Soludo ga achi anyi [Soludo will lead us]. Yet, if there is another party [Non Voted Peoples Party, NVPP], any candidate representing it would have won. According to INEC which has called the election, Chukwuma Soludo (APGA), the winner of the November 6 governorship election in Anambra State, polled 112,299 votes, followed by Valentine Ozigbo (PDP) who scored 53, 807, and then Andy (APC) who closed at 43,285 votes.
Total accredited voters were 253, 388 with valid votes 241,523 and voided 8,108 (some possibly did not wait to vote). The state has a total number of 2,466,638 registered voters!
Largely, if NVPP had mobilized more that 2.2 million registered voters who did not even care to show up, its candidate would have won. My point is this: Nigerians are not participating well in elections, and if people do show up, anything is possible.
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This trajectory was the same during the last presidential election. If all the registered voters who did not vote were allocated to one special party, the party’s candidates would have won in all elections in Nigeria! This does imply that winning is indeed possible if those latent voters are stimulated, activated and mobilized to vote.
Mazi Soludo, congrats. Now, the work begins.
Update: This is Soludo Acceptance Speech
A Divine Journey Whose Time Has Come
Chukwuma Charles Soludo, CFR
Acceptance Speech following the Declaration of the Results of the Anambra State Governorship Election, November 2021, by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC): November 10th, 2021
With utmost humility and gratitude to God, I accept the results of the 2021 Anambra Governorship election as declared by INEC. This reflects the supreme will of the almighty God, and an overwhelming sacred mandate of the people. For 12 years since the massive clamour by the people of Anambra for us to serve them, we persevered to this Divine moment. This is a divine journey whose time has come. To God be all the glory and adoration!
We have a very long list of persons whom God used to make this moment a reality. In particular, we thank all members of APGA especially our national leader, HE (Sir) Willie Maduaburochukwu Obiano, our national Chairman, Ozonkpu Victor Ike Oye, members of the BOT, NEC, state Exco, etc for availing me the opportunity to fly the APGA flag and the cohesive party support.
Many thanks to our able Campaign Committee, our first rate legal team, and all other stakeholders who worked tirelessly and informally to see us through. We are grateful to all the stakeholders of the Anambra project— the clergy and the church, traditional rulers, ASATU, labour, market, trade and professional unions, youth and women organizations, non-indigene associations, businessmen and captains of industry, the Diaspora community, persons with disability, etc.
We thank all our donors, especially the hundreds of thousands of members of the 41 self-funding support groups who, for two years, put in their sweat and personal funds to propel this project. Never mind that all of you could not vote. The limited number that voted is still representative of the wishes of the people.
We are humbled by the massive support of stakeholders and Nigerians across the entire country. Your donations and goodwill are treasured. In particular, I thank my wife, Queen Frances Nonye Soludo, and children: Ozonna, Ifeatu, Chinua, Ekene, Oduko and Zikora for their love and sacrifices. Despite your deep reservations, you still allowed and supported me to step out in the service of our people. As I promised, I will work hard every day never to disappoint you.
At this moment, we must remember and will continue to remember all those who died in the course of this movement, especially the three policemen who were killed by unknown gunmen during our town hall meeting with youths in my ward. May God continue to grant their souls eternal rest.
The run up to this election and the election itself tested the resilience and integrity of our federal institutions. Many times there were tensions especially as one party boasted that it must “take” or “conquer” Anambra by all means. Our institutions proved again and again that this country can achieve eminent greatness when our institutions rise up to the occasion.
The judiciary, led by the President of the Court of Appeal and the Chief Justice of Nigeria, stood for the integrity of the judiciary. We salute the eminent justices of the Anambra High court, Court of Appeal and Supreme Court for standing up for justice. Your names will be written in gold. We thank President Buhari, the presidency, and our security agencies for ensuring a level playing field. We must particularly commend the Chairman, Management and staff of INEC for systematically striving to bequeath a legacy of free, fair and transparent electoral system to Nigeria.
The use of Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) represents a massive improvement over the Card Reader and manual accreditation system. With a continuous refinement of the technology, upscaling of the skills of its operators, collaboration with telecommunication companies, improvement in logistical deployment and security, and stringent punishment for anyone involved in electoral malpractice, Nigeria will be on course to a robust and exemplary electoral system.
Aside from the initial glitches in the operations of the BVAS machines in some places including at my polling unit, the election has been adjudged as the most peaceful, free, fair and credible. There is joy in the land. Kudos to INEC!
To my fellow candidates in the election, I wish to congratulate you for the gallant contest. Our people have spoken overwhelmingly, and surely that loud voice is the voice of God. The ultimate winner is Anambra people: we are all winners. I hereby extend my hand of fellowship to all of you. I need all of you to succeed. Politics aside, we are all brothers. Let’s come together for the “Project Anambra”.
There is enough room for everyone to contribute in the service of our homeland. On February 7th, 2010, INEC declared as winner of the Anambra governorship election a candidate who had described the election as a sham on Channels TV and refused to vote in protest.
Two hours after the declaration, I addressed a press conference and congratulated him, and walked away without a legal challenge. I was probably the first candidate of a major political party to do that in Nigeria. In Anambra, we fight hard during elections but meet the next weekend at traditional weddings and funerals and throw banters and share drinks.
That’s the Anambra way! Let’s keep the “spirit of Anambra” alive and strong, and with it, collectively take our homeland to the moon. So far and even before the official declaration, I have received congratulatory messages from thousands of Ndi Anambra and Nigerians from around the world including some of my fellow candidates. I deeply treasure the massive goodwill.
To the estimated 17 million Ndi Anambra within and outside our homeland (state), this is your moment, seize it! This victory is your victory. My role will be that of your chief servant, and I will work every minute of the day with you to make you profoundly proud. I will need the guidance, advice and contribution of everyone to succeed.
Our state is one of infinite possibilities and humungous opportunities. Working in collaboration with other states, the federal government, and the international community, we have all that it takes to make our state whatever we collectively will that it can be. As we transit to a post-oil world and into the 4th Industrial Revolution, let us work together to build upon the foundations of our founding fathers and predecessors to create that livable and prosperous homeland that is the industrial, technology and leisure hub of West Africa. This is our manifest destiny, and collectively we shall get there!
Finally, let us work together to support our ably working Governor, Akpokuedike Aguleri, to finish very strong. Together, we can, and by the grace of God, we will!
Long live APGA!
Long live Anambra State!
Long live the Federal Republic of Nigeria!
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Only those who voted can decide an outcome, elections aren’t won on social media, bar or living room.
When you remove yourself, you cannot blame the system for removing you, because for you to stand a chance of winning or losing, you must first compete. Those who say votes don’t count are ignorant and deluded, because you can’t rig election where people overwhelmingly voted, it’s when you have empty spaces everywhere that political merchants move in to fill those empty spaces.
INEC remains one of the few institutions that work here, the responsibility on its shoulders is enormous, yet it relies on public security infrastructures to work in environments full of primitive thinkers and barbarians, it’s never a nice experience. Some will even discourage corps members from working in elections, you now wonder where we will import the people that can help deliver the exercise, but we always erroneously believe that we are wise and thoughtful, strange people.
Whether more or less people vote, it doesn’t always change the outcome, because those who love a candidate will be keen to vote. Soludo must perform, it’s not even optional. He could inspire something bigger, he has both the visioning capability and intellectual capital.
I would rather suggest we respond to the observation of the writer as it was presented.
The observer never disputed that those who truly love a certain contender wouldn’t turn out en masse to vote towards his/her victory, he rather opined that if those “latent” or docile electorate (who apparently have the majority) could be well sensitized, they possessed the capacity of producing a victor at any poll.
Secondly, he never posited or argued that the declared winner at the Anambra polls, Chukwuma Soludo would not perform. That never formed the basis of his analysis.