Senator Nenadi Usman, the chairman of the Labour Party National Caretaker Committee (LP-NCC), has stated that she hopes to leave the Labour Party with a legacy of unity.
Usman agreed that it is a lofty, challenging order, but one that is doable provided all parties involved uphold the principles of the party’s founding fathers, embrace the spirit of forgiveness, and work closely together as a single family embarking on a shared destiny.
The acting head of the committee said in a statement, “The legacy I desire to be remembered for is that I met a Labour Party in relative conflict and disunity but left it a united, formidable, and indomitable elections winning party nationwide.” Eyes Of Lagos reports,
“This is a tall, demanding order,” she went on. However, it is possible if we embrace the idea of everyone forgiving the wrongs done in the past, uphold the principles set forth by our party’s founders, and work together as a cohesive family as we embark on our shared destiny.
No team, group, or division within the party was defeated, according to Usman, who also stated that no division or group should feel defeated or ashamed following the September 4 party assembly in Umuahia, the state capital of Abia.
In the worst case scenario, the commission might have been forced to deregister our party from their websites and bar us from participating in any elections. September 4, at Umuahia, that course of action was successfully avoided.
For this reason, I declare that there was no defeat and that all those who genuinely identify as members of the Labour Party are co-victors of our party’s resurrection at Umuahia.
She pleaded with all parties involved in the division to put down their swords and give them up completely.
“Achieve this by turning them into sickles and peace ploughshares for our party’s eventual 2027 presidential triumph and harvests of progress.” Just thirty months from now.
Peoplesmind