Chief Jeff Nweke, the Action Alliance Candidate in the Anambra Governorship Election, slated for November 8, has expressed worry over what he described as “campaign of bitterness and mudslinging”.
Nweke made the remark in a statement issued in Awka and made available to newsmen on Monday.
He advised other political parties and their candidates to base their campaigns on issues and eschew politics of bitterness and campaign of calumny for undue advantage.
He said that campaigns should be a period for candidates to market their programmes and convince the electorate to vote for them on the strength of their manifestos.
According to him, campaigns should be issue-based, with candidates talking about their plans for the security of lives and property and how they intend to stop kidnappings and killings that have become commonplace in Anambra.
“Political campaigns should not be to malign or engage in character assassinations or unnecessary altercations with political opponents but time to showcase our plans for the people.
“It is time to tell the people how you intend to tackle the problem of multiple taxation choking the masses, death and stagnating businesses, your plans for the education sector, welfare of the people and the state’s economy,
“These are the issues that ought to dominate our discourse and not name calling.
“I am worried by the uncouth language that some persons used to react to a recent video of Gov. Chukwuma Soludo dancing with his son to a new music.
“Soludo is a family man, there is nothing wrong with dancing with his son, so it is condemnable and detestable for anyone to ridicule the first family of the state because of that”, he said.
Nweke said there was no need for anybody to take others to the cleaners in the name of politics, adding that politics of bitterness and blackmail should be resisted and condemned by all.
He said that his party had a very robust programme for rescuing Anambra from misrule and putting the state on the path of development and progress.
He said although Soludo was doing his best, hNweke, had a different approach toward addressing the governance challenges in Anambra.





