Ekiti State Governor, Kayode Fayemi, has joined presidential race as he informed President Muhammadu Buhari of his intention to seek the presidential ticket of the All Progressives Congress (APC) ahead of the party’s forthcoming presidential primary, a presidency source has said.
“He (Fayemi) came here two weeks ago to inform the president that he would be running,” the official disclosed, asking not to be named because he had no permission to discuss the matter with journalists.
“The president received him well and encouraged him to go ahead, saying having worked closely with him in the past few years, he is confident he would make a good successor.”
The source said it however remained unclear if Buhari would throw his weight fully behind Fayemi’s candidature especially given the fact that he has kept the identity of his preferred successor secret.
When contacted Tuesday night, Fayemi confirmed he met Buhari but declined to provide details of what he discussed with the president.
Buhari and Fayemi have had a close political relationship for almost a decade beginning in 2012 when the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and a faction of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) began talks to merge into a single political platform.
Buhari was a member of the CPC at the time while Fayemi, who was in his first term as Ekiti governor during the period, was a member of the ACN.
Fayemi lost reelection in 2014 but was shortly afterwards appointed director of policy, research and strategy of Buhari’s 2015 presidential campaign.
After the APC came to power in 2015, Mr Buhari appointed Mr Fayemi as the minister of solid minerals development, a position he held until May 30, 2018, when he resigned to again contest the Ekiti governorship election which he won.
Since 2019, Fayemi has been the chairperson of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, an association of the country’s 36 governors, which again provided him with an opportunity to regularly interface with the President.
It, however, remains unclear whether this long-term working relationship would count for something when Buhari eventually settles for a preferred successor.