The victory of the All Progressives Congress, APC, and its candidate, 
Muhammadu Buhari, in the March 28 presidential election may force some 
leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, into retirement from 
politics.
Goodluck Jonathan of the PDP became the first incumbent
 Nigerian president to lose re-election after he lost to Mr. Buhari on 
March 28. The latter was sworn in as president on May 29.
Some of
 the PDP leaders have given indications they would play very minimal 
role politically in Nigeria in the aftermath of the elections, while for
 others, the demystification of their relevance politically may 
influence their retirement.
Among those that could retire or lose political relevance are Tony Anenih, Ibrahim Babangida, and Edwin Clark.
Tony Anenih
Governor
 Adams Oshiomhole of Edo state was the first to declare that it was time
 to retire some “godfathers” in the PDP. According to the APC governor, 
recent elections have demystified the PDP leaders.
One of those Mr. Oshiomhole was referring to is the immediate past chairman of the Board of Trustees of the PDP, Tony Anenih.
It
 can be said that the governors’ prophecy has come to pass, because 
following Mr. Buhari’s victory, Mr. Anenih resigned as chairman of his 
party’s BoT.
Mr. Anenih’s foray into mainstream politics can be 
traced back to 1981, when as the chairman of the ruling National Party 
of Nigeria, NPN, in the old Bendel State, he saw to the victory of 
Samuel Ogbemudia as governor of the state. He was also the national 
chairman of the Social Democratic Party, SDP in 1992/93 when late 
Moshood Abiola was elected as President in the June 12, 1993 election.
In
 the PDP, the Esan chief was always in the thick of things whenever a 
need arose to “fix” an endemic problem and he has consistently delivered
 until recent times when he was apparently demystified, first by Mr. 
Oshiomhole in Edo State and finally by the 2015 general elections.
Since
 its defeat in the 2015 general elections, leaders of the PDP hardly 
mention Mr. Anenih’s name as they go about trying to rebuild their party
 ahead the next elections.
IBB
Another major 
casualty of Mr. Buhari’s victory is former Head of State, Ibrahim 
Babangida, often referred to as IBB. The gap-toothed retired General has
 been a member of the PDP since inception in 1998 and has tried to run 
for the office of President under the platform of the party on three 
different occasions – 2003, 2007 and 2011.
Although IBB has failed to
 get the ticket of the PDP each time he tried, he remained an 
influential member of the PDP and retained influence on persons elected 
on its platform.
From Mr. Obasanjo to late Umaru Yar’adua and 
then Mr. Jonathan, all presidents elected under the PDP found it easy to
 “work” with IBB because he presented himself as a party member without 
leaning to any known faction or group within the party.
When Mr. 
Obasanjo was in office, IBB never publicly criticized him even during 
the third-term debacle. He was also a confidant of President Goodluck 
Jonathan and sources at the State House say the President often “runs” 
to IBB whenever a matter was giving him “serious headache”.
IBB led 
the coup that ousted Mr. Buhari as president in 1985 and although both 
men seem to have resolved their differences, the former is not expected 
to wield any influence on Mr. Buhari’s presidency.
Edwin Clark
Another
 prominent member of the PDP who could retire from politics is a former 
Federal Commissioner of Information, Edwin Clark. Apart from the fact 
that age is not on the side of the Ijaw chief, who is over 80 years 
already, his fanatical support of the candidature of Mr. Jonathan means 
that for him it was all or nothing.
Tom Ikimi
Unless
 he decides to retrace his steps to the APC, a party he helped form, 
former National Chairman of the defunct National Republican Convention, 
NRC, Tom Ikimi, may have seen his best days in politics.
Mr. Ikimi was the chairman of the merger planning committee when the defunct Action Congress of 
Nigeria,
 ACN, All Nigeria Peoples Party, ANPP, and the Congress for Progressive 
Change, CPC, decided to dissolve and form the APC. He even hosted most 
of the meetings of the group in his personal residence in Abuja.
However,
 he parted ways with the APC after failing to get the nod of the party 
to emerge as the national chairman. He subsequently rejoined the PDP, 
but has been quiet since then.
The outspoken former Minister of Foreign Affairs is not likely to be relevant politically unless he returns to the APC.
Tanko Yakassai
At
 a period most of the leaders of the north turned their back on 
ex-president Jonathan, the controversial Kano politician, Tanko 
Yakassai, chose to support his re-election bid.
To achieve his 
aim, Mr. Yakassai sought to break the ranks of the Northern Elders 
Forum, NEF, who had been acting as the platform to aggregate the 
position of northern elders on national issues, by forming the Northern 
Elders Council, NEC.
Mr. Yakassai has been in politics since the 
first republic as a member of the radical group, Northern Elements 
Progressive Union, NEPU. However, Mr. Buhari’s emergence coupled with 
Mr. Yakassai’s age could mean the latter could cease to be relevant 
politically.
Ibrahim Shekarau
The immediate past 
Minister of Education and former governor of Kano State successful broke
 the jinx of failure to win a second term in the state when he won 
re-election in 2007 under the ANPP.
Mr. Shekarau became governor in 
his fist attempt largely on the back of the popularity of Mr. Buhari who
 was the ANPP presidential candidate in 2003. 
However, he fell 
out with Mr. Buhari and was one of the people who forced the president 
to leave the ANPP and form his own party, the CPC.
The former 
governor and Mr. Buhari again found themselves on the same side in the 
APC after he chaired ANPP’s merger committee and played a prominent role
 in the formation of the new party.
However, problems arose for Mr. 
Shekarau after Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso and four other governors dumped 
the PDP and joined the APC in 2013.
With Mr. Kwankwaso’s arrival 
to the APC and instantly becoming the leader of the party in Kano, Mr. 
Shekarau found it difficult to stay and moved in opposite direction to 
the PDP which saw him picking a ministerial slot from the state.
Apart
 from the PDP’s loss in the presidential election in the state, Mr. 
Shekarau’s preferred governorship candidate, Sagir Takai, lost his bid 
to be Kano governor in the last election. The swearing-in of Mr. Buhari 
on Friday may be the final nail to Mr. Shekarau’s political coffin, 
unless he chooses to return to the APC.
Bamanga Tukur
Bamanga Tukur is one of the founding members of the PDP and was elected its national chairman in 2012.
He
 was, however, forced to resign from office after he fell out with most 
of the PDP governors who found his style autocratic. His feud with the 
governors led to the departure of the famous five governors who 
eventually found themselves in the APC.
Political commentators 
often ascribe the defection of the five governors as one of the 
strongest reasons why PDP lost the 2015 election.
By the time the 
next election holds in 2019, Mr. Tukur would be 84 years old and 
opposition politics is expected to be the last thing occupying his time.
Alex Ekwueme
The former Vice President in the Second Republic is also one of the founders of the PDP.
Although
 often sidelined in the affairs of the party, its leaders at various 
times run to the octogenarian whenever they fail to overcome one crisis 
or another.
With the failure of the PDP in the last election, Mr.
 Ekwueme is effectively shut out of national politics and is expected to
 retire from active politics
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