Category: Politics

  • Osun PDP Senators Fadahunsi, Fadeyi reaffirm support for Tinubu

    Osun PDP Senators Fadahunsi, Fadeyi reaffirm support for Tinubu

    Two Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Senators from Osun State, Adenigba Fadahunsi (Osun East) and Olubiyi Fadeyi (Osun Central) have reaffirmed support for President Bola Tinubu’s administration and his 2027 reelection. 

    The Senators, while addressing newsmen in Osogbo capital of Osun State on Thursday, lauded Tinubu over his interventions in their respective senatorial districts and for demonstrating exceptional leadership since assuming office.

    According to Fadeyi: “The President’s keen interest in Osun Central Senatorial District has not gone unnoticed, and the people of the zone remain deeply appreciative. Our renewed endorsement of Tinubu is a reciprocal gesture in recognition of the President’s strategic contributions to infrastructure and institutional development in Osun.

    “Mr President has done so much for my constituency such that I cannot but support him. He gave us the Federal University of Agriculture and Development Studies in Iragbiji, the installation of TCN 300MVA Power Transformer at Osogbo Sub station, also the on- going installation of 2x 60MVA sub- station in Ila-Orangun, and he graciously promised an upgrade of the Nigeria Police Training School in Ila-Orangun to a full-fledged Nigeria Police Academy to serve the South-West region. What else can we ask for?” he asked rhetorically.”

    Fadeyi, who also chairs the Senate Committee on Environment, assured that the people of Osun Central would rally behind Tinubu in 2027, voting en masse to ensure his victory at the polls.

    Read Also: By-elections: PDP begins sale of nomination forms Thursday

    Fadahunsi commended the President for his approval of funds in the 2025 appropriation bill earmarked for the reconstruction of the Ibadan–Ilesa Expressway, a major transport corridor critical to economic activity in Osun State and gateway in the nation.

    “The President’s commitment to the completion of this important road and the rehabilitation of other federal highways across Osun is commendable,” Fadahunsi added.

    Fadahunsi, who is the chairman Senate Committee on Industries, highlighted several federal institutions earmarked for the district, including the proposed Federal School of Nursing and other medical-related matters in Ijebu-Jesa, the Federal Orthopaedic Hospital in Obokun, and a Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital in Ile-Ife,initiatives the President graciously pledged to support and approve.

    He said: “The President has shown genuine concern for the development of our senatorial zone, and we are optimistic that the delivery of these projects will significantly enhance healthcare access and economic activities in Osun East.”

  • Kachikwu’s faction to petition INEC, head to court over alleged ADC takeover

    Kachikwu’s faction to petition INEC, head to court over alleged ADC takeover

    The 2023 presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Dumebi Kachikwu, has announced a three-pronged strategy to challenge what he called a “hostile takeover” of the party’s leadership by a rival faction.

    He noted that despite being subjected to threats and online harassment by unnamed individuals and social media trolls following his stance on the party’s latest internal crisis, he remains undeterred.

    Kachikwu also disclosed that he had rejected overtures from members of the opposition coalition against President Bola Tinubu as far back as last year. 

    According to him, the talks collapsed when the coalition promoters rejected presenting a southern candidate as the coalition’s standard bearer, an arrangement he believes is necessary to complete the South’s turn in the power rotation currently occupied by President Tinubu.

    He added that even if the coalition eventually agrees to present a southern candidate and formally approaches the ADC, the party would still conduct a primary election. 

    This, he stressed, would ensure that all interested party members have a fair opportunity to contest for the ticket alongside the coalition’s preferred aspirant.

    Dumebi spoke at a media parley in Abuja on Thursday, flanked by seven state chairmen from Benue, Niger, Nasarawa, Akwa Ibom, Borno, and Jigawa States, as well as the party’s national spokesman, all of whom he said were arbitrarily removed from their positions through a social media announcement by the rival group.

    “These so-called common Nigerians have safeguarded this party for years. Yesterday (Wednesday), they were simply chased out of their offices online. That is not what they signed up for,” he regretted.

    Dumebi said his camp will formally petition the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), explore legal redress through the courts, and rally the support of grassroots party members across Nigeria to resist the undemocratic hijack.

    “All options are on the table. INEC as the regulator, the courts as the last hope of the common man, and the Nigerian people as witnesses,” he said.

    According to Kachikwu, the first step is to demand that INEC clarify who currently occupies the position of party chairman. 

    If a leadership vacuum is confirmed, he said, the ADC State caucus, composed of elected chairmen, will immediately convene a national convention to elect new officers and restore order to the embattled party.

    “We’re asking INEC: Is there a chairman in this party, or is there a vacuum? If there is, then we need to convene a convention immediately to elect new leadership. That’s our pathway to resolving this crisis,” he said 

    Kachikwu emphasized that the chairmen in his camp were elected at the party’s April 2022 convention, with valid mandates running until April 2026. 

    “They were not appointed on WhatsApp or Facebook. They were elected by the people,” he pointed out.

    Speaking further on whether his faction would go to court, Kachikwu confirmed that legal action is under serious consideration. 

    “Yes, the option of court is absolutely on the table. We are exploring all avenues, and we will not rest until this injustice is reversed.”

    He faulted INEC for previously tolerating parallel structures within the party under former interim chairman Ralph O. Nwosu, accusing the electoral body of enabling confusion. 

    “For three years, INEC allowed Nwosu to appoint parallel chairmen. We’re now asking the same INEC to clarify who leads ADC. This time, they must act,” he said.

    Kachikwu faulted the abrupt announcement of a new interim chairman by the rival faction, who allegedly received his ADC membership card during the very event where he was named leader.

    “In a democratic society, how does it make sense that someone is made interim chairman and given his party card at the same event? That’s not a merger. That’s a hijack,” he stressed.

    The former presidential candidate said he had previously engaged with coalition advocates, including former Ministers and senior political figures, but ended all talks when it became clear the arrangement was designed to return Atiku Abubakar to power.

    “I asked a simple question, do you agree that since Tinubu is in his first term, the South should produce the flag bearer in 2027? Their immediate response was, ‘We are taking our power back.’ That was a red flag”.

    He rejected any arrangement that discounts southern participation in future leadership, calling it a return to recycled leadership and ethnic-based politics.

    “Imagine my situation, someone who came fifth in the last presidential race and I’m told that because I’m from the South, I should foreclose my ambition. That was an absolute no-no,” he added.

    Issuing a direct challenge, Kachikwu said, “Let them declare publicly that the next flag bearer will come from the South. If they do, I’ll welcome them through the front door. 

    “But we all know they won’t, because this is a coalition designed for Atiku, and that’s a betrayal of balance and equity.”

    Kachikwu also lamented the rise of what he called “toxic social media politics,” which he said is foreign to the ADC’s values. 

    “APC, PDP, Labour Party, these are parties where all they do is insult and threaten each other online. That’s not who we are. We are decent people.”

    Since rejecting the faction’s legitimacy, Kachikwu said he has been targeted with threats, online abuse, and even preemptive media attacks. 

    Read Also: ADC: Tinubu’s 2027 re-election unshaken by opposition coalition – Group

    He referenced an article reportedly in the works by Peoples Gazette, alleging unresolved U.S. tax issues

    “For those who believe I can be bullied, you are the vocal minority. Politics in Nigeria must move away from threats and blackmail. You cannot cow people on social media.

    “If you believe that threats or blackmail will move me, you’re making a big mistake. Maybe Kachikwu is the last person anyone can cow.”

    He also criticized the media for failing to properly label the opposing camp as a faction, warning that misleading headlines can distort the political narrative.

    “When I became our candidate in 2023, the media focused only on four names, Atiku, Tinubu, Obi, and Kwankwaso. You told Nigerians the rest of us didn’t matter. The media can make or mar a nation,” he said.

    He, however, insisted that despite the turmoil, he remained confident in the resilience of his camp, which includes several elected chairmen who helped take the ADC to fifth place in the 2023 general elections.

    “Our party is worth fighting for. We won’t give up, no matter the threats, no matter the pockets behind them. We’re ready for the long haul.”

  • Coalition is proof Tinubu’s policies are working, says Lloyd

    Coalition is proof Tinubu’s policies are working, says Lloyd

    A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Dr. Chidi Lloyd, has described the ongoing coalition against President Bola Ahmed Tinubu as evidence that the President’s policies are effective and disrupting the status quo.

    Lloyd, a former Chairman of Emohua Local Government Area in Rivers State, said the coalition’s formation only reinforces public belief in the Tinubu administration, as it is displacing entrenched political interests.

    He argued that many of the coalition’s members are individuals who previously held office but failed to make meaningful impact, now scrambling to stay relevant after being pushed out of their comfort zones by Tinubu’s reforms.

    Describing the coalition as “dead on arrival,” Lloyd said its promoters are not new faces but career politicians who have occupied power since 1999, and whom Nigerians now reject.

    He insisted that Nigerians are politically aware and will not be deceived into returning to a system that failed them. 

    He also criticised some members of the coalition, claiming they lack the moral authority to speak about building a better Nigeria.

    Lloyd said: “The coalition is dead on arrival. We didn’t see any foreigner. If the coalition were formed by citizens of America or Britain, we would have been worried. The coalition still had the same faces, the same old faces since 1999. 

    “I agree that what we have is a gathering of displaced politicians. We have a former vice-president; we have someone that was a Senate President for eight years. He was in a position to change Nigeria. His daughter won an election under an opposition party. It means his own political party is not popular in his Federal constituency. 

    “We had someone in the coalition, who as a governor of Kaduna State dammed the consequences without minding the feelings of people from Southern Kaduna, flew a Muslim/Muslim ticket and told them to go to hell. People forget easily. 

    Read Also: Tinubu to Nigerians in Saint Lucia: be good ambassadors

    “What will someone like Abubakar Malami be telling us? The Malabu scandal is still there. We also knew how the Ministry of Justice under him took over the trial of most suspects from EFCC that led to the unceremonious exit of Ibrahim Magu. 

    ” We know all of them. If I had not been convinced that President Tinubu is doing something. I am now further convinced that President Tinubu’s policies are affecting the establishment, those who think that it should continue to be business a usual.

    “What will any of them be telling us in the coalition. We have a rascallly former Senator in Dino Melaye, who couldn’t win his state. What is he bringing to the table?

    “He has been on social media telling Nigerians that they are hungry and angry. He has been flaunting his wrist watches and his cars, shoes and cloths of various designers. We cannot be deceived. Nigerians know better now”.

  • ADC: Tinubu’s 2027 re-election unshaken by opposition coalition – Group

    ADC: Tinubu’s 2027 re-election unshaken by opposition coalition – Group

    The Grassroots Movement for Tinubu (GMT) in Ondo State has dismissed the recent regrouping of political figures under the African Democratic Congress (ADC) as irrelevant, insisting it poses no threat to President Bola Tinubu’s re-election bid in 2027.

    Speaking on Thursday in Akure, the group’s Director General, Saka Yusuf-Ogunleye, described the coalition as a gathering of “political orphans” lacking the influence to challenge Tinubu’s growing popularity and political strength.

    Yusuf-Ogunleye maintained that no opposition alliance, regardless of size or structure, can stop President Tinubu from securing a second term, adding that the individuals behind the coalition are merely seeking political relevance.

    He said the President remains firmly on track to continue his administration beyond 2027, with the full support of the grassroots.

    “No amount of political meetings or emergency alliances among failed politicians can stop the will of the people. Tinubu is on course for 2027, and his achievements are the loudest campaign. 

    “These are people who couldn’t win elections in their wards. Some are ex-governors with damaged reputations, and others are habitual defectors. 

    “They are not building a movement – they are chasing shadows. Political ambition, ego battles, and conflicting loyalties will ultimately truncate the dream of the so-called coalition,” he said. 

    While stressing that the coalition is ‘a time bomb waiting to explode’, he warned Nigerians not to be deceived by the romance of the ‘ideologically incompatible’ coalition whose only unifying factor is to oppose President Tinubu im 2027. 

    “Every major figure in that coalition has presidential ambition. None is willing to step down for the other. When the chips are down, their selfish interests will scatter the arrangement.”

    He further said that President Tinubu remains the ‘best-prepared and most result-oriented leader’ Nigeria has seen in recent years.

    Read Also: NTAC DG applauds Tinubu’s strategic strengthening of Caribbean ties

    “His Renewed Hope Agenda is not mere talk—it is working. The masses are feeling the impact. He will win again, not because of propaganda, but because of performance,” Yusuf-Ogunleye added. 

    The group, however, vowed to continue its grassroots mobilisation across the state and beyond, stressing that the Nigerians are solidly behind President for his re-election in 2027.

    Rallying further support for President Tinubu, the group listed achievements that have been recorded under his administration include infrastructure development, especially the ongoing Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway. 

    It also pointed to President Tinubu’s renewed focus in the railway sector, the power sector (where states can now generate and distribute electricity independently), road construction, and rehabilitation. 

    The group added that the economy has also improved, especially with the removal of the fuel subsidy, savings redirected to key sectors, palliatives to states, and aggressive investments in food security.

    “In education, the student loan scheme is revolutionary. In energy, the CNG-powered vehicle initiative will soon cushion transport costs. President Tinubu’s foreign policy is attracting global investors again,” it said. 

  • Klinsmann blasts ADC coalition, Mark’s leadership

    Klinsmann blasts ADC coalition, Mark’s leadership

    Policy analyst and APC chieftain from Anambra State, Pharmacist Ikeagwuonwu Chinedu Klinsmann, has lashed out at the newly unveiled opposition coalition under the African Democratic Congress (ADC), describing the development as “a recycled political joke” engineered by “expired power merchants” bent on derailing the steady progress of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration.

    Klinsmann specifically questioned the credibility and moral standing of former Senate President David Mark, the newly announced interim chairman of the coalition, accusing him of “presiding over decades of missed opportunities and political betrayal.”

    In a statement in Abuja, Klinsmann said the ADC coalition was neither founded on any democratic conviction nor powered by a unified ideological vision but rather a product of frustration, ego and bitterness by politicians who had outlived their relevance in modern governance. 

    “The announcement of this so-called ‘Third Force’ is nothing but a gathering of political scavengers,” Klinsmann declared. “Their only agenda is power for power’s sake – Nigerians must reject them completely.”

    He expressed disbelief over David Mark’s attempt to re-emerge on the political scene under a new guise, calling it an insult to Nigerians’ collective intelligence. 

    “What new idea is David Mark bringing to the table now that he couldn’t deliver during his 12 years in the Senate, including two terms as Senate President?” Klinsmann asked.

     “He failed to deliver anything meaningful even to Otukpo – the political capital of the Idoma nation – despite holding one of the highest offices in the land. Otukpo still lacks basic road infrastructure. David Mark was always coming to Otukpo in a helicopter. So much for leadership!”

    Klinsmann reminded Nigerians of David Mark’s infamous legacy as Minister of Communications during the military regime where he reportedly said that “telephones were not for the poor.” 

    According to Klinsmann, that statement captured the former Senate President’s disdain for the common man and explained why he should have no business attempting to ‘rescue’ Nigeria. 

    “Anyone who once believed that the poor did not deserve basic communication access has no moral right to pose today as a patriot,” he added.

    The APC stalwart pointed out the current leadership of the ADC is composed largely of political drifters, defectors from PDP, Labour and even APC, many of whom have spent decades running Nigeria’s economy into the ground and now want to ride on anti-Tinubu sentiment to regain power.

     “What we are seeing is not a movement – it’s a mutiny of rejected political relics hoping to exploit temporary discontent for personal advantage,” Klinsmann said.

    He argued that in contrast to the cacophony and confusion within the opposition, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has demonstrated competence, clarity, and consistency in rebuilding the nation. Citing Tinubu’s economic and infrastructural reforms, Klinsmann stated that “no serious Nigerian would exchange the Renewed Hope Agenda for a backward march into the recycled chaos of the ADC coalition.” 

    He added the Tinubu administration has not only stabilized the naira and implemented critical foreign exchange reforms but has also initiated major infrastructure projects, including the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway and the expansion of railway networks nationwide.

    Addressing security and national unity, Klinsmann highlighted Tinubu’s ongoing efforts to strengthen national security institutions, improve inter-agency coordination, and enhance funding for Nigeria’s armed forces. 

    “Despite the challenges, we are seeing a gradual return of peace in areas previously overrun by bandits and insurgents. These are not theories – they are measurable impacts,” he asserted.

    Klinsmann warned Nigerians to beware of another charade like that of 2018, when former President Olusegun Obasanjo propped up the ADC as an alternative platform to fight the APC, only for the coalition to collapse within months. “History is repeating itself – same recycled faces, same old lies, same inevitable failure,” Klinsmann said. “The only thing new about this coalition is the speed at which Nigerians are rejecting it.”

    He called out Atiku Abubakar, Peter Obi, Rotimi Amaechi, and other prominent names linked to the emerging coalition, stating that they’ve all had their turn in leadership with nothing to show. 

    “This is a tired group of elites trying to confuse and divide Nigerians. Their political DNA is failure. They are united only by their fear of irrelevance under a working APC-led government,” Klinsmann noted.

    He also lambasted the attempt to mimic APC’s acronym and messaging. “ADC? The similarity in branding is laughable and desperate. Nigerians know who the real APC is – and we have nothing in common with this coalition of confusion.”

    Klinsmann appealed to the youths, especially those in the Southeast and across Nigeria, not to allow themselves to be manipulated by men who have been complicit in decades of underdevelopment. 

    “They annulled your parents’ votes in 1993. Yes! David Mark was an arrowhead of the military cabal that annulled the June 12, 1993 presidential election, so far the freest and fairest election in Nigeria. They mismanaged your future from 1999. Now, they want to hijack your voice in 2027? Say no!” he urged.

    As an APC stalwart from Dunukofia, Anambra State, Klinsmann further called on Igbo youth and leaders to resist the temptation of being dragged into another political distraction.

    Read Also: Klinsmann slams el-Rufai over attacks on Tinubu, APC

    “Now is not the time for bitterness. Now is the time to align and contribute meaningfully to a Nigeria that listens, builds, and includes. Tinubu’s government is the most inclusive in recent times – let us be part of the solution, not a tool for retrogression.”

    He urged Nigerians across all regions, age brackets, and professional backgrounds to consolidate around the Renewed Hope Agenda. 

    “We cannot allow a cabal of expired politicians to derail the progress of over 200 million Nigerians. 

    The ADC coalition has no plans, no ideology, no compass. It is a coalition of self-service, not nation-building. President Tinubu is not perfect, but he is purposeful, and Nigeria is finally heading somewhere.

    “The 2027 elections will not be about recycled politicians or tired slogans. It will be about continuity, stability, and delivery. Tinubu represents that hope – and we must defend it,” Klinsmann concluded.

  • Nenadi-led LP dismisses resignation ultimatum to Obi

    Nenadi-led LP dismisses resignation ultimatum to Obi

    The Labour Party faction led by its acting chairman, Senator Nenadi Usman, said no ultimatum has been issued to its presidential candidate in the 2023 general election, Peter Obi.

    The faction of the party led by Julius Abure had given Obi a 48-hour ultimatum to resign from the party following his participation in yesterday’s coalition movement to the African Democratic Congress.

    In a statement by Ken Eluma Asogwa, senior special adviser, media, to Usman, the party said that on May 26, 2025, it publicly declared its full support for Obi’s involvement in the coalition efforts aimed at creating a “robust political alternative to rescue Nigeria from the disastrous misrule of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The statement said, “The attention of the Labour Party has been drawn to misleading reports and commentaries suggesting that His Excellency, Mr. Peter Obi, has been issued a 48-hour ultimatum to resign from the party following his participation in the recent coalition talks and the unveiling of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) in Abuja.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, the leadership of the Labour Party, on May 26, 2025, publicly declared its full support for Mr. Obi’s involvement in the coalition efforts aimed at creating a robust political alternative to rescue Nigeria from the disastrous misrule of the APC. That position has not changed.

    “We wish to reaffirm that Mr. Peter Obi’s participation in the coalition activities, including the ADC unveiling, was done with the full knowledge, approval, and support of the Labour Party leadership.

    Read Also: Peter Obi submits single-term proposal to opposition coalition

    “The individuals claiming to have issued an ultimatum to Mr. Obi are political jesters with no legitimate standing in the Labour Party. They are neither recognised by the party nor by the law, having long been sacked by the Supreme Court of Nigeria – the highest court in the land – and suspended from the party for their serial acts of indiscipline and anti-party activities.

    “It is the remnants of the disorder and mess left behind by these impostors that the current leadership under Senator Nenadi Usman continues to clean. Therefore, members of the public, and especially the media, are urged to disregard the distractions and mischief from these discredited elements.

    “For clarity, the only legitimate and authoritative source of information regarding the official position of the Labour Party on any matter remains the office of Senator Nenadi Usman, Acting National Chairman of the Labour Party.”

  • ADC, a desperate coalition of failed politicians – Wike

    ADC, a desperate coalition of failed politicians – Wike

    The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, has launched a blistering attack on members of the newly formed opposition coalition under the African Democratic Congress (ADC), dismissing the group as lacking credibility or the capacity to challenge President Bola Tinubu’s administration.

    Speaking during a media chat with journalists on Thursday, Wike described the coalition as a “desperate fallback” for political figures who failed to gain control of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    “There is no coalition,” he declared. “The opposition has decimated itself. The only party that can, if properly organised, challenge this government is the PDP.”

    He accused former Senate President David Mark of trying to hijack the PDP leadership before defecting to become interim chairman of the ADC-led coalition.

    “David Mark wanted to be chairman of the PDP, and we said no,” Wike said. “When they demanded that the chairmanship return to the North Central, we resisted. Now he has gone to lead a coalition. Let’s see who Nigerians will believe.”

    Wike also criticised Ovation publisher Dele Momodu, calling him politically irrelevant.

    “Dele Momodu was never my friend. He claimed he ran for president—he didn’t get a single vote, and now he’s in this coalition.”

    Known for his blunt rhetoric, Wike accused many coalition members of chronic political opportunism, singling out former Vice President Atiku Abubakar for repeatedly switching parties to pursue power.

    “Atiku was in the PDP, left for the AC, returned to the PDP, then joined the APC, came back to the PDP, and now he’s with the ADC,” Wike said. “Every time, he jumps ship. They’re just looking for where they can be in charge.”

    Read Also: Wike, Keyamo, Bwala knock coalition, ADC

    He questioned their credibility, arguing that their criticisms of the government were simply bitterness over personal losses.

    “They keep saying Nigerians are angry. Say the truth: you were defeated here. Don’t project your frustration onto the public.”

    Wike challenged coalition figures to measure their records against his achievements in public office.

    “If I leave as minister today, I can confidently say, ‘This is what I accomplished.’ Let any of them show what they’ve done.”

    He also suggested that former Kaduna Governor Nasir El-Rufai’s involvement in the coalition was driven by disappointment over being sidelined.

    “If El-Rufai. If the president hadn’t dumped him, would he be part of any coalition?”

    As the 2027 elections draw nearer, Wike insisted that despite internal challenges, the PDP remains the only organised opposition party capable of defeating the APC, provided it stays united.

    “Politics is about interests,” he concluded. “Those people tried everything to seize the PDP’s leadership, and we stood firm and said no.”

  • Ex-PDP southwest secretary Owokoniran dumps party, joins ADC

    Ex-PDP southwest secretary Owokoniran dumps party, joins ADC

    A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for 18 years, Hon. Rahman Owokoniran, has announced his resignation from the party, citing personal reasons and the desire to mitigate potential conflicts.

    In his letter addressed to the PDP Mende/Anthony (Ward C) chairman, Owokoniran expressed his deep appreciation for the unwavering support and commitment he received from the party community throughout his tenure.

    He articulated the difficulty surrounding his decision to depart from the party, effective immediately, to pursue new opportunities that align with his professional aspirations.

    Furthermore, Owokoniran has assumed a pivotal role in facilitating the integration of the PDP Lagos chapter into the African Democratic Congress (ADC) coalition.

    Read Also: A hostile takeover of ADC

    The official announcement of this coalition occurred yesterday in Abuja, with David Mark serving as the interim chairman, succeeding Ralph Okey Nwosu.

    This strategic manoeuvre is considered a noteworthy development within Nigerian politics, particularly regarding implications for the upcoming 2027 elections.

    Hon. Owokoniran possesses extensive experience in the political arena. He previously held a seat in the Lagos State House of Assembly and served as the Commissioner for Housing and for Chieftaincy and Boundary Affairs during Bola Tinubu’s administration as Governor of Lagos State.

    He also chaired the committee responsible for the establishment of 20 Local Government Areas and 17 Local Development Councils within Lagos State.

    His decision to join the ADC coalition is perceived as a significant enhancement to the party’s prospects. Owokoniran’s expertise and established track record in politics are anticipated to be invaluable assets to the coalition.

    As the PDP Lagos chapter integrates into the ADC, stakeholders are closely observing the potential ramifications of this development on the political landscape in Nigeria.

    Meanwhile, the ADC coalition has warmly welcomed Owokoniran and the PDP Lagos chapter.

  • Who succeeds Inuwa Yahaya?

    Who succeeds Inuwa Yahaya?

    • By Abdulrahman Musa

    As Governor Muhammad Inuwa Yahaya of Gombe State is about to wind down his second tenure in office, conversations have already begun to heat up around who should succeed him. Among political stakeholders, media circles, and grassroots mobilisers, the question is no longer if but who will wear the crown come 2027.

    Governor Yahaya himself hasn’t been coy about the conversations, and indeed, his intentions with respect to who succeeds him. He has made it clear that he is already steering the process to ensure a worthy successor emerges — someone who shares his development philosophy and can continue his governance blueprint. In his words, the “car is already in motion, my hands are on the steering, my legs are on the brakes,” and I will make sure we land safely by getting the right and ideal successor. But with a growing list of aspirants, political heavyweights, and ambitious contenders lining up, the process may not be as straightforward as the governor hopes.

    Now, let me say this upfront that I have never been comfortable with political godfatherism. I believe it to be a dangerous tradition that often sidelines the will of the people and imposes leaders based on loyalty to a single person rather than the needs of the wider public. However, I am also not blind to the reality of Nigerian politics. There’s a fine line between godfatherism and legacy protection. The former chokes democracy, but the latter — when done with the interest of continuity and stability in mind — can be beneficial. And this, I believe, is the lens through which we should assess Governor Yahaya’s current political moves.

    One doesn’t need to look far to see the dangers of a poorly managed succession. Take Rivers State as a case in point. The breakdown of the political alliance between Governor Siminalayi Fubara and his predecessor and former political benefactor, Nyesom Ezenwo Wike, has thrown the state into months of instability, leading to the declaration of a six-month state of emergency. This kind of crisis is precisely what Gombe State must avoid.

    On the flip side, we also have examples of states where successors have maintained a productive and respectful relationship with their benefactors, leading to political harmony and steady development. Lagos State is perhaps the most textbook case of such a model. Since former Governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu, now Nigeria’s President, initiated a robust succession plan for Lagos, the state has experienced continuous development.

    Read Also: ADC coalition a desperate alliance of failed politicians – Tinubu Media Force

    Although many governors have contributed to this modern Lagos, the enduring legacy of good leadership is often traced back to Tinubu’s foresight. Babatunde Raji Fashola, Akinwunmi Ambode, and Babajide Olusola Sanwo-Olu have all added their touch, but the credit still flows upward — and deservedly so — to the architect of the continuity.

    Beyond Lagos, similar models exist in Kogi, Kano, and Borno States. Governors like Ahmed Usman Ododo of Kogi State, Abba Kabir Yusuf of Kano State, and Babagana Umara Zulum of Borno State are building on the legacies of their predecessors with an impressive blend of loyalty and performance.

    Governor Zulum, for instance, recently came into the limelight not for policy failure or to project his own interests, but for standing firmly behind Vice President Kashim Shettima, his predecessor, in the face of party pressures that sought to isolate Shettima during an endorsement fray for President Tinubu by the North-East caucus of the APC. Zulum made sure to unite the North-East region to demand that any endorsement for President Tinubu must include Vice President Kashim Shettima. It was a show of uncommon loyalty and clarity of purpose. Olden and overambitious politicians cannot go this length to protect the interests of their successors.

    In Kogi State, while many disagreed with Governor Ahmed Usman Ododo for his unwavering loyalty to former Governor Yahaya Bello, especially during Bello’s controversial tussle with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the optics still send a clear message: Ododo understands the value of trust and allegiance in Nigerian political ecosystems.

    Similarly, in Kano, when some campaigners tried to pit Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf against his political godfather, Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, through the “ Abba Tsaya da kafar ka” (Abba stand on your legs) movement, Yusuf did not hesitate to dismiss the campaign outrightly. He warned members of his administration to steer clear of such divisive antics, making it clear that his loyalty to Kwankwaso was not up for negotiation.

    A closer look at the lives of these three loyal governors before they were elected reveals a most exemplary pattern. Zulum, Ododo, and Yusuf were not desperate to become governors when they were anointed. Their rise to power was, therefore, not based on loud political ambition or desperation. They were, in fact, dark horses — underdogs who quietly earned the respect and trust of their mentors and the public alike. And today, their respective states are the better for it.

    Which brings us back home to Gombe. While Governor Inuwa Yahaya holds the key to the 2027 puzzle, the choice of who will carry the baton matters more than ever. The state needs a stabilising figure. Someone loyal, competent, widely accepted, and free of political baggage. And in that light, one name consistently rises to the top — Engr. Aliyu Muhammad Kombat.

    Engr. Kombat is not just another politician. He is a calm, cerebral, and deeply respected figure in Gombe politics. Though not flashy or loud, his record of loyalty, capacity, and people-oriented leadership has won him admirers across party lines. Even more impressive is his approach to succession politics. Unlike others who are openly jostling and lobbying for endorsements, Kombat has remained composed, distant, and very humble.

    It is even on record that Engineer Kombat has called on his supporters to direct their loyalty and political energy towards Governor Inuwa Yahaya, describing the Governor as the leader whose policies he respects and supports. He went further to list some of the major projects and achievements of the governor and the need to support him to complete the ongoing ones. That kind of humility and strategic alignment is rare in today’s politics. He is not desperately clamouring for power, and perhaps that is why many consider him worthy of it.

    Among stakeholders, Kombat is increasingly being described as Governor Yahaya’s Ododo Pro Max — a premium successor model, if you like. And it’s not just about loyalty. Kombat also ticks every box in terms of capacity, empathy, grassroots connection, and a clear grasp of governance issues in Gombe State. He understands Governor Yahaya’s vision and has worked in support of it rather than in competition with it.

    More importantly, he is popular among the youth — a critical bloc that will no doubt shape the outcome of the 2027 elections. His appeal to the younger demographic is organic, driven by years of quiet service, mentorship, philanthropy, and visibility at community levels.

    As the race toward 2027 heats up, Governor Inuwa Yahaya must now make a choice that will either protect or imperil his legacy. He must choose between ambition and stability, noise and competence, entitlement and loyalty.

    Gombe cannot afford political uncertainty. The gains recorded in the last eight years — in education, healthcare, infrastructure, and security — must not be reversed by handing over to a reckless and disloyal successor. And while it’s not our job to pick a candidate for the governor, it is important that we call attention to what’s obvious: Engr. Aliyu Kombat represents the kind of successor every state hopes for.

    So, as Gombe, like many states with governors on the last leg of their tenures, stands at the crossroads, Governor Yahaya must ask himself: Will I leave behind a Zulum, an Ododo, or a Fubara? More importantly, will my legacy be lost in the mire of a successor-predecessor dogfight? The choice, and the legacy that follows, is Inuwa’s to make.

    • Dr. Abdulrahman writes from  Abuja.

  • Adebayo: a consummate politician departs

    Adebayo: a consummate politician departs

    • By Omotayo Ishola

    The may not be a colourful politician in the mould of Barkin Zuwo, Rimi Abubakar Mohammed nor possessed the oratorical wizardry of uncle Bola Ige, Ladoke Akintola or Kingsley Ozumba Mbadiwe. He might have not earned the governmental genius of an Awolowo, Jakande or Sam Mbakwe, Chief Cornelius Olatunji Adebayo, Ex-Governor of Kwara State who died on Wednesday 25th June, 2025 aged 84, was a marvic politician of triumph and strength by all indices of politics, politicking, in Nigeria political firmament!

    Horned in the academics as a lecturer at the University of Ife, Ile-Ife, Osun State, now Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Chief Cornelius Adebayo transferred his service into the former Kwara State School of Technology Ilorin now Kwara State Polytechnic where he was pulled for Public Service as a cabinet member in the military regimes of Late Col. Adetunji Taiwo, to Late George Innih between 1975 to 1978.

    He was a “point man” in that cabinet with various portfolios in various times as Commissioner for Education, Economic planning and Finance, and other varied portfolios. It was as Commissioner for Education that he became a “Focal Point” in the geometric expansion of Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Institutions in the then Kwara State transversing a section of the present Niger, Benue and Kogi States respectively. At the dawn of Second Republic Presidential System, the Late Chief J.S Olawoyin, the stormy petrel of Offa politics fished out young graduates and intellectuals for the fledgling Unity Party of Nigeria in Kwara State to push the revolutionary programmes of Chief Awolowo led party in Kwara State. Chief C.O Adebayo was one of the “Turks” and was pushed for Senatorial contest in Kwara South comprising of then Ifelodun, Irepodun and Oyun Local Governments. C.O Adebayo won the senatorial election on the platform of the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) and was the UPN Secretary for Senatorial caucus of the senate then in Lagos! Senator C.O Adebayo was on some senate committees on education, and later got elected as the secretary of International Parliamentary Union (IPU). As a young senator then at Tafawa Balewa Square in Lagos, Senator Adebayo was privileged to rub minds with more experienced parliamentary wizards like Late Chiefs J.O A Odebiyi, Abraham Adesanya, Rajilola Ayoola Adeleke (Balogun of Ede), Prof. Senator Banji, Akintoye, David Oke, Senator Oye Adefila, Sola Saraki, Senator David Dafinone, Barkin Zuwo among senators of the period. As the run-up to the Second Republic gathers momentum in 1983, the young revolutionary Turks in the UPN in Old Kwara State pulled up the rings to push up a younger person other than old horse of J.S Olawoyin for gubernatorial on slaught in 1983. These young radicals included but not limited to: S. Wole Oke, Sanmi Fatoyinbo, Joe Obasaju, Olumide Fayomi, Dele Shittu, Peter Olayemi Obaoye, Adewara Toyin Lawal, Bisi Adeoye, Elias Adebayo, Baba Baako among others.

    The political geometrics produced a C.O Adebayo as gubernatorial candidate as against J.S Olawoyin. In the main, there was an irreconcilable political rumpus in the then ruling party, the then National Party of Nigeria which pitched the then Governor Adamu Atta against his god-father Late Senator Olusola Saraki in the hurricane that was code-named “Salake”. A marvic politician in C.O Adebayo made him elected as a UPN Governor trumping the ruling party to the opposition. But the whole drama lasted for three months from October 1983 to 31st December, 1983. But an Adebayo became a UPN elected Governor against the run of play.

    Between the ensuing military interregnum, C.O Adebayo became one of the leading lights against militarism. At 50, I was able to interview him for a report in the Daily Times in which he contended prophetically that he would be a man of the future. When the duo of Ibrahim Gbadamosi Babangida and Sanni Abacha launched their Hitlerian reich on the Nigeria landscape, a voice of C.O Adebayo resonated in the Afenifere, NADECO, and National Movement for National Restoration in which he became the Secretary while the late immortal Adolor of Uromi, Chief Anthony Enahoro the mover of Independent motion in 1953 became the anchor person as chairman. C.O Adebayo travails and triumphs had been adequately documented in his memoirs “Running for Dear Life, NADECO report Abroad”. As Nigeria gravitated towards Civil Rule in 1999, C.O Adebayo stars rose up again, he was taunted for Chairmanship of Interior National Government hurribly  put by “IBB” but he strongly rejected the offer on course of principles.

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    In the second term of President Olusegun Obasanjo, he was appointed as Minister for Communications and later as Minister for Works and Housing.

    In retrospect, he has trasved the political landscape of Nigeria, as Commissioner, Senator, Governor and Minster of the Federal Republic of Nigeria aside from many ad-hoc state responsibilities.

    Chief Cornelius Olatunji Adebayo was born on February 24, 1941 at Igbaja, in the Ifelodun Local Government Area of Kwara State. His father Chief Joel Toye Adebayo and his mother Rebecca Adebayo hailed from Oke-Onigbin in Isin Local Government Area of Kwara State. From 1948 to 1955, Chief Adebayo had his elementary education at St. Anglican School, Oke-Onigbin in 1956, he was admitted into the provincial secondary school Ilorin now (G.S.S, Ilorin) where he completed his secondary education in 1961. In 1962, Chief Adebayo attended the Government (now Barewa College), Zaria where he obtained his Higher School Certificate (HSC). From 1964 to 1967, Chief Adebayo attended Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria where he graduated with B.A (Hons) degree Second Class Upper in English. He proceeded to the University of Ghana, Legon in 1967 where he bagged his Master degree Arts in English in 1969.

    From 1969 to 1973, Chief Adebayo was a lecturer in English at the then University of Ife, Ile-Ife now Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Osun State of Nigeria. As an educationist, Chief Adebayo was the founding Head of English department of the Kwara State College of Technology now Kwara State Polytechnic, Ilorin, Kwara State. Between 1973 to 1975, he was appointed a Civil Commissioner in Kwara State. He was Commissioner for Education where he expanded in scope and content, the educational frontiers of Kwara State at the primary, secondary and tertiary levels of education. He provided a foundational and logistical support for the then fledging University College Ilorin now University of Ilorin (Better by Far University). Before his exit in the cabinet which he voluntarily resigned, he had the opportunities of serving various departments like Economic planning, finance, commerce and industry till 1978. When he formally resigned from state cabinet and return to the polytechnic as a lecturer. He formally left the College of Technology to join active polities. He was one of the Young Turks which the late enigmatic Asiwaju of Offa and middle belt crusader of minority rights, the late chief Josiah Sunday Olawoyin recruited to thr best organized political party, the rested Unity Party of Nigeria under the unforgettable avatar, Chief Jeremiah Oyeniyi Obafemi Awolowo to push revolutionary fervour to the upstart state of Kwara.

    It remains to be noted that he contested the 1979 senatorial election into the senate in Lagos and won on the platform of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN). He was a young senator between 1979 to 1983. In the senate then, having Late Joseph Wayas of the NPN as Senate President, and another irrepressible politician from Kwara State, Dr. Olusola Saraki as Senate Leader, Senator Cornelius Adebayo was on various times senate committees like Education, Culture and Environment, Commerce and Industry among others. He was also within the period and at varied times secretary and later Vice-President, Nigerian Group of Inter-parliamentary Union, Chairman sub-committee in Education, culture and environment.

    Chief Adebayo won the gubernatorial primaries of UPN in 1983 against his more experienced and formidable mentor, Chief J.S Olawoyin after some three running battles. He eventually won the Governorship election against the incumbent Governor Late Alhaji Adamu Attah from Okene, presently of Kogi State.

    He became the second Executive Governor of Kwara State till the demise of Second republic in 31st December, 1983.

    In recognition of his services to his immediate and distant communities, he was honoured with chieftaincy titles of Ajagunmolu (Field Marshal) of Oke-Onigbin, Balogun of Alla, Are of Isin and Ajiniyi of Edidi among other chieftaincy titles. A devout Christian, Chief Adebayo is married and blessed with children including the present Director-General of NALDA Oluwasegun Adebayo.

    C.O Adebayo would be remembered as a progressive politician of highest rank, an Afenifere Irredentist, a NADECO gadfly, an astute leader of Yoruba Kwara Patriots, Chairman of COFA (Nig) Ltd, a loving husband and loving father, a church man of both Anglican communion and ECWA persuasion. C.O Adebayo was here!!!

    Adieu, Chief Cornelius Olatunji Adebayo.

    •          Ishola, Legal Practitioner, Veteran Journalist, Public Essayist in Ilorin, Kwara State.