Home News 2027: APC rules out automatic tickets for NASS members, other aspirants

2027: APC rules out automatic tickets for NASS members, other aspirants

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The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) has ruled out the granting of automatic tickets to members of the party in the National Assembly and other aspirants seeking elective offices ahead of the 2027 general elections.

APC National Chairman, Nentawe Yilwatda, disclosed this during a media chat on Channels Television on Wednesday night, stressing that such a move would violate both the Electoral Act and the party’s constitution.

Yilwatda acknowledged that the party had received multiple requests from lawmakers seeking automatic tickets but insisted that the APC would adhere strictly to due process.

According to him, all aspirants must test their popularity through either the direct primary system or a consensus arrangement, as provided by law.

The push for automatic tickets by some federal lawmakers and party loyalists is not new within the APC. Since the 2019 and 2023 election cycles, many incumbents have argued that granting them return tickets would help the party avoid costly and divisive primary contests, which in the past triggered internal disputes, litigations, and defections.

Proponents of the arrangement also believe that incumbents, particularly legislators, already possess established political structures and grassroots networks that could give the party an edge during general elections.

However, critics within the party warn that automatic tickets undermine internal democracy, shut out new entrants, and often fuel resentment among grassroots members who feel excluded from the candidate selection process.

The APC leadership has repeatedly faced the delicate task of balancing these competing interests, especially as the 2027 elections approach and intra-party competition intensifies across states.

Nevertheless, Yilwatda explained that consensus candidacy would only be valid where all aspirants agree in writing and the process is duly ratified by party officials responsible for conducting the primaries.

The APC chairman, who appeared alongside the party’s National Secretary, Surajudeen Ajibola Basiru, expressed confidence in the party’s electoral prospects, noting that the administration of Bola Ahmed Tinubu has delivered significant infrastructure and empowerment programmes across the country.

Yilwatda also addressed growing concerns over the defection of the former Governor of Kano State, Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso to the African Democratic Congress (ADC), a move that has stirred anxiety within some APC circles about a possible erosion of its support base in the North-West.

Kwankwaso who is the leader of the influential Kwankwasiyya movement, commands a loyal grassroots following, particularly among urban youth and rural voters in Kano and parts of the wider region. His political structure has historically proven capable of swinging electoral outcomes, as seen in previous contests in Kano.

The fear among some APC stakeholders is that his defection could consolidate opposition forces and fragment the ruling party’s traditional vote base in Kano which is one of Nigeria’s most politically significant states by voter population.

However, Yilwatda dismissed such concerns, arguing that the APC’s entrenched structures backed by key political figures and incumbents like Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf, his predecessors , Abdullahi Umaru Ganduje, Ibrahim Shekarau remain strong enough to withstand any opposition surge spearheaded by Kwankwaso.

He maintained that alignments involving established APC stakeholders across Kano and neighbouring states would neutralise any potential gains by Kwankwaso and his supporters

He further projected similar dominance for the APC in Sokoto, Zamfara, Kebbi, Katsina, and Kaduna states, attributing this to what he described as improved governance and sustained infrastructural development over the past three years.

The sun.