By Bayo Wahab
Former Governor of Ekiti State, Ayodele Fayose, has claimed that three extra governors elected on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Occasion (PDP) will quickly dump the opposition social gathering.
Fayose made the declare on Wednesday whereas talking on Politics At present, a Channels Tv programme, following the current resignation of Bayelsa State Governor Douye Diri from the PDP.
Based on him, the opposition social gathering could quickly be left with solely 5 governors as inner crises proceed to plague its ranks.
“Let me inform you, there are three extra governors that can depart quickly. There shall be 5 remaining. The 5 remaining, one in all them will wrestle to catch the ticket, and so they all know that the ticket is an unusual tissue paper,” Fayose mentioned.
He accused some PDP governors of contributing to the social gathering’s decline attributable to their need to manage its construction.
“They’re largely killing the social gathering as a result of they need to management it. That is what occurred in 2023,” he added.
Fayose dismissed claims that President Bola Tinubu has been coercing opposition governors to defect to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). He argued that many of the defecting governors are appearing out of self-interest and political calculation.
“President Tinubu shouldn’t be blamed for PDP’s issues. The PDP is sick and stays perpetually sick with out a treatment in view,” he said.
The previous governor maintained that the disaster inside the PDP is the results of inner sabotage by a few of its leaders.
“Those that killed the social gathering know themselves. There’s a distinction between a former governor and a sitting governor,” Fayose mentioned.
Though nonetheless a card-carrying member of the PDP, Fayose mentioned he bears no accountability for resolving the disaster, insisting that the present leaders should come clean with their position within the social gathering’s troubles.
The put up Defections: Three more PDP governors will soon resign — Fayose appeared first on Vanguard News.
