Former Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi has said although he and his Jigawa State counterpart, Sule Lamido, were allies in government, they disagreed over strategy in opposing then President Goodluck Jonathan.
Amaechi, who is also a former Minister of Transportation, stated this in Abuja on Tuesday during the public presentation of Lamido’s autobiography, Being True to Myself.
“We were quite good friends in the government. We had our bad times when we disagreed. I made the mistake of assuming he was as radical as I was. So, he was one of the governors I clung to when it came to radical decisions.
“The last one before we broke ranks was when we all agreed to go against President Jonathan. We formed a committee of governors and others. At the end of the day, he went to find a new party, the SDP. We said, ‘If we go to the SDP, we will lose the election. Let’s hang on to this one called the APC.’ He disagreed and left us. That’s where we parted ways.”
He said they would not have allowed the current state of affairs in Nigeria if they were still serving as governors.
Amaechi, who chaired the Nigeria Governors Forum during Lamido’s second tenure as Jigawa governor, said they were bold in opposition and committed to holding the Federal Government accountable.
He said: “I asked you (Lamido) this morning, what is going on currently in the country, in Nigerian politics — would it have happened when we were governors? You said no. And the answer is no.”
Amaechi said: “We would have confronted the government, confronted the president. That’s how radical you were. That’s how our Governors Forum operated. That’s how determined we were to change things.”