top of page
Writer's pictureAdmin

2019: Resign and go home – Fayose tells Buhari

The immediate past governor of Ekiti State, Ayodele Fayose, has told President Muhammadu Buhari to resign and go home.

Fayose said this will save Nigerians the agony of continuous rule by a “clueless president,” who will relegate the country further down if elected again.

The former governor was reacting to Buhari’s admission that the economy of the country is in bad shape.

Fayose spoke on Saturday in a statement by his media aide, Lere Olayinka.

He said, “In saner climes, a leader, who admitted that he has failed and passed (a) vote of no confidence on himself won’t be seeking re-election; he will rather excuse himself and quietly return home.”

According to Fayose, Buhari was like a football coach, who kept boasting that he had the capacity to take a team out of the middle of the league table to the top three.

“And the coach eventually got the chance to manage the team three and half years ago only for the team to be relegated to division two in less than two years he took over.”

Fayose wondered “Why the same man whom it is crystal clear will get team relegated to the division three the next season will be retained by the club owner.

“If after spending three and half years as president, you are still complaining that the economy is in bad shape, isn’t that a clear indictment on your own government? If by your own assessment, you have failed, shouldn’t you just excuse us?

“It would be disastrous to entrust the lives of over 200 million Nigerians into the hands of a man who has come out to admit that he has failed.

“The choice before Nigerians was between a failed president and Atiku Abubakar, who had proved to be a better manager of his own private economy and had played prominent roles in the provision of several millions of direct and indirect jobs through the telecommunications industry.

“For a president who boasted that he would clear the North-East of the Boko Haram insurgents within three months and make life more meaningful for Nigerians, the signs that he must take a bow and return home are clear.

“Most importantly, when a president comes out to his people who have lost over 10 million jobs and are suffering (and says) that they should expect more hardship next year, such a president should be told in plain language that his time is up.”

0 views0 comments

Comments


bottom of page