Oyo State Governor, Eng. Seyi Makinde, on Thursday, said that he is not ready to ‘go low with anyone who decides to go into the gutters’.
Shortly after the Southwest Zoning consultative summit of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), held in Lagos, the governor said to the media: ‘Personally, when people go low or go into the gutters, I don’t go with them. Some people are now going into the gutters. We will reach out to them. That is democracy.
‘I can disagree with people, but there shouldn’t be anything personal here. It should be about what we are giving to Nigerians because they are watching’.
Makinde added that despite challenges, recent elections had shown that the PDP remained a formidable force.
‘In all our states, they showed last Saturday that PDP is not dead. In most other places of the 12 states, PDP came second. It is an indication to us that if we continue to work hard, we can reclaim the confidence of Nigerians’, he said.
When asked about discussions on zoning of the PDP presidential ticket to the South, Makinde said the party was not yet at that stage.
‘We haven’t even gotten there. We need to have a party first before you start talking about presidential candidates. If we don’t have a party, anything you are trying to do will fall flat.
‘Our efforts right now are directed towards having a vibrant and united PDP that Nigerians will be proud of and believe in again’, he said.
Dignitaries at the meeting include the Chairman of PDP Board of Trustees, Senator Adolphus Wabara; Chairman of the National Zoning Committee, Senator Duoye Diri, who is the Bayelsa State Governor; Governors Ademola Adeleke of Osun State, Peter Mba of Enugu State (represented by his deputy, Ifeanyi Ossai); a former Osun State Governor, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola; a former Deputy National Chairman, Chief Bode George; and Senator Monsurat Sunmonu, who was in the eighth session of the National Assembly after serving as Speaker of the Oyo State House of Assembly between 2011 and 2015.
Others were 12 of the 17 PDP National Assembly members and key stakeholders of the party from across the southern states.