Friday, November 15, 2019

Bayelsa/Kogi elections: Bello, Wada, Diri, Lyon clash in eight battleground LGAs


The candidates of  the All Progressives Congress and the Peoples Democratic Party  for the governorship polls in Bayelsa and Kogi states will engage in a fierce battle in at least eight local government areas considered to be  the battleground places for  today’s election.

According to Saturday PUNCH findings, the two leading  parties may coast to victory in no fewer than 21 LGAs considered to be their  strongholds in the two states.

In the eight Bayelsa State LGAs, the ruling PDP is expected to engage the main opposition APC in the Yenogoa Local Government Area considered as a major battleground, while both parties may divide the remaining seven councils  in the ratio of three to four.

While the APC is predicted to gain  the upper hand in Brass, Nembe,  Southern Ijaw and Ekeremor LGAs, the  PDP is expected to coast to victory in its strongholds of Sagbama, Ogbia and Kolokuma LGAs.

In Kogi State, the ruling APC is expected to clash with the main opposition PDP in seven battleground council areas.

In the remaining 14 council areas, findings show that the APC will coast to victory in five stronghold LGAs  making up the Kogi  Central Senatorial District, where Governor Yahaya Bello comes from, while the PDP is expected to show strength in  the nine councils  making up  Kogi East, where Musa Wada comes from.

However, there are indications that certain factors may affect Wada from polling block votes in these areas.

Bayelsa: Diri, Lyon battle in Yenagoa as PDP, APC control seven LGAs

As Bayelsa  voters go to polls on Saturday (today), Governor  Seriake Dickson-backed PDP governorship candidate, Douye Diri, will engage ex-governor Timipre Sylva-backed APC  candidate, David Lyon, in a fierce battle to outdo each other in the local government areas  believed to be their respective strongholds.

For instance, it is believed that the opposition APC may poll block votes in Brass, Nembe, Southern Ijaw, and Ekeremor. The four councils  are strategic to the APC in its quest to upstage the PDP in the election.

Sylva, who is the leader of the APC in the state and current Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, is from the Nembe-Brass zone, where he holds sway in Bayelsa East.

In the last general elections, the party, under his leadership, won the Nembe/Brass Federal Constituency. Also, the party’s deputy governorship candidate, Biobarakuma Degi-Eremienyo, who is  from Nembe LGA, is the  senator representing  Bayelsa East at the National Assembly.

The APC started consolidating its grip on Bayelsa East with the 2015 general elections, winning a seat in the state House of Assembly.

In fact, Israel Sunny-Goli, who represents the Brass/Nembe Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives was the only APC member in the Assembly.

Also, the APC boasts a lot of political strength in Southern Ijaw where the governorship candidate, David Lyon, comes from. There are indications that Southern Ijaw would give him a  block vote.

It will be the second time Southern Ijaw would produce governor, after the late Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, if Lyon emerges victorious.

The party is also believed to have   political advantage in Ekeremor, which is the local government area of Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, the immediate past Minister of State for Agriculture and Rural Development. Although Lokpobiri, who also contested the governorship ticket of the party, had gone to court to challenge the outcome of the exercise, analysts believe his meeting penultimate week with the APC National Chairman, Adams Oshiomhole, in Abuja might have resolved the political undercurrents that would have jeopardised the party’s chances in Ekeremor.

The PDP will be looking  to secure block votes in Sagbama and Kolokuma/Opokuma LGAs. The two councils  are considered to be no-go areas for the APC because Dickson comes from Sagbama and  Diri from Kolokuma/Opokuma. Incidentally, Diri’s running mate, Senator Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo, who represents Bayelsa West  (Sagbama and Ekeremor), is from the same LGA as the governor. Besides Sagbama and Kolokuma Opokuma, the PDP is also believed to have a strong foothold in Ogbia, which is former President Goodluck Jonathan’s area. The party hopes to make a huge harvest of votes in Ogbia.

But, despite the seeming huge support that the APC envoys in Nembe and Brass, Dickson is believed to be the chief strategist of the PDP in this election.

It is also believed that he has his foot soldiers in all the local government areas. The governor’s determination to see  Diri and Lawrence emerge victorious is the fire that is driving his push for the PDP to sustain its political dominance in Bayelsa.

However, in all of these, Yenagoa LGA will be the battleground for the PDP and the APC, because it has the highest  votes.

It has 199, 895 registered voters with 180, 263 PVCs collected by their owners.

Also,  a member of the  House of Assembly, Oforji Oboku, is believed to be holding the aces in the council where Lyon,  a resident of Igbogene community, has endeared himself to the people through his philanthropy over the years.

A public affairs commentator and Secretary of the Civil Liberties Organisation in the state, David West, opined that the entire political situation portended what he described as a 50-50 chance for the PDP and the APC.

Giving an insight into his opinion on the political advantages of the two parties, he said, “From my observation, Lyon has a very good following in Southern Ijaw.  Brass  is a  stronghold of the APC and, by extension, Nembe LGA.

“But Ogbia, in my view, has sympathy for the APC, too, although the PDP is trying to convince the people of the area that they had been very good to them by giving them the presidency with Goodluck Jonathan as the beneficiary. However, it is 50-50 situation.

“The Kolokuma/Opokuma people believe that it is their turn to produce a governor and Sagbama  is for the PDP, because  Dickson is from there. In Ekeremor, it is going to be 50-50, too, but the PDP appears to have a slight edge.”

Which way will the political pendulum swing at the end of the voting?

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