President Bola Ahmed Tinubu will choose his running mate for the 2027 presidential election only after formally accepting the partyβs nomination during its convention in 2026.
Bayo Onanuga, special adviser to the president on information and strategy, disclosed this on Thursday in an exclusive interview with Daily Trust.
Responding to a question on why the presidency has remained silent amid growing controversy over the omission of Vice President Kashim Shettima from a wave of endorsements for Tinubu, Onanuga dismissed suggestions that the silence amounted to tacit approval of the vice presidentβs exclusion.
βWhen I read the report, I dismissed it as a non-issue. In a presidential system, the candidate emerges first and then selects a running mate. Thatβs what happened under Buhariβhe was nominated first and later picked his running mate. You donβt do both at once.
βOnce INEC releases the timetable, the party convention will hold, and if the president is nominated again, he will choose his running mate,β he said.
Onanuga also rejected claims that Tinubuβs record as governor of Lagos Stateβwhere he changed deputies twiceβindicates a plan to drop Shettima ahead of 2027.
βThatβs just speculation. Yes, when he was governor, there were issues. In his first term, he and his deputy, Kofo, didnβt get along, and she had to leave. Femi Pedro replaced her. In the second term, he retained Pedro, but Pedro later defectedβhe wanted to be governor. Thatβs why he had to go. I donβt want to reopen old wounds, but thatβs what happened.
βSo, itβs wrong to say he has a pattern of discarding deputies. There were specific political circumstances each time. Thatβs what Iβm explaining,β he said.
The presidential aide added that the speculation of a rift between Tinubu and Shettimaβcirculating even before the current endorsement debateβwas baseless.
βIβm not aware of any issues between the president and the vice president. From what I know, they have an excellent working relationship. All the speculation is just beer parlour gossip. People even say ridiculous things like Seyi Tinubu is the vice presidentβabsolute nonsense.
βIn this country, deputy rolesβwhether deputy governor or vice presidentβare always surrounded by rumours. Even when thereβs no conflict, people around them will concoct stories. But as far as I know, Tinubu and Shettima work together very well,β he said.
Asked whether his comments meant the controversial Muslim-Muslim ticket that brought Tinubu to power in 2023 would be repeated in 2027, Onanuga said the matter was no longer an issue, insisting that earlier fears about Islamisation had been dispelled.
βChristians are living their lives. The president even attended the Popeβs inauguration in Rome. Thereβs nothing to worry about.
βMany of the names being speculated as potential running mates are Muslims. So again, this isnβt an issue,β he added.
Responding to criticisms about the flurry of endorsements for the president despite INEC not officially declaring the campaign period open, Onanuga said it was a necessary response to opposition attacks.
βThe endorsements are a reaction to something. If those in the so-called coalition had not started throwing missiles at the Tinubu administration and the APC, the APC would have waited until early next year to respond. But we had to show that weβre not asleep but ready to square up. You canβt expect the president to sit by while his opponents are plotting openly against him.
βWeβre grateful for the confidence they have in him. Of course, we welcome the endorsements, even though the campaign period hasnβt officially begun. Everyone knows that. But because the opposition jumped the gun, the ruling party canβt just fold its arms,β he added.
β How APC North East summit escalated concerns over Shettimaβs fate
Daily Trust reports that the omission of Vice President Kashim Shettima from a wave of endorsements for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has stirred unease in recent weeks, culminating in a tense standoff during the APC North East stakeholdersβ summit held in Gombe last weekend.
Although party leaders from the zone eventually endorsed the Tinubu-Shettima ticket for the 2027 election, it followed a rowdy session triggered by the refusal of the APC national vice chairman (North East), Salihu Mustapha, to endorse Shettima alongside the president.
Prior to the Gombe summit, questions had already been mounting over Shettimaβs political future after party chieftains endorsed Tinubu as the sole candidate for the 2027 presidential election at last monthβs APC National Summit held at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.
The development fuelled speculation that Tinubu might be planning to replace Shettima as his running mate. Political observers suggested the president was considering four possible alternatives.
One theory was that Tinubu could pick a northern Christian to placate voters who were aggrieved by the Muslim-Muslim ticket of 2023. Another line of speculation suggested the vice-presidential slot could be offered as an incentive to lure the 2023 presidential candidate of the New Nigeria Peopleβs Party (NNPP), Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, into the APC. A third rumour pointed to two serving governors from the North West being considered for the position. The final theory held that Tinubu might retain the slot for the North East but nominate a different candidate from the zone.
Before the national summit, APC leaders from the North West and North Central had also endorsed the president for re-electionβbut notably left out Shettima in their declarations.
However, at the Gombe summit, Borno State Governor Babagana Zulum reaffirmed the earlier position taken by APC stakeholders in Borno, urging Tinubu to retain Shettima as his running mate in 2027.
βIt is a rare opportunity to have the vice president from our region; it reflects the trust and confidence reposed in us by President Tinubu and indeed the entire nation.
βThe role played by Kashim Shettimaβhis leadership, dedication and vast experienceβhas been pivotal in advancing the priorities of this administration. The synergy between Tinubu and Shettima is one of strength, unity and shared vision, which guarantees that Nigeria is well represented.
βWe also urge him to retain our own Kashim Shettima as his running mate. On behalf of the government and good people of Borno State, I endorse the Tinubu/Kashim ticket for 2027,β Zulum said.
β Declining to endorse Shettima nearly cost me my life β APC vice chairman
Speaking on his ordeal after declining to endorse Vice President Shettima as President Tinubuβs running mate during the APC North East summit in Gombe, the partyβs national vice chairman (North East), Salihu Mustapha, said his decision was guided by party procedures for candidate nomination.
In an interview with Trust TV, Mustapha claimed he βcould have been lynchedβ had he not fought his way out of the venue after his speech sparked a rowdy session.
He alleged that a politician from Borno State, whom he accused of exploiting political thuggery for personal gain, orchestrated the chaos to further strain his relationship with the vice president.
βI had to defend myself. I called in my security detail and fought my way out. If not for the few boys shielding meβand my own strengthβI could have been lynched,β he said.
βThey tried to attack me, but I defended myself. Even amid the chaos, I told the governor, βTell your people to stop.β Because I can defend myselfβIβm militarily trained and experienced in handling situations like this,β he added.
Explaining his refusal to include Shettima in the endorsement, Mustapha argued there is no constitutional or party provision for naming a running mate during candidate nomination.
βPolitics today is about popular participation and stakeholder consensus. Itβs about lobbying and building trustβnot intimidation.
βAnyone truly loyal to a leader or political system should understand that once the partyβs presidential candidate is endorsed, no one should take offence. Constitutionallyβand Iβm tired of repeating thisβcheck the constitutions of all political parties in Nigeria. There is no provision for selecting a running mate during primaries.
βThe endorsement at the National Summit was for the presidential ticket. Weβre not INEC. Weβre not the general electorate. Our mandate is to decide who becomes the partyβs flagbearer. Thatβs where our role ends.β
He further explained that choosing a running mate is the prerogative of the flagbearer, after due consultation with the party and other stakeholders.
βSo, itβs counterproductive for us as a zone to try and force the issue, especially without first approaching the president in humility to say, βWeβre here to consult and urge you to pick your running mate from our region.β
βIf the president responds favourably, we can then return and say, βWeβre endorsing the president and our zone.β Thatβs respectful. But trying to force his hand or chanting slogans like βNo Shettima, no Asiwajuβ in the hallβthatβs blackmail.
βAnd thatβs not the position of the North East. Not at all,β he said.
On claims that Governor Zulum had made Shettimaβs inclusion a condition for endorsing Tinubu, Mustapha said: βThat is not the position of the North East.
βThe stakeholders I consulted across five states in the region are endorsing Asiwaju unconditionallyβwithout preconditionsβwhile still expressing confidence in and solidarity with the vice president.β
He acknowledged that Governor Zulum had insisted on including Shettima in the endorsement but said the party leadership explained why it could not adopt that position.
βI told him plainly: this was the general sentiment gathered from all the stakeholders we engaged,β he said.
Mustapha added that rumours about Shettima being replaced in 2027 were part of a familiar pattern in Nigerian politics.
βWhether itβs a president and vice president, governor and deputy, or local government chairman and vice chairmanβitβs always the same.
βThere are intermediaries, conflict profiteers, who insert themselves between both camps and relay conflicting messages. They thrive on stoking tension and mistrust. It has been a recurring pattern in almost every administration throughout our political history,β he said.
β 2027 without Shettima ill-advised β MURIC
Meanwhile, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) has warned the APC and President Tinubu against replacing Vice President Shettima ahead of the 2027 elections.
In a statement signed by its executive director, Professor Ishaq Akintola, MURIC said any move to drop Shettima would be ill-advised.
βThe Islamic human rights group argued that such a replacement will be ill-advised. It therefore advised the president and the ruling party to consult widely before taking a decision on the matter,β the statement said.
WARNING: If You Are Not 18+, Don’t Click The Link Below ππ«£Β
https://abnormalitylovingmammal.com/kx6iepv2qm?key=6c14bd1d68e1eba721851f19778f5efe
https://poawooptugroo.com/4/8902554
Please donβt forget to βAllow the notificationβ so you will be the first to get our gist when we publish it.
Drop your comment in the section below, and donβt forget to share the post.
Never Miss A Single News Or Gist, Kindly Join Us On WhatsApp Channel:
https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vad8g81Eawdsio6INn3B
Telegram Channel:
https://t.me/gistsmateNG