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APC: Atiku’s Aide Reacts As Adamu Resigns

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Daniel Bwala, the political aide to the 2023 presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar, has reacted to the resignation of Senator Abdullahi Adamu as the National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

Naija News reported that Adamu resigned as the APC national chairman, and was replaced by the Deputy National Chairman (North), Senator Abubakar Kyari

Reacting to the development in a Twitter post on Monday, Bwala mocked the former Governor of Nassarawa State over his resignation as the APC chairman, saying that life should be taken easy.

He alleged Adamu refused to pay his legal fees because he dumped the APC for the PDP before the 2023 elections and some of his friends in the ruling party stopped talking to him.

Bwala wrote: “Life is to be taken easy ohh. The APC chairman that was reported to have said, “ I could write demand letters that filled his office and still would not get my professional fees of what i worked for” simply because i left the party.

“Today he is not the chairman and he will watch how i will be paid my fees by those who in-spite of the fact that i left the party, but we maintained cordiality and respect.

“To be honest the Yorubas know how to play politics without bitterness. Beginning with PBAT Asiwaju, his family and those around him. When we meet and exchange pleasantries as if i never left.

“The other day, Babatunde Ogala (SAN) in court saw me and shouted in an open court filled before the judges sat “Bwala, you know you are on loan ohh and you must come back” everybody laugh.

“Today I accidentally met Kayode Fayemi on my way to the gym, as soon as we sighted each other and I greeted him, he laugh and said you must come home, ohh.

“No bitterness, but my Northern brothers in APC stopped talking to me because i left APC and one of them refused to pay me my legal fees.

“There are few of my northern brothers though that are exceptionally good and still keep in touch. May God help us to see politics and practice it as politics and not war because power is truly transient.”

Ige Olugbenga is a fine-grained journalist. He loves the smell of a good lead and has a penchant for finding out something nobody else knows.