![The All Progressives Congress (APC) national leader, Bola Tinubu. [CREDIT: Tinubu Twitter Page]](https://media.premiumtimesng.com/wp-content/files/2022/05/FSWSQ-qXMAEud-0.jpg)
Speaking after receiving his certificate of return, Tinubu went on along the same line, philosophising about the importance of placing the country above anything else. “To those who didn’t support me, I ask that you not allow the disappointment of this moment to keep you from realising the historic national progress we can make by joining hands and hearts in common endeavour to pull this nation through. In a phrase, I am asking you to work with me. I may be the president election but I need you. More importantly, Nigeria needs you.”
For a hurdler who laboriously surmounted many hurdles on his way to the finish line, there could be the temptation for chest-beating and gloating. The victory was well earned. He worked for it and it came as a vindication that through acts of providence and hard work, destiny could be fulfilled in spite of mountainous challenges. But for Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Nigeria’s president-elect, victory is a moment for humility and magnanimity.
Immediately he was announced as the winner of the presidential election in the early hours of Wednesday, 1 March, Asiwaju Tinubu changed from that political gladiator who fought his way to victory to a unifying statesman.
The journey to victory was an uphill task. He paddled through shark-infested waters to grab the presidential ticket of the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the 8 June convention last year. He upturned his disadvantageous position just days before the primaries into a formidable one. At the end he emerged winner with a shocking two/third of the total votes. He repeated the feat at the general election.
This presidential election is arguably the most competitive we’ve seen in recent recollection. Ordinarily it ought to be a walk-over for the APC, having gone into the election as a pretty intact ruling party at the centre, with 21 governors in tow. However, events leading up to the election threatened the comfortable position of the party. The threats were not the making of the opposition. The ranks of the position was hugely fractured with the closest contender having to deal with a bitter internal revolt.
The APC went into the poll with two injuries, largely self-inflicted — the unending fuel crisis and the messy currency swap (or confiscation, to borrow the term from the Nigerian Governors Forum). Pains from the two situations generated a lot of anger.
Like the Qur’anic Abu Lahab, some persons went about laying out thorns on the path of Tinubu and the APC to victory. They clothed their actions with a garb of patriotism and pushed their sugar-coated bitter pills down the throat of Nigerians. Expectedly it stoked anger and sent the opposition, which was likely part of the script, into an overdrive. It wrote off Tinubu and his quest. Indeed if not for the smart management of it, the scheme could have cost the President-elect victory.
The campaign also had to contend with three strong rivals, each of them experienced in politics, and each one of them riding on strong emotional waves. This polarised voters, who had invested a lot of emotions largely along ethnic and religious lines in the election. It was a stormy ride.
After the end of the rigmarole, Asiwaju Tinubu came out of the ring, victorious but bruised. He won the election with a reasonable margin; averaging the usual margin for previous presidential elections, in spite of the lower turn out.
He was pained that he lost Lagos, and he admitted this when he received former South African president Thabo Mbeki on Thursday. It was the first time a party he had supported would fail to clinch that state. It’s doubly painful that he was on the ballot. But, as he admitted, it goes to show how credible the election was and call to question the hypocrisy of the wailing losers who celebrate such victories for themselves, yet call to question integrity of the entire process.
The true democrat that he is, once it was over Tinubu immediately put behind him the sores from the campaign and the election. It is a new dawn for the nation and for him whose lot it is to unite the country as he prepares to take on the reins of power.
Rather than relish the sweetness of his victory with dance steps and parties, he chose to assume the position of a peacemaker. He extended the olive branch to the candidates who lost and used his words as a soothing balm for Nigerians who supported candidates other than him. He had said it in his first speech to the nation as president-elect: it doesn’t matter if you had voted for him or supported any of his opponents. The issue on the table now is building an administration and a nation. “Political competition must now give way to political conciliation and inclusive governance,” he declared in his acceptance speech.
Speaking after receiving his certificate of return, Tinubu went on along the same line, philosophising about the importance of placing the country above anything else. “To those who didn’t support me, I ask that you not allow the disappointment of this moment to keep you from realising the historic national progress we can make by joining hands and hearts in common endeavour to pull this nation through. In a phrase, I am asking you to work with me. I may be the president election but I need you. More importantly, Nigeria needs you.”
It is in this spirit that he opened his doors wide open to receive visitors, irrespective of where they stood before the election. Everyone came. Lines were blurred. The goal now is in rallying the country around and galvanising its great sons and daughters to come together for the task ahead. He received close lieutenants and foot soldiers. Those who refused responsibility or declined support at the time it was needed were there with smiles. He received fifth columnists who threw spanners to work against him with his same warm embrace and broad smile. The past is behind, the task is ahead.
It is a new chapter. Off in the horizon, the glint of the Renewed Hope that Asiwaju Tinubu promised is already visible. This week both the Nigerian bonds and stocks appreciated sharply in response to the election outcome. To borrow his own phrase, indeed “hope is here”.
Abdulaziz Abdulaziz is Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the president-elect.
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