2023 Election was Won Fairly and Frankly - Lai Mohammed
Although some supporters of the opposition candidates believe otherwise, former Information and Culture Minister Alhaji Lai Mohammed has stated that the 2023 election was not rigged for any candidate.
"The major opposition candidates involved in the election know this truth but choose to continue on the path of claiming being rigged out so as to keep their support base intact with the false hope that they narrowly lost our due to the purported rigging," the former I minister said.
He claimed that in order to refute the claim that the 2023 presidential election was rigged, the federal authorities contacted foreign media outlets. During an Abuja meeting of former government spokespersons on Tuesday, Mohammed revealed the information. He noted that there was an increasing global effort to undermine the 2023 presidential election.
“Allegations of rigging had surfaced, largely centred around the delay in uploading results to the IReV portal—which, notably, plays no role in the official collation of election results.
“I led my team to the United Kingdom and the United States to engage directly with key international media organisations and influential think tanks. Our goal was to present them with irrefutable facts on how the election was won and lost.
“We met with journalists and representatives from Voice of America, The Washington Post, Foreign Policy Magazine, Associated Press, BBC, The Economist, Reuters, Bloomberg, Politico, Hudson Institute, U.S. Institute of Peace, Atlantic Council, and Chatham House, among others,” Mohammed said.
“We explained that, under Chapter 6, Section 134 of the Constitution, a candidate must not only win the majority of votes but also secure at least 25 per cent of the votes in no fewer than two-thirds of the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory.
“Based on this, we made it clear that neither the PDP nor LP candidates had a viable path to victory. We presented the breakdown: the LP candidate placed a distant third, trailing the APC candidate by approximately 2.7 million votes.
“The APC candidate not only won the highest number of votes but also secured 25 per cent of the vote in 29 states—well above the constitutional threshold. The PDP candidate, who came second, met the 25 per cent threshold in only 21 states, while the LP candidate achieved it in just 15 states. Both fell short of the constitutional criteria for victory.
“To further dispel the allegations of rigging, we laid out compelling evidence: the APC lost in key states with a high number of registered voters—Lagos, Kaduna, Kano, and Katsina—even though all had APC governors,” he concluded.
Comments
Post a Comment