APC To Unveil Its Manifesto This Week

The All Progressives Congress (APC) will unveil its long awaited manifesto to Nigerians on Thursday.

The manifesto, styled a "Road map to a New Nigeria", will be launched at the Party's National Summit to be held in Abuja on Thursday, March 6th.

The Interim National Publicity Secretary of the party, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said in a statement issued in Lagos on Sunday that the Road map will detail the party's priorities in fixing the widespread failings of successive PDP governments since 1999, in order to bring hope and succour to the long-suffering people of Nigeria.

It said the Road map was a product of an empirical and painstaking process embarked upon by the APC, in a deviation from the old practice of packaging such documents on a whim.

"With conditions deteriorating throughout Nigeria, with security an ever increasing concern, with the lack of jobs pushing families and young people further and further into poverty and with new stories of
corruption within the PDP government appearing day after day, the APC decided to commission the largest ever public opinion survey in Nigerian history to determine the current status of things in the
nation directly from those who knew best – the actual people of Nigeria.

"The results were even more revealing than the APC had anticipated: When asked, 'If the election were held today, would you vote for Goodluck Jonathan or the candidate of the All Progressives Congress',
the APC candidate held a ten-point lead over the President. By a margin of 44% to 34% (with 22% undecided), the APC candidate was the clear national choice.

"When asked, 'In general, do you think things in Nigeria are going in a good direction or bad direction', by a staggering more than two-to-one margin (50%-24%), Nigerians responded that the country was going in a bad direction.

When asked, 'What issue would you like the President and National Assembly to focus on most', an overwhelming
majority (60%) said jobs was the dominant issue that the government should address.

"And then when asked if they found the following statement convincing or not, 'Goodluck Jonathan has done nothing to create jobs, and far too many people are still unemployed', decisively, 58% of Nigerians found that argument about Jonathan convincing.

Finally when asked if Jonathan was doing a good or bad job fighting corruption, 59% Nigerians thought Jonathan was doing a bad job fighting corruption.

"The voice of the people was clear: The nation is going in the wrong direction. The nation wants change and would not vote to re-elect Jonathan in part because the number one issue to Nigerians is jobs and the nation believes Jonathan has no credibility on the issue of job creation," APC said.

According to the party, the unveiling of the party's Road map, designed with the survey results in mind and the real needs of the Nigerian people made evident by the people themselves, will be the clearest indication yet that the Movement for Change has indeed begun.