Buhari’s search for saints as ministers will fail – Senator Urhoghide
The
jury is still out on whether Matthew Urhoghide has finished paying for his sins
of radicalism. After years of unionist struggle that climaxed with his election
as president of the Students Union in the University of Benin, his bid to enter
mainstream politics in his native Edo State in 1999 was for 15 years laced with
several disappointments.
In every election cycle he made all the waves
galvanized the electorate but when it mattered most, he was always left in the
cold!
Urhoghide’s fate until his recent
election to the Senate was essentially because of his own inclination to walk
in the public arena. Many of his associates from his school days like the
former journalist, Segun Babatope preferred to work behind the scenes. But not
Urhoghide, a man who fought the system from outside as a student’s activist and
decided to reform it from inside!
In his first outing in 1999 when he
sought the governorship ticket of Edo State on the platform of the defunct All Peoples
Party, APP, he was roundly routed despite a popular campaign that galvanised
many youths.
He suffered the same stamp of defeat in
2003 in the hands of Senator Roland Owie, who had just left the former Peoples
Democratic Party, PDP.
He did not give up and in 2007 instead
of seeking state wide office, he now sought the Edo South senatorial ticket of
the opposition All Nigeria Peoples Party, ANPP. For the first time he was on
ticket for a general election but was overwhelmed by the PDP’s nationwide blitz
that year.
Despite his own loss, his formidable
political machine was helpful in gathering the election data with which Comrade
Adams Oshiomhole used in prosecuting his election petition at the tribunal.
With the Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN
in power in Edo State it was believed that Urhoghide’s time had finally come in
2011 when he again sought the Senate ticket of the ACN.
He was surprisingly disappointed by the
last minute intrigues that shadowed the emergence of the ACN senatorial
candidate in 2011. Urhoghide’s unhidden bid was derailed after Comrade
Oshiomhole joined forces with Senator Ehighie Uzamere as a quid pro quo for the
latter’s own help. Uzamere had helped Oshiomhole to defeat the PDP’s forces as
led by Chief Tony Anenih during the Senate confirmation hearings of the Edo
State nominees for the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC.
Some would have also suggested that
Oshiomhole or the Benin electorate was also paying Uzamere a hand of gratitude
for his own role in seeing to the first ever appointment of a Bini man as both
vice-chancellor of the University of Benin and the Nigerian Institute for Oil
Palm Research, NIFOR.
Willy-nilly, Uzamere”s reward became
Urhoghide’s loss.
It was, however, a stinging loss for
Urhoghide and forced him to leave the ACN. He was immediately welcomed into the
PDP which waived away all rules to immediately give him a leading role in the
party which was in opposition in Edo State.
It was a sort of irony. Urhoghide was
now fighting his former comrades and allies and doing so from the camp of the
former enemies.
Urhoghide’s appointment as the Publicity
Secretary of the PDP immediately gave verve and vibe to the PDP which had
virtually been discredited on account of the stewardship of the state between
1999 and 2007.
It was thus remarkable that in the
period leading to the last National Assembly elections that the
senatorial ticket of the PDP became his for the taking especially after Senator
Uzamere declined a third successive stint.
Confronted with the Oshiomhole machine
in the main elections, Urhoghide overcame and eventually banished the stigma.
Having overcome the demons with his
Senate victory it is not surprising that those hoping to return the PDP to the
Edo Government House would beckon on him. Is he falling for it, he was asked in
an interview.
“I am not aware of that. I must say that
everything is not about
contest.” He, however, confesses the
desperation of the PDP to win back the office, desperation that it is claimed
has made the party to zone the office to his Edo South Senatorial Constituency.
“We are desperate in the sense that we
are going to do everything legitimate and within the rules of the game to win
the election.”
It would, however, seem that neither his
stint in the Senate nor his membership of the PDP has lessened his inclination
for political fights. A case in point is his stern posture on the campaign
against Senator Ike Ekweremadu’s election as Deputy Senate President.
For
the full story, check the full story in the Vanguard newspaper.
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