The subsidiary of Fitch Ratings, a global rating company, in its report said the APC candidate Tinubu had a higher possibility of winning, adding that Nigeria might, however, experience political unrest following Tinubu’s winning.
According to report, the Fitch Solutions Country Risk & Industry Research has predicted that the presidential candidate of the ruling All Progressives Congress, Bola Tinubu, might win the 2023 presidential election.
It warns that if Tinubu emerges victorious, it will likely increase protests and social discontent in the country.
According to it, a win for the APC
candidate will likely trigger sentiments of perceived marginalisation among
Christians while supporters of his opponents may take to the streets to
question the fairness of the electoral process.
The agency also noted that recent polls, which only capture that small fraction of Nigerians, have overstated support for the Labour Party presidential candidate, Peter Obi.
It said, “Indeed, we maintain our view that the ruling party’s Bola Ahmed Tinubu is the candidate most likely to win the presidential election as a split opposition vote will favour the All Progressives Congress. Protests and social discontent are likely to ramp up in the aftermath of a Tinubu win since this would end the recent trend of the presidency alternating between Muslims and Christians.
“At Fitch Solutions, we believe
that recent polls are significantly overstating support for Peter Obi, the
Labour Party candidate running in Nigeria’s February 2023 presidential
election. Surveys showing that Obi is ahead of his opponents Bola Tinubu (All
Progressives Congress) and Atiku Abubakar (Peoples Democratic Party) were
mostly based on responses gathered online. Since only 36.0% of Nigerians use
the Internet (World Bank, 2020), we believe that these results are skewed
towards urban, affluent voters who are most likely to support Obi. We also
highlight that these polls suggest that a large share of voters remain
undecided.”
According to the report, Obi’s lack
of support in Nigeria’s Muslim-majority North will make it difficult for him to
win next year’s election.
The global rating company also said it did not expect significant policy changes under a Tinubu presidency, especially regarding removing fuel subsidy.
It added, “While Tinubu has stated that he would phase out Nigeria’s costly fuel subsidy, we are sceptical this will happen in the short term. There appears to be limited appetite within the APC to remove the subsidy, and with inflation remaining elevated in 2023 – due to high food prices – the cancellation of the subsidy would negatively affect the new president’s popularity. Indeed, the PDP tried to remove the subsidy in 2012, but had to back down after large-scale protests.
“In addition, we believe that Tinubu’s aim to raise oil production is unfeasible in the short term. Crude production has declined significantly to 1.1mn barrels per day in September – a multidecade low – due to rising oil theft and previous underinvestment. Given the country’s weak fiscal position, we believe that there will be limited room for more security and social spending to combat oil theft and attract more investment.”
The agency also said that if public concerns around Tinubu’s health persisted, this would likely reduce Tinubu’s chance of winning.
On Atiku, the report states that the votes for the opposition PDP might experience a split at the expense of its standard bearer. This, it said, would be as a result of the popularity of Obi as a relevant third party candidate after the APC and the PDP.
“…we believe that Obi’s popularity
will most likely split the opposition vote, at the expense of the PDP. The
PDP’s candidate (Atiku Abubakar) is a northerner and we believe that the
party’s only route to victory is expanding its vote in the South-West and
North-Central states while retaining large majorities in the South-South and
South-East,” the report added.
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