Olufemi Lanlehin (Solan), who represented Oyo South Senatorial District between 2011 and 2015, is a chieftain of the Oyo State All Progressives Congress (APC) and was the governorship candidate of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) in 2019. His party was one of those that entered into the never-seen-before coalition that culminated in victory for Engr. Seyi Makinde of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). For the first time, Lanlehin spoke to newsmen on issues surrounding the coalition, and why the people of Oyo State should vote for Senator Teslim Folarin as governor.

In specifics, what were the coalition terms you reached with Engr? Seyi Makinde during discussions for the coalition?

There were four parties – PDP, ADC, ZLP, and SDP, and we decided that we will have a joint approach to the election by presenting a single candidate, in the person of Seyi Makinde, and that at the end of the day, if we do win – which we were sure we will, because of the high numbers that we had, that we will have a unity government, which would be structured based on our performance at the presidential/national assembly elections. At the end of the day, PDP which he represented, had 50% of the total votes, ADC 33%, ZLP 10%, and SDP less than 5%, which we agreed to round up to 5%.

We constituted our Campaign Directors-General into a Committee which came up with a working paper that culminated in the table we were working with. These DGs, many of them astute politicians and experienced administrators, gave us all the positions available in government, and, gave us proposals, B, and C, and we agreed to one of the proposals which spelled that the governor, will have the SSG, Chief of Staff, one or two Commissioners – I think Finance, ADC will have three or four Commissioners, ZLP, I think one, among others. We structured the whole thing around specific appointments to which thegovthe ogovernvgovernmenteexpressionsion.

Were there timelines for all of these agreements, or you just left the governor to his discretion?

There were supposed to be timelines; they were supposed to be done before the inauguration, and if not, because of certain exigencies, then it should continue after the inauguration until fruition. But ever since he was sworn in, he became evasive, totally unavailable. I was the face of the coalition, I was supposed to be meeting him, and reporting to other coalition partners. I think once or twice, we had a meeting with all the coalition partners before I met the governor more than five times, and he continually promised to do all that we agreed to, although we knew it was not justifiable. I recall there was a time a meeting was arranged – he had spent about four or five months in office then, the meeting was arranged for Governor Ladoja’s house, wherein all governorship candidates of the coalition parties were present. We had that meeting from 9 pm to 3 am, and everybody stated their grievances; I enumerated my grievances. Of course, he apologized and promised to make amends, that he was going to contact me on Monday (the meeting was held on Friday), and that we would take it from there, I didn’t hear from him for the next two weeks.

Did you try contacting him?

I think I called him once or twice the next week, and after one week, he still said he would call, and he didn’t. So, all the meetings we had before the inauguration, which was, I think more than five, and about two after the inauguration were not adhered to.

What you’re saying is that Governor Makinde’s evasiveness and non-committal nature convinced you the coalition would not work.

I knew he was just playing games. I was so convinced that I stepped out of it. Although I left the party there.

You were the first to leave the coalition, you left around July 2019

I left because it was so clear to me that he was not going to be faithful, as his body language, spoken language, and subtle meanings behind his spoken words didn’t show he would be committal.

In the governor’s defense, he might say he gave appointments to some people in the ADC, are they not your people?

No, they’re not our people.

The likes of Senator Monsurat Sunmonu, WasiuOlatubosun…

No, I was supposed to anchor the whole thing, and I was supposed to take it back to the house. It was supposed to be a joint approach, a joint decision. But at the end of the day when I left, I left therein the party apparatus to continue with the negotiation – Architect Basiru Lawal, our DG, Hon. Yemi Aderibigbe, and Pastor Wale Adepoju.

What you’re saying is that those who got an appointment didn’t get it through the coalition arrangements.

They were not recommendations from the ADC. As the face of the coalition, I can boldly say that.

Perhaps it was their relationship that got them appointed?

It was out of their manipulations.

So, in all fairness, the coalition led by you did not get anything from Governor Makinde?

We didn’t.

And you didn’t think you could’ve given the governor more time to fulfill the terms?

Even after two years, he didn’t reach out to us. Even if someone says I’m stepping out because of so, so and so, as an Omoluabi, don’t you think he should’ve said, let’s look at it again? The only time he ever reached out, was when we had that marathon 9 pm to 3 am meeting at Governor Ladoja’s place, which nothing came out of. I just knew he was playing games.

You’re backing Senator Folarin for governorship, why?

I’m backing Folarin because the difference is clear. The experience he has as an administrator, politician, and humanist, is incomparable to what Seyi Makinde has. Makinde is a businessman who believes because he has a lot of money, he has bought all he thinks he has. He has not gone through the mills at all.

So, do you think Folarin will not be another Makinde?

No. Though it is impossible to vouch for anyone 100%, the fact is if you put the two of them together side by side, Folarin is miles ahead of Seyi, who has no experience, whether as a Commissioner, Board Member, Councilor, and he hasn’t got any milk of human kindness in him at all. He doesn’t believe in anyone. It is now that elections are coming that he is now trying to be nice, and relate with everyone.

But he’s paying salaries?

That’s a constitutional duty, a statutory duty. He’s supposed to administer the state, which comprises all and sundry, all members of the party, all members of the society, but he just administers the state in a manner that benefits himself and his close circuit of friends, he brings contractors and consultants from outside the state to run and manage the affairs and finances of the state.

So, do you think Senator Folarin will make a good governor?

He will. Somebody who’s been to the Senate three times must have something standing him out. It means he’s a team player, one who listens. Remember he was once Senate Leader; for someone to rise that high, surely means he has something to offer. Not someone who got there, and now considers himself a god, and his money got him there.

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