Special Assistant to the President on New
Media, Reno Omokri organised a poll asking who Nigerians want to represent them in the upcoming 2015 presidential elections, it seems though he got more than he bargained for as General Buhari seemed to be leading the incumbent president Jonathan. Subsequently, he pulled down the poll. Premium Times reports:
The Special
Assistant to the President on New Media, Reno Omokri, on Sunday night suddenly
closed an online poll he organised almost immediately President Goodluck
Jonathan overtook former Head of State, Muhammadu Buhari, in the survey.
At the end of the
poll, the president got 13,111 votes representing 49.3 percent, while Mr.
Buhari got 12,875 votes, representing 48.41 percent. The president had less
than one percent lead over Mr. Buhari.
Sources close to Mr. Omokri said he decided to hurriedly
close the poll in apprehension that Mr. Buhari’s supporters might charge back
online to vote the former head of state to an unassailable victory.
Mr. Omokri did not indicate the duration of the poll in the
beginning and rushing to close it after the president got a slim lead is like
changing the rules in the middle of the game, said Femi Falade, a development
expert and school owner in Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State.
“That’s clear
rigging,” Mr. Falade said.
PREMIUM TIMES had reported how Mr. Buhari led in the polls
for three days in what is seen as an embarrassing and unforeseen outcome for
the president’s camp.
Several aides and loyalists of the president were mobilised
extensively to reverse the trend in the last 24 hours.
Insiders in the president’s camp said presidency and
administration officials as well as the top hierarchy of the governing Peoples
Democratic Party felt “deeply embarrassed” by the direction of the poll and
mobilised supporters of the president in and outside Nigeria to quickly get
online and vote in his favour.
“Phone calls were made to supporters of the president in the
Transformation Ambassador of Nigeria (TAN), Goodluck Support Groups (GSG),
Gejites and other groups sympathetic to the president,” one of our sources
said.
“They were being pressured to get online and reverse the
results in favour of the president, even if means voting multiple times with
multiple devices,” said the source who preferred not to be named for security
reasons.
A source close to the creator of the poll, Mr. Omokri, also
told PREMIUM TIMES that the presidential aide has a mandate to ensure the poll
did not close until Mr. Buhari is “roundly defeated”.
Most online polls have time frames within which they are
conducted. The poll by news website, Sahara Reporters, ran for 24 hours. But
Mr. Omokri’s ran for four days and closed abruptly.
Buhari still in the lead
Despite the efforts to garner support for the president,
which has seen his fortune leaping from 2,455 votes, representing 26.75 percent
as at last night, to 12,016 votes, representing, 48.46 percent as at 4:27 p.m.
on Sunday, Mr. Buhari remains in the lead.
The former head of state, who led the president with 6,411
votes, representing 69.87 percent on Saturday night, was seen leading with
12,198 votes, representing 49.2 percent at 4:27 p.m. on Sunday.
Also, while 310 persons, representing 3.38 percent were
undecided last night; the number of undecided voters increased to 580 votes,
representing 2.34 percent.
Background
On October 15, the day former Head of State, Muhammadu
Buhari, declared his intention to run for president in the 2015 election, news
website, Sahara Reporters, activated an opinion poll asking Nigerians to
indicate who they would vote for if the election were to hold that day between
Mr. Buhari (as candidate of the All Progressives Congress, APC) and President
Goodluck Jonathan ( as candidate of the Peoples Democratic, PDP).
The poll lasted for only 24 hours, and out of a total of
15,435 persons that voted, Mr. Buhari got 12,246 votes, representing 79 percent
of the total votes cast, while President Jonathan got 3189 votes, representing
21 percent of the total votes.
However, ostensibly to counter the survey conducted by
Sahara Reporters, Mr. Jonathan’s aide, Mr. Omokri, set up a similar poll asking
almost the same question posed by the news website.
His poll, which is still running on his blog, “Build Up
Nigeria” posed the question: “If the Nigerian Presidential election were held
today, who would you vote for between President Goodluck Jonathan and General
Muhammadu Buhari?”.
Mr. Omokri’s poll began a day after Mr. Buhari declared to
run, but unlike the one ran by Sahara Reporters, which has since closed, the
one by Build Up Nigeria only closed suddenly after Mr. Jonathan leapt to a
marginal lead.
Online Poll not scientific
Online polls, such as the ones by Sahara Reporters and Mr.
Reno are not representative and do not necessarily represent public opinion.
“It categorically does not represent public opinion – at
best, it may coincide with it,” the BBC says in its Guideline on Opinion Polls,
Surveys, Questionnaires, Votes and Straw Polls.
“Online votes are particularly vulnerable to campaigns,
lobby groups and individuals who seek to organise mass or multi voting. For
that reason, some highly controversial issues are not, normally, suitable for
online voting as the risk of being hijacked is too great,” the guideline adds.
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