The flagbearer for Labour Party in the forthcoming governorship election in Bayelsa State, Udengs Eradiri, has boasted about winning the November 11 gubernatorial election.
While addressing newsmen at his campaign secretariat in Yenagoa on Thursday, the former youth commissioner and president of the Ijaw Youth Council expressed confidence that he will defeat his opponents from other parties.
According to Eradiri, the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had already created the conditions for the electorate to choose his candidature as the alternative for a better Bayelsa.
He noted that poverty was widespread in the state and businesses were leaving Yenagoa to other places due to alleged poor governance.
Eradiri stated that he would anchor his development agenda on โPeople, Education, Agriculture and Powerโ. He said he has the capacity and competence to govern and provide leadership for the development of the state, having garnered experience as an Ijaw youth leader and in public service with his last appointment as a special assistant on youth and sports under the immediate-past interim management of the Niger Delta Development Commission.
He further stated that his aspiration and development blueprint for the state was the liberation that the people had been waiting for, adding that he had been contributing to the stateโs development as an active private-sector player, employer of labour and taxpayer.
The Labour Party governorship candidate who hails from Bayelsa Central as the second term-seeking governor Douye Diri of the PDP, said, โI believe that as a young man who has gone through the process of learning, it is time I shouldnโt be complaining but take action.
โMy PEAP (People, Education, Agriculture and Power) agenda will be propagated around every structure of leadership. We are going to run a pyramid system of government in Bayelsa State where local governments and communities understand the PEAP agenda.
โAnd let me tell you, we are going to win this election. We are going to win this election because the poverty in Bayelsa is naked for everybody to see.
โI donโt have the money they have. In any case, Iโm not even afraid of the money, itโs my money, our money that they are bringing. Itโs your schools, itโs your economy, itโs your agriculture they are going to be bringing. They are gathering it to come and buy people for four hours.
โIf the people say they donโt want me, Iโm not desperate to be governor. I will go and face my work. But young people must get up, it is you that are graduating and there is no job, it is our mothers that have nothing to do anymore, and businesses are leaving the state because itโs no longer conducive for them to stay. This is the liberation that Bayelsans have been waiting for.โ