Afe Babalola: The best candidate will not win 2023 presidential election

Afe-Babalola

Chief Afe Babalola

Afe Babalola’s position is that the coming presidential election will not be won by the most qualified candidate but by the highest spender among the candidates.

The legal luminary raised the fear at a media briefing in Ado Ekiti.

The 93-year-old noted that the 2023 general elections will only reproduce those who have brought Nigeria to a sordid state because the poll will be conducted under the 1999 constitution.

“It is not who can make a difference that will win this election, I repeat, it is not the person who has all it takes – age, health, education, and patriotism, that will win the election; the winner of this election I can bet it is going to be the person who has made money in this country.

“It is the person who has the money that will win,” the legal icon buttressed.

Related News

On the recent endorsement of Peter Obi of the Labour Party by former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Afe opined that it does not factor in the role money bags will play in the election.

He bemoaned the huge and crippling debt owed by Nigeria in addition to worsening security and economic challenges, insisting that only a new constitution with stringent conditions for political candidates, will save Nigeria from a total collapse.

“A man who wants to rule the whole country or any part of the country, ought to be screened. Has he ever worked before, what type of work did he do, did he steal there, was he a good manager, does he pay his taxes regularly, what contributions has he made to society?

“You cannot just come from nowhere and become president, become governor, become a member of house; these are transactional businessmen.

“I still stand by my suggestion that any election conducted under the present 1999 Constitution cannot and will not produce new leaders with new ideas, rather any election conducted with the 1999 Constitution will merely result in recycling people who have brought Nigeria to grinding poverty, unemployment, under-funded education, and insecurity,” the educationist emphasized.

Load more