The governor-elect of Anambra state, Chukwuma Soludo, has pledged that the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) is “going to work very hard” to drive the party’s popularity in other parts of the country. Soludo revealed this during an interview session with Arise TV.

The former CBN governor was, on Tuesday, announced the winner of the Anambra governorship election.

He polled 112,229 votes on the platform APGA to defeat his two major rivals — Valentine Ozigbo of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) who got 53,807 votes, and Andy Uba of the All Progressives Congress (APC) who secured 43,285 votes.

However, APGA, having ruled Anambra for 15 consecutive years, has not been able to establish a foothold in other parts of the country.

Speaking on this, Soludo said the party should not be categorised as a regional party, adding that it will soon spread across that country.

He said APGA will “mainstream our neo-progressivism” and get Nigerians to buy into the ideas of the party and “begin to flood into the party”.

He said APGA will leverage on its home support to build a “systematic approach to getting the rest of the country”.

“AGPA happens to be the first progressive party that was registered in Nigeria. And its name says it all, All Progressives Grand Alliance. It starts in 2002 before others started adding progressives to their names. The first election that it won happened to be in the southeast. Just Like Action Congress (AC), the first election that they won happened to be in the southwest, and (some people) began to see it as Yoruba party — forgetting that its first presidential candidate was Atiku Abubakar,” the governor-elect said.

“Ditto for APGA the first election it won was in Anambra and people began to have that toga. We are going to work very hard to mainstream our neo-progressivism and we’re the ones with the neo-progressive ideas, mandate, agenda. The moment Nigerians begin to see with clarity where the uniqueness of APGA and why the APGA agenda, people from all walks are going to begin to flood into the party.

“We’ve won elections sporadically in some parts of the country but we’re now going to build on that to really have a systematic approach to getting the rest of the country.”

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