chairman) is talking about unity and discipline within the party. What do you make of what former VP Atiku Abubakar said that the APC is trying to destabilize the opposition party, harass and intimidate people?

    Let me be very clear here, I was there (at the BoT meeting), not physically, but I was there. I joined that meeting via zoom. At the point that I joined, the Chairman of the Board of Trustees was still making his speech, so I wasn’t too late to join. So I was there from the beginning. Now, we got cut off by the time somebody physically pushed the young man.

    I don’t remember his name. He was the National Youth Leader of the party. They were physically pushing him out, and I was raving with anger here. Because what on earth was going on, are we Agberos? With the experience, the age, and the commitment that we had had from the beginning of the establishment of this political party, it was disgraceful.

    And my concern, and I must state it, had been that, look, we have to be careful because of the public image this will send. If you want to be a winner in a political setting in any nation, your public image is very

    Important. Now, what are these people trying to achieve? If people are looking at us and saying, “can you trust this party?” Look at – you mean there is no – we don’t have any open crisis in APC? Of course, they do have.

    They have never held any meeting, no National Executive Committee meeting. Abdullahi Ganduje, who is the Chairman, has been imposed, no meeting, no National Executive Committee meeting. So, it is not only us. But for God’s sake, we can resolve our own. Throwing tantrums and pushing issues, they say, “Oh, it’s the APC that is doing this, the APC that is doing that”.

    We’re just trying to undermine the issue. We must sit down. All sides, as I have stated, all sides of the divide, both Atiku and Wike, we must be bold enough to tell them enough of this nonsense. The committee set up now is just to look at the legal implications. As I said to you, Anyanwu is saying, yes, there was a judgment that gave a ruling in favour of the former Youth Leader who is claiming to be the National Secretary of the party. And Anyanwu went to another Court of Appeal and said the Court of Appeal said, you know, status quo ante bellum be maintained.

    Now, what is the status quo ante bellum? People are saying, yes, it is the status quo established by the Court of Appeal that gave positive judgment to the former Youth Leader. And that Anyanwu, if he wanted to do anything, should have gone to the higher court, which is the Supreme Court.

    You said Atiku and Wike committed hara-kiri. I’m using your words. I can understand where you’re coming from about Atiku Abubakar but Wike is your man. You were together in the G5 Unity Group. So, which hara-kiri did Nyesom Wike commit and have you fallen out with him?

    Let me be very clear with you. In the beginning, I said we could not wash our dirty linens in public. If you have a family meeting in your house, do you go to the marketplace to start undressing yourselves? I am a bona fide, committed, dedicated and faithful member of this party. It would be unpardonable for me to do that. If we have to appear before a constituted party committee, I would expose everything to them. But if I love this party, it is not the public domain that we open up ourselves. And that is why I don’t want to make any comments now. I am not a member of anything. At the initial time I was there, I took sides because I was disgusted with what they did at the National Convention.

    If I tell you the role I played in going with A or B, you will know. But it’s not for me to say to the public. And that was what angered me. And when I got to the other side, and I saw what they were doing, I told them to calm down. If you are not going to calm down, I will not come back. And I’m not a member of either of them. Never. That ceased a long time ago.

    You appear to also be part of those who committed hara-kiri, sir, because we saw how you supported Wike and how you said Atiku was a problem. What changed?

    This is a misunderstanding. Let me now explain to you. At this age, on the eighth floor of life, do you think I will be involved with a load of nonsense? Something happened at that National Convention, and I was completely disgusted with what was going on. And, listen, I have said it often that I made my move based on the fundamentals that established this political party.

    Why did you stop supporting what Wike was fighting for then?

    No, I am not supporting anybody and that’s what I’m explaining to you. Listen, I had a meeting with Atiku. And I spent six hours with Ayu in his house in Abuja. He didn’t do what is right. And he was insisting (he was right). I said, “OK, if you, Ayu, made a statement publicly that per adventure, the presidential candidate comes from the North, you will resign”… And when the presidential candidate emerged from the North, he refused to resign.

    I said “what are you talking about?” He said he had four years. I went to his house to convince him. Then I called Atiku. I said, “Look, talk to your brother. They are disrupting this system. That is not the way the

    founding fathers set it (PDP) up. If we did that to you as southerners, would you accept it?” Never. And what is not good is not good, no matter where you belong. You must have the fear of God in whatever you are doing. That was where I disagreed with them. And I moved out. Then the Wike people came and said they were trying to resolve it. I joined the meeting. They made me a leader.

    We sat down. In the end, they said, OK, now we had two presidential candidates from the South. I said “so?” They said, “Look, they believe that Bola Tinubu is the better person”. I said, “if you go out of this meeting and you talk about it outside there, I will counter you. You guys have no idea who this gentleman is. He has ruled my state. We know his modus operandi.

    You don’t have any idea”. That was where we parted. It’s not a matter of jumping ship and looking for laurels. No. Since that day before the election, we parted ways. This is the truth. Why should I be (with Wike and co)? What am I looking for now that I will not be able to look at you in your face and tell you the truth?

    How much faith do you have in the Tanimu Turaki Committee to douse the flames currently engulfing the PDP? Does he have your support?

    Now, the important thing is this. The Chairman of the Board of Trustees, the cases presented before the BoT was that the young man, the incoming National Secretary had gone to the court to get a judgment. That is the bona fide National Secretary. Okay. Now, Anyanwu went to another Court of Appeal, and the Court of Appeal that he went to stated that status quo ante bellum be sustained. Now, what our Chairman is stating

    is, “Look, let this issue be examined.

    The legal issue, the status quo ante bellum stated by the second Court of Appeal. What is the interpretation?” That is all this young man, this lawyer (Taminu), because he’s a SAN, is going to examine. That’s all. Once he comes around to say that the former Youth Leader should assume office as National secretary, Anyanwu should back off. If I want to tell you to analyze what Anyanwu did, he was wrong, absolutely wrong. You wanted to contest for governorship position, and it is the Secretary and the National Chairman who will normally sign off on all candidates going to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and you signed yourself in. How could you?

    What is the future of the PDP and what is the guarantee that the PDP will be a winning party in Nigeria and Lagos, your state, in 2027?

    Let me tell you, and I’m happy I have the opportunity to state emphatically that the problem in Lagos is not something that I created. There are too many external factors that come into play here in Lagos. I keep telling them to allow everybody to hold on to his house.

    You cannot know my house more than me. It started with Atiku trying to control here and there. How can they know my house more than me? That has been the madness in Lagos and you saw that they have been working for Bola Tinubu here in Lagos.

    They are paying the price now and I told them that this last election would be my last battle before I take my leave. Any external intervention, we will resist it, we will prevent it and we will fight; even if it means we are going to decimate the party, so be it.

    They keep causing crisis in the party and come around to blame Bode George, how could you blame me?