Festus Keyamo, minister of aviation, says the factors that earned Peter Obi millions of votes in 2023 will collapse if he ends up as Atiku Abubakar’s running mate in 2027.
Abubakar and Obi contested the 2023 presidential election on
the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Labour Party (LP) platforms
respectively, but both lost to Bola Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress
(APC).
Tinubu won with 8,794,726 votes, Atiku polled 6,984,520,
while Obi came third with 6,101,533 votes.
Speaking on Channels Television’s Sunday Politics, Keyamo
said the African Democratic Congress (ADC) coalition adopted by the opposition
will have no electoral impact.
The minister said the coalition’s strategy of uniting the
former Anambra governor with ex-vice president Abubakar to puncture the APC’s
vote bank is unrealistic.
“They (ADC) are going nowhere in terms of demography,”
Keyamo said.
“I like what is happening; they are putting us on our toes.
It is going to make us work harder, but the numbers are not looking good for
them.
“This so-called ADC, in 2027, what they are working on is to
bring Peter Obi and Atiku together to join those numbers and beat our over eight
million votes.
“Let me tell you why it is wrong. If you make Peter Obi the
deputy to Atiku… three demographic factors delivered Peter Obi in 2023, but the
three will collapse.
“The other candidates were Muslims, and so there was only
one Christian candidate, and the Christians went to one candidate.
“The south-east felt cheated, so the south-east went to one
point because of the Igbo man.
“And the third demography: the Obidients, young Nigerians
who felt they were angry, they wanted a younger person and all of that because
the other candidates were older than him (Obi).”
The minister also said Obi would struggle to garner votes in
the north, claiming that the APC’s dominance in the region remains unshaken.
“If you put Peter Obi this time as president, he cannot
penetrate the north. We have our structures in the north. We have governors,
senators in the north,” Keyamo added.
Obi, who previously dismissed claims of being offered the
running mate role ahead of the poll, has maintained his commitment to serving
only one term if elected president.