Fayose

Wike can’t be expelled, Fayose warns PDP

A former Governor of Ekiti State, Ayodele Fayose, said removing Nyesome Wike, now the Minister of FederalCapital Territory, FCT, from the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, would spell doom for the party.

Wike, a chieftain of the PDP, worked for the All Progressives Congress, APC, presidential candidate in 2023 election, and was appointed minister into President Bola Tinubu’s cabinet after the election.

Despite the FCT minister’s alleged anti-party activities, Fayose said the PDP cannot sanction the former Rivers State governor.

“Some people say fight Wike, expel Wike, sack Wike. I think they do that at their own peril. You see, the first thing in your family even when you have extreme situations, or indifferences, is not to drive away your wife or husband. Wike is a force in the PDP and beyond PDP, a force you cannot ignore,” he said on Channels Television’s Hard Copy, a prerecorded show that airs Friday nights.

“Ignore Wike, sack Wike, or fight Wike at your own peril. He is a man of capacity,” he said.

According to him, the PDP needs to unite members and work to restore the party which came second in this year’s presidential election.

Fayose stressed the need for the southern part of Nigeria to produce the president, saying it could have been unfair for the northern region to have done so.  In spite of his stance against the PDP which featured Atiku Abubakar – from the northern region – as its candidate for the poll, the former governor does not want to leave the main opposition party.

“The moment I am not in the PDP, I would never join another political,” he said. “And I would never be a member of the APC – not whether they are good or bad,” he said.

He also debunked reports of him resigning from the PDP.

Away from politics, Fayose spoke about the recent wave of coups in Africa, attributing it to a sit-tight syndrome.

Even though The PDP chieftain hates military incursion into politics, he is “very happy” with developments in Gabon after soldiers seized power in the oil-rich Central African nation.

“In a country where one man is spending 30, 40 years, they must boot him out of the place,” he said.

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