By Abiola Olawale
Senator Seriake Dickson, the lawmaker representing Bayelsa West Senatorial District of Bayelsa State at the Senate, has criticised his successor, Governor Douye Diri of Bayelsa State, for dumping the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
This is as Dickson, a former Governor of Bayelsa State, declared that he doesn’t understand the reason why Diri, who is serving his second term, will dump the PDP.
He also accused Governors elected on the platform of the PDP including his successor, of running away from the mess they created and decamping to the All Progressives Congress (APC).
Dickson made this known while speaking with the press on Wednesday.
He said: “I am where I have been. I am where I am. I don’t believe that Nigeria should be a one-party state. And as a soldier of democracy, I’m used to the ups and downs of democratic practices and democratic life and political life especially. And I’m still as constant as a northern star.
“Steadfast in the Peoples Democratic Party and working with my colleagues and friends to ensure that problems in the party are solved.
“I hope that the governors and the leadership working committee who created this mess in our party, all of them, and who instead of showing leadership, have created this mess and ensured that it has persisted for this long.
“And they are the ones now bailing out after creating the problem that they could not solve or refused to solve. It’s very sad. Very, very sad. It’s making Nigeria look small and making our country’s democracy look ridiculous.
“We don’t really know what they are pursuing or what is pursuing them. But whatever it is, it belittles our democracy and endangers our multi-party democracy.”
He further said, “I believe in a multi-party Nigeria. A plural Nigeria can only thrive in a plural democratic environment. That’s what has happened.
“But on the specifics of Bayelsa, you know, since I left and handed over to all the members who used to be part of my team, and I left, unlike others who are godfathers, I’ve not been a godfather. Left everything.
“No requests, no demands, no pressure. Only being available for consultation and advice.
“As in this case, the governor consulted me several times to his credit. And I was not convinced because I didn’t see any compelling reason for a second-term governor to defect.
“I’m just using this to say that I am still standing in the PDP that gave my people (the Ijaw Nation) and the Niger Delta people an opportunity to run for election, to emerge as vice president of this country, acting president of Nigeria, and president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
“This other party cannot do that. And I’m standing there with the PDP. If and when we don’t succeed in retrieving the PDP, in saving the PDP, then we’ll be part of a collective decision, which again, should not be the ruling party.
“Because I believe there must be opposition. A democracy without opposition ceases to be a democracy.”