Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Fashola has challenged
President Goodluck Jonathan to use the dollars he is using to bribe the
electorate for votes, to pay petroleum marketers to end the ongoing
nationwide fuel scarcity.
Fashola, who spoke at the
official handing over the Maidan-Aina-Agiliti network of roads and
bridge in the Kosofe Local Government Area of Lagos, southwest Nigeria
on Tuesday, said Jonathan should showcase his achievement rather than
bribing people with dollars to get their votes
According to Fashola, it is demeaning, insulting and
degrading for a president who had made promises and did not fulfil them
to now turn around and be sharing dollars, saying that sharing dollars
could not account for the poor records of the president since he took
over office six years ago.
The governor said anybody
who collected Jonathan’s dollars is only mortgaging his or her future,
adding that it were better if Jonathan spent the dollars in paying the
marketers who refused to import petroleum products because they were
being owed by the Federal Government.
Fashola said he is a happy man because the new roads and
bridge had brought prosperity to all the people in the area, with the
traders commuting easily with their wares and landlords also enjoying an
increase in rate of properties due to the new roads.
He
stated that for him, a government must stand for something or it will
fall for everything, stressing that for him, the project represents the
value of democracy where voters can hold politicians responsible for the
promises made to them.
“Any politician who makes you promises
and comes back after four years without fulfilling those promises and
is promising you that he would do more, must be voted out. Any
politician who cannot make definitive positive impact in your life
within his first term of office will not do anything during the second
term.
“In the second term, he is not accountable to you
anymore. This is the only time you can hold him, when he is seeking
re-election. In this campaign, the PDP presidential candidate can make
all sorts of promises but for me as a citizen, this issue is no longer
about promises. The issue is about his record of performance.
“It
is not about what I will do because I cannot change him if he doesn’t
do anything in the next four years. This is the only time I have to hold
him to account and I will vote to change him,” he said.
He
argued that if Nigerians vote to change Jonathan, for the first time in
the history of Nigeria, the citizens would have changed a government
that had disappointed them, adding that all his life, it was the
military that always changed governments that performed below
expectation.
“This is the first time that you have the
opportunity to change a government that has not fulfilled its promises
and that is what democracy is all about. It is not about whether he is
my brother or handsome. Politicians are not voted to be handsome but to
be improving the life of the people, not about where he comes from. The
President has not offended me as a person but as a citizen he has not
done his job, he has not given me electricity; he has not managed this
economy well.
“The dollar is getting stronger and my
local currency is getting weaker. So if I have to buy anything imported I
have to pay more. So that is not personal or religious, it is just that
his best is not good enough. So I want to change him. If we change him,
the message we will send to politicians is that no politician will come
to you again and tell lies,” he stated.
Noting that
the best politics is good policies and development and not about sharing
dollars or rice around as the president is currently doing, the
governor said if the Nigerian economy is in good shape, it would be
possible for every resident to be able to afford rice and kerosene that
were being shared by the politicians that had just come to town to sway
voters to support them.
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