Thursday 22 January 2015

Jonathan Wants 2015 Elections Postponed for 6 Months, Plans to Sack Jega from INEC

There is fire on the mountain, it looks like Muhammadu Buhari of the APC is now obviously more popular than President Goodluck Jonathan of PDP, hence there are underground moves to do everything possible to postpone the election since the Certificate story against Buhari has failed.

Plans by Jonathan and his team to scuttle the general elections scheduled for February have come to light, with National Security Adviser, NSA, Sambo Dasuki, openly calling for postponement of the elections.

Sambo spoke at a Chattam House lecture in London, offering the excuse that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has not distributed Permanent Voters Cards across the country as was expected. Continue...

SR had reported several months ago that President Goodluck Jonathan was reluctant to hold national elections because his popularity had dwindled considerably and he feared losing the election.

In the last few days, as Buhari's popularity for the presidency has grown, Jonathan has spent vast sums of money mobilizing people to call for the postponement of the elections.

INEC spokesperson, Kayode Idowu told Sahara Reporters on Thusday that INEC was not aware of Col. Dasuki’s suggestion, and that the elections must hold as scheduled.

Several sources connected to the presidency told SaharaReporters that President Jonathan wants the elections to be postponed for at least six months, a period that will enable him to appoint a new INEC chairman of his liking to oversee the elections. Professor Attahiru Jega’s tenure expires in July 2015.

With Jega out of the way, Jonathan would appoint another INEC chairman who would further the postponement of the election. 

Sahara Reporters sources stated that President Jonathan is seriously considering an “Interim Government of National Unity” that would elongate his tenure till 2017. That would mean he spends eight years in power as President, the equivalent of two terms.

In 2011 as he assumed office, his first effort was to call for a new six-year term arrangement, which was shot down by Nigerians.

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