ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) - Nigerian President Bola Tinubu on Thursday denied that there were plans to turn Africa’s largest democracy into a one-party state, pushing back against claims that he’s using state mechanisms to convince high-profile opposition politicians to defect to the governing party.
Nigerian leader denies one-party plan after he’s accused of clamping down on opposition
ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) - Nigerian President Bola Tinubu on Thursday denied that there were plans to turn Africa’s largest democracy into a one-party state, pushing back against claims that he’s using state mechanisms to convince high-profile opposition politicians to defect to the governing party.
Several governors and federal lawmakers have left opposition parties in recent months to join Nigeria’s All Progressives Congress party. Abdullahi Ganduje, the governing party’s chairman, has also said there was "nothing wrong" with Nigeria becoming a one-party state, angering many in a region threatened with shrinking democratic space.
In his Democracy Day address to federal lawmakers, Tinubu said that he would be "the last person" to advocate for Nigeria to drop its multiparty structure and adopt a one-party system.
“At no time in the past, nor any instance in the present, and at no future juncture shall I view the notion of a one-party state as good for Nigeria," he said.