Goodluck Ebele Jonathan
Goodluck Ebele Jonathan is a Nigerian politician.
Biography
Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan was born on 20 November 1957 in Otuoke, Bayelsa State, to an Ijaw Christian family of canoe makers. His father, Lawrence Ebele Jonathan, and mother, Eunice Ayi Ebele Jonathan, were farmers and educators before his birth.
He attended primary and secondary schools with a religious emphasis and earned a bachelor’s degree in zoology (second-class honours), followed by master’s and doctoral degrees in hydrobiology and fisheries biology from the University of Port Harcourt. Before politics, he worked as an education inspector, lecturer, and environmental-protection officer.
Jonathan entered politics during the late 1990s with the PDP, initially rising to deputy governor of Bayelsa State (1999–2005) alongside Diepreye Alamieyeseigha. After Alamieyeseigha’s removal from office in December 2005 due to corruption allegations, Jonathan became governor until 2007.
As vice president under President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua (2007–2010), he maintained a low public profile but participated in key meetings and statutory roles. Following Yar’Adua’s death in May 2010, Jonathan assumed the presidency temporarily before being sworn in as substantive president on 6 May.
His administration transformed Nigeria’s economy by rebasing GDP, investing in infrastructure (roads, railways, airports), and implementing reforms like power sector privatization. However, corruption allegations persisted, including mismanagement of public funds, fuel subsidy controversies, and economic mismatches.
Politically, Jonathan faced challenges from Boko Haram insurgency, though military operations gradually reduced its influence by 2015. His presidency ended with a contested re-election loss to Muhammadu Buhari in March 2015, marking Nigeria’s first incumbent defeat in elections.
After leaving office, he defended his administration and later held roles as honorary special advisor (Bayelsa Education Trust Fund), ECOWAS mediator during Malian protests, and African Union delegate. He has also been chancellor of Cavendish University Uganda since 2021.
Married to Patience Jonathan, an evangelical Christian from Ijaw ethnicity, he has two children. His political career reflects a trajectory from academia to governance, with persistent debates over accountability during his tenure.
Party Positions
Policy positions from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) party manifesto.
Education
Ensure free education up to Junior Secondary School (JSS1) level and commit to revamping tertiary education.
Healthcare
Provide free medical services for pregnant women and children under five years, rehabilitate health facilities in each LGA, and support local production of essential drugs.
Infrastructure
Accelerate the completion of key rail projects, including standard gauge rail lines between Lagos and Kano (Phase 1) and Port Harcourt to Jos (Phase 2), by privatizing or concessioning the Nigerian Railway Corporation to private operators.
Security & Defense
PDP plans to refine recruitment methods, retrain personnel, improve logistics, and strengthen early warning systems for police reform.
Anti-corruption
PDP commits to strengthening anti-corruption institutions (EFCC & ICPC) and enforcing transparency reforms, including asset declaration laws and removal of immunity clauses for public officials.
Energy
PDP pledges to eliminate gas flaring, enforce air pollution regulations, complete deregulation of downstream petroleum sector, and lay gas pipelines nationwide for industrial use.
Environment & Climate
Commits to reclaiming and rehabilitating land devastated by desertification and soil erosion through afforestation in affected areas.
Technology & Digital
Will establish internet/computer learning centers in all LGAs, provide computers for secondary schools, and enforce local content policy for telecom equipment.
Reliefs and scholarships
Introduce a service compact (SERVICOM) aimed at improving governance through enhanced engagement with the public sector.
In The News
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