
Ayodele Olorunfemi, the restored Labour Party candidate for governor of Ondo State, has lamented his defeat in Saturday’s poll and blamed the Nigeria Labour Congress and former Anambra State governor Peter Obi for his situation.
After winning all 18 Ondo local government districts, the Independent National Electoral Commission proclaimed Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa of the ruling All Progressives Congress the victor.
According to Prof. Olayemi Akinwumi, the State Returning Officer, who made the final result announcement, Agboola Ajayi of the PDP received 117,845 votes, while Ayedatiwa of the APC received 366,781 votes.
“That Ayedatiwa Lucky Orimisan of APC, having satisfied the requirement of the law, is hereby returned elected,” the Returning Officer declared.
Olorunfemi’s defeat occurs just days after INEC, in response to a Court of Appeal decision, put his name back on the ballot as the LP flag bearer for the November 16 election.
Olorunfemi exhaled with relief after weeks of tension when the Court of Appeal in Abuja overturned a previous ruling by the Federal High Court directing the electoral umpire to acknowledge Olusola Ebiseni, Obi’s preferred candidate.
In response, Olorunfemi said in an interview with The PUNCH that he would never forgive the NLC and the former LP presidential candidate for their part in thwarting his bid for governor of Ondo.
A distraught LP flag bearer admitted that his election campaign was indecisive when asked if he was able to organize a last-minute door-to-door campaign with his supporters after winning his appeal.
He remarked, “I have Peter Obi and the NLC to thank for that. They have scuttled my aspirations and chances to win this Ondo election. These people spoilt things for us with that PDP reject they wanted to force on the party. Their insistence on having Ebiseni on the ballot ruined everything for me.

“They just capitalised on the crisis between the Labour Party and the Nigeria Labour Congress to create problems. Can you imagine that Ebiseni wrote a letter to the court in my name without my knowledge, saying I have withdrawn from the race? They cannot exclude me from such a position.”
Olorunfemi pledged to get his pound of flesh, even though he acknowledged that he understood his chances of winning the election were limited following his reinstatement a few days prior.
Additionally, the deputy chairman of the LP for South threatened to ask police to look into how Ebiseni and the NLC falsified his name and signature.
“Thank God we got an appeal judgment and my name is back in the INEC portal. The good thing here is that the truth has prevailed. Withdrawal must be voluntary. You cannot force someone to withdraw. What they have done was an attempt to force me behind my back.
“Again, it wasn’t the party that submitted it. It was the handiwork of the former President of the NLC and head of the National Transition Committee, Abduwaheed Omar. What they did is criminal.
In fact, I am planning to petition the Inspector General of Police to probe how they wrote that letter, put my signature and presented it before the court. We will deal with that later. For now, we are still doing our underground work and doing our best for this election,” he stated.
Prof. Theophilus Ndubuaku, the acting chairman of the NLC Political Commission, branded Olorunfemi a “very funny character” when he was asked to refute the accusation made against the workers’ union.
“He is one human being you should never take seriously. As a result of this crisis between us and Abure, Olorunfemi became the deputy to Abure and he was given the ticket. Before this election, he was a placeholder. So what did he do? He now started shopping for who would buy the ticket from him.
“In the process, they asked Ebiseni to pay N20m to get the ticket. He paid and even added another N5m which they claimed was for expenses. When they refused to give him the ticket, Ebiseni went to court. In retaliation, the Abure’s camp started working to ensure INEC didn’t upload his name because of the Kagaroo judgment they went to secure.
“The only challenge we have was that before the judgment, INEC had already given the code for uploading the names of agents to Olorunfemi. We know he would have uploaded the names of suspected APC agents there. We know he is obviously working indirectly for the APC.”
Attempts to contact Obi and Ebiseni for responses were unsuccessful, at the time this story was filed.
Source: punchng.com