Nigeria’s ruling party picks candidate for 2023 presidential polls

Nigeria ruling party leaders and workers celebrate their primaries in the presidential election. Agency photo
Nigeria ruling party leaders and workers celebrate their primaries in the presidential election. Agency photo
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BSS :
Nigeria’s ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) party voted on Wednesday in key primaries to choose a candidate for next year’s election to replace President Muhammadu Buhari.
No clear favourite emerged among the APC frontrunners vying to lead Africa’s most populous country, including former Lagos governor Bola Tinubu, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, former transport minister Rotimi Amaechi and Senate president Ahmad Lawan.
The APC convention in Abuja took place two days after gunmen killed 22 people in an attack on a church in the southwest-a reminder that security in the elections will be a major issue.
More than 2,300 APC delegates were voting to select a candidate to face Atiku Abubakar, 75, of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) among others in the February 25 presidential ballot.
Buhari, who is stepping down after the two terms he is allowed in the constitution, arrived at the Eagles Square convention centre on Tuesday evening before voting began very early Wednesday.
The Nigerian leader spent the days leading up to the party convention in negotiations with the APC’s factions seeking unity over one strong candidate though he gave no indication of his favoured name.
“We must choose a knowledgeable, fair-minded nationalist with a very strong belief in the unity of our nation, Nigeria, and strength of character and purpose to steer the country forward,” Buhari said in a speech to the convention.
“We should not allow the PDP to drag the country backwards.”
At least three would-be candidates backed out of the race shortly before voting began, and assigned their delegate votes to Tinubu, an APC stalwart and former governor known as the “Godfather of Lagos”.
Part of the APC’s debate over candidates relates to “zoning”-an unofficial agreement among political elites that Nigeria’s presidency should alternate between those from the predominantly Christian south and those from the largely Muslim north.
After two terms with northern Muslim Buhari, observers expected the presidency to go to a candidate from the south.
But the PDP-which held its primary on May 28 and 29 — chose Abubakar, a former vice president and political stalwart who is a northern Muslim.

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