Buhari Presidency Now A Citadel Of Liars
The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) says the Buhari presidency has become
a citadel of liars where deceptive lies are churned out daily to beguile
Nigerians.
The party was reacting to a presidency statement credited to the
Special Adviser to the President on National Assembly Matters, Senator
Ita Enang, claiming that members of the National Assembly, who reunited
and those who joined the PDP have agreed to work for Buhari in the 2019
election.
Dispelling the submission as a hallucination of a failing government,
the PDP said the Buhari presidency has become so jittery over its
imminent loss of the 2019 election that it now recourse to bare-faced
lies and childish blackmail.
The PDP said such will not save the disintegrating All Progressives
Congress (APC) from drowning.
In a statement signed by the National Publicity Secretary of the PDP,
Kola Ologbondiyan, the party maintains that those who deserted the
sinking ship of APC did so in protest against the incomptences of
President Muhammadu Buhari leading to the unabating killings,
bloodletting and biting economic hardship across our nation in the last
three years.
PDP further says that the APC-led Federal Government has woefully failed
to deliver on any of its promises and has nothing to showcase except a
recourse to underhand tactics and intimidation of opponents and
perceived enemies.
Those who left the APC are therefore no longer prepared to continue
living a lie that everything is okay with our nation, whereas under the
leadership of President Buhari the drift towards anarchy as well as the
indices of a failing state are very manifest.
The PDP therefore finds it ludicrous that the Presidency can sit back
and claim that compatriots who have seen ahead that President Buhari is
taking our nation to nowhere will turn around and contemplate casting
their votes for him in 2019.
We, therefore, urge the Buhari Presidency to stop its fantasy game and
be ready to confront the crushing defeat that awaits him and his party
in the 2019 general elections.





