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Defections: We won’t beg governors to stay, but will reach out — PDP

The FrontierThe FrontierDecember 12, 2025 1236 Minutes read0

The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is taking a firm, unapolo­getic stance in the face of defec­tions and political turbulence: it will not beg governors to stay, but will extend a hand of outreach.

But the party warns that poli­tics is inherently messy, and even actions that are legal can some­times be morally questionable.

National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Ini Ememobong, laid out this position clearly yesterday in Abuja during an appearance on Channels TV.

“No. In the circumstance that we are, you know that ex­cept for the legislature where the law binds their hands, every executive has the capacity to do what is… it would be legal but immoral. So we are not begging anybody, but we are reaching out.

“The Turaki led administration is reaching out, the Governors’ Forum is reaching out. But you know there’s a thin line between what is illegal and what is immor­al,” Ememobong said.

He framed recent departures, such as that of Osun State gover­nor, Ademola Adeleke, as conse­quences of unresolved leadership failures and longstanding prob­lems.

“Governor Adeleke’s defec­tion… he’s a victim of circum­stance, which is vicarious. Vicar­ious because every problem has a human cause and therefore should also have a human solu­tion. At the level of the leadership which he belonged to at the party, the party ought to have acted de­cisively.

“Immediately we begin to feed the monster without knowing that we’ll end up in the belly of the monster. After a while, we become victims. So if we feed animals to the monster, we feed others to the monster, and we think that time would solve problems… Time al­lows human beings to solve prob­lems; it doesn’t on its own solve problems.

“So it’s vicarious in the sense that strong action by leadership ought to have been taken from 2023 immediately the decline started. But there were negotia­tions. I mean, you also cannot fully blame them because sometimes you think that with negotiations, when passions are calm, people could reconsider their position.

“But unfortunately, it didn’t, until the convention took the decision it did in Ibadan. So that’s the na­ture of what has happened. He’s become a victim of circumstanc­es arising from vicarious liabili­ties which he cannot completely extricate himself from.

“No, we’re not giving excuses. We’re saying that both are cir­cumstantial, and even the victims of the circumstances themselves had a role to play in the conflict that eventually engulfed them. So we’re not making excuses.”

Turning to Rivers State, Eme­mobong expressed sympathy for Governor Siminalayi Fubara but rejected attempts to shift blame for crises within the party.

He stated, “But in the case of Fubara, you do know that Fubara voluntarily became a candidate of the party. And you do know that the people who brought him have always said that there were agreements. We’re talking about agreement… till today he hasn’t said what the agreement was, but his political party stood by him.

“The point of our anger is re­ally when he mentioned that he wasn’t secure on the platform. We all have great sympathies for Fubara even as a person. Before becoming a Publicity Secretary, I had sympathies for him — a calm, gentle person who is pushed to the wall, who has no other direction to move than in the opposite direc­tion.

“But to attempt to lay blame other than where blame ought to be… Because if you backtrack and look at the origin of the crisis, you know that the origin is between two people.”

The party image maker fur­ther pointed out that “You re­member that people rose up at the beginning of this crisis and began to speak for him. After a while, he came out and said, ‘No, no, don’t worry, it’s a father-son matter.’ And after a while, a state of emergency was declared. Peo­ple started advocating, and he went silent.

“I spoke to some governors, especially Governor Bala, asking what happened. Governor Bala said, ‘Look, we were ready and we have deployed at some points, but the governor would either remain incommunicado or will say “don’t worry, we would handle it”.’ So, volenti non fit injuria—you cannot do harm to a consenting person.

“So while he has our sympa­thies, the attempt to shift blame is what we are very angry with. There’s no need shifting the blame. When you get into a vol­untary agreement… till today he has not said what agreement he got into. He has not really told Rivers people or us on camera or confided in anyone what the real issues are.

“So while we sympathise with him—and we know that this is a situation where Stockholm syn­drome has happened, where a captive has fallen in love with the captor—we frown against that conscious amnesia where he picks and chooses where the blame should be. He knows where the origin of his problem is.”

He further maintained that “You do know that people do not enter a crisis until the parties themselves have declared war. So if people have agreements and the agreement is going fine and the state is not suffering, you have no business going into it because you wouldn’t even know there was an agreement. But it is when people begin to shout or things begin to happen to suggest that a crisis has occurred, that’s when third parties come in.

“In this circumstance, even when he went to the meeting with the president, did he consult the party? Did he consult the Gov­ernors’ Forum? Remember that even after his election as gover­nor, it took a long while for him to even associate with the party. We quite understand that maybe his hands were tied. But immediate­ly you feel the pinch, you begin to call for help.”

Continuing, he noted that “I’m not saying that agreements do not exist, but the first thing is that there cannot be a valid agreement to commit a crime. If the agreements are to siphon state funds or lead the state in a way inconsistent with the consti­tution, that’s an illegal agreement. But if people have political agree­ments — ’this one will take this, this one will take that’ — those are not illegal. But where agreement fails, and understanding fails, then if the parties begin to speak out, the third parties will come in.

“No, that’s not true. You do know that even at the last NBA conference, very senior lawyers raised the issue that there was a court case and the Supreme Court did not fix the hearing… But number two, when you are fighting for a person, you must fight in the interest of the person. And the person in whose interest you are fighting must feel that you are fighting in his interest.

“If you look at the disposition of the governor, even in that whole period, he discouraged peo­ple from fighting. Commentators coming out from Rivers State to attempt to fight… what was his dis­position? ‘He will sort the matter out.’ You cannot cry more than the bereaved at a funeral.

“The PDP governors took steps, but the steps you’re taking must have the person’s go-ahead. You don’t file a case in court and someone comes to say, ‘I didn’t send you to do that.’ We have been having discordant dispositions from the governor. When he was ready to fight, everyone fought along with him—look at the lo­cal government election, he had all the support.

“But in a circum­stance where you are not fighting from the front and you’re asking people to backtrack, then people begin to think maybe fighting fur­ther would hurt your interest. It’s like a patient who tells you, ‘If you give me injection, I will die.’ You cannot still go ahead and give that patient injection against his own will,” he stated.

 

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