Real Reasons I Lost 2015 Presidential Election - Jonathan Reveals In New Book, 'My Transition Hours'
Goodluck Jonathan, has revealed how former governors of his
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), who defected to the then opposition All
Progressive Congress (APC) because they were “blinded by ambition” and a
barrage of “fake news,” cost him his bid to be reelected for a second term in
office.
According to PREMIUM TIMES, the immediate past president
made the claim in a book about his tenure in office titled: “My Transition
Hours” being launched on Tuesday in Abuja.
The ex-president who lost the election to his challenger,
Muhammadu Buhari, with just over 2.5 million votes, also blamed northern
leaders who wanted power returned to their region for sabotaging his reelection
bid.
“This time around, there were governors who were rounding
off their eight years tenure and were blinded by ambition,” he wrote about his
re-election bid in 2015 having been overwhelmingly voted for in the
2011election.
“Some governors wanted to be Vice President whilst others
strived to be the President. If I contested none could realise his ambition.
"This muffled implosion would fully manifest in the
buildup to the 2015, which each ship-jumper calculating how much he or she
would take from the PDP or the most opportune moment to cause maximum damage
and based on that, plot their exit.
“As they jumped ship in preparation for the 2015 elections,
only very few of this lots, if any at all, bothered about what the PDP did or
did not do in terms of delivering our campaign promises.
"Their opposition to my re-election was principally
driven by personal ambition. They therefore played up the issue pf where I come
from and the faith, I professed to fuel their burning ambition. My performance
mattered quite little, if it mattered at all,” he wrote.
Jonathan added that in a twist of fate, most of the
governors and other prominent members of the former ruling party who plotted against
him are now being victimised in the APC.
The former president also said he faced a barraged of
opposition from Northern leaders and socio-political group who felt he was
usurping power from the region. He said these northern power blocs had tried to
deny him of his constitutional right of replacing the late president Umaru
Yar’Adua, who died in office, in 2010.
He said despite the threats and opposition he was able to
win the 2011 election
“In spite of the threats and provocations to make the country
‘ungovernable’ for me, I had the overwhelming support of Nigerians in the
run-up to the presidential election in 2011.
"I was able to win the election to the grace of god and
the love of Nigerians. The election was all but won even before the whistle was
blown for some strong factors. To mention a few, the pressure to preclude me
from contesting in 2011, met with solid indignation from majority of
Nigerians.”
He said in 2015, some northern leaders continued to oppose
his presidency and his bid to seek a second term in office, but a new element
was added to the opposition: “constant fabrication of damaging stories”.
“Many reasons make the onslaught in this context very
suspect especially as it was being managed by foreign experts mostly from the
United States.
“Throughout my tenure in office as President, there was
constant barrage of what Donald Trump has now termed ‘fake news’ coming from a
well-oiled media propaganda machine. I can say as a matter of fact that were
never any snipers in training or already trained. There were no lists of
political enemies to be taken out.
“There was no missing $49.8 billion and more importantly I
can say that even those who made these and other allegations knew that they
were false. This probably explains why many of these allegations died a natural
death even as the echoes of my retreating footsteps still resounded nationally
and globally,” he wrote.
He said he faced unending insults during his tenure and one
that was particularly bemusing to him was the tagging of his presidency as
“clueless” despite a number of firsts the country recorded during his tenure.
He said his tenure heralded “phenomenon economic growth” for
the country, the most prominent of which was the 2013 declaration of Nigeria as
the largest economy in Africa.
He was it was no ordinary diplomatic feat for the country to
be elected into the Security Council of the United Nations twice during his
tenure.
He added that it was during his administration that a
Nigerian, Akinwumi Adesina (his Minister of Agriculture), became the president
of the African Development Bank for the first time.
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