2023 polls, Tinubu and Katsina APC 

Governor Aminu Bello Masari of Katsina state was speaker of the House of Representatives in 2006 when a former military head of state and presidential candidate of the opposition Congress for Progressives Change (CPC), retired Major General Muhammadu Buhari, wanted to address the National Assembly, which was dominated and controlled by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). 

Retired General Olusegun Obasanjo was then the president of Nigeria on the banner of the PDP. He was alleged to harbour a ‘Third Term’ agenda. Third term agenda meant self-perpetuation in office, which is against Nigeria’s constitution.

The CPC presidential candidate went to the National Assembly to address members on the ills of ‘self perpetuation in office’. President Obasanjo would have none of that, and told the National Assembly to deny the request of the CPC’s presidential candidate.

The Senate granted the request of President Obasanjo, and refused the request of Buhari, the candidate of the CPC.

The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Masari, however, saw it differently. He thought and believed it was wrong to deny the former head of state the platform of the National Assembly to address the members. His reasoning was that the members and President Obasanjo, himself a former military head of state, should look beyond politics and see the request as coming from a former head of state and commander-in-chief, not from a politician.

While the Senator Ken Nnamani-led Senate denied the request of the CPC candidate, Speaker Aminu Bello Masari allowed him the platform of the House of Representatives, where he addressed its members. A very strong political bond was thus borne between General Buhari and Speaker Masari. For emphasis, that bond, well formed, became one of the series of events that culminated in the formation of the APC. Buhari and Masari are from Katsina state.

Of course, the Jagaban Borgu and President-elect, Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu, was to play a significant role in collaboration with some key elements from the then new PDP members, a faction of APGA and other progressive minded Nigerians, in the formation of the APC, as we know it today.

President Buhari became the presidential flagbearer of the APC and Masari, perhaps, in appreciation of his plausible roles, emerged the party’s first vice chairman where he galvanised the party not just in the North but also across the country. Of course, he eventually emerged its gubernatorial flagbearer in Katsina state.

From APC’s formation to date, Katsina state has continued to play fundamental roles in boosting its fortunes through massively voting for the party in all elections.

For instance, in 2015, APC won all the national and state assembly seats. Similar feat was repeated in 2019 and 2023 where the party won all the senate seats, clinched nine of the 15 House of Reps seats and won 31 of the 34 state assembly seats with three scheduled for rerun.

Fundamentally, the APC’s critical stakeholders in Katsina state never waver in their commitment to consolidate the party’s fortunes just as they have been in the forefront of ensuring power shift to the South after the expiration of President Buhari’s term.

Governor Masari never hid his belief that it was now the turn of the South to have a shot at the presidency and the right person for the job is the Jagaban Borgu, who by God’s divine mercy and thanks to the efforts of people like the Dallatun Katsina, is now the president-elect.

The APC leadership in Katsina state under the guidance of Governor Masari plays fundamental roles in further proving to all and sundry that the state is under the firm control of the progressives.

Through dogged commitment, the governor and other leaders of the party galvanised members and worked tirelessly for the party’s victory. For long, they have been preoccupied with what they could do for the party and indeed, all its candidates. That paid off. It won’t be out of place to ask what the party (the president-elect) will do for the leadership in the state.

Sani writes from No 51, Daura Street, Kofar Kaura, Katsina state