Tag: ADC

  • Fayose’s ex-deputy gov dumps PDP, set to join ADC

    Fayose’s ex-deputy gov dumps PDP, set to join ADC

    A former deputy governor of Ekiti State, Professor Kolapo Olusola-Eleka, has resigned his membership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state.

    Olusola-Eleka disclosed this in a letter dated July 24 and addressed to his Okeruku Ward 2 chairman in Ikere-Ekiti, Ikere local government area of the state.

    In a copy of the letter made available to our correspondent on Thursday, the ex-deputy governor hinged his decision on the party’s failure to provide a platform for credible opposition and leadership in the country.

    The professor of building technology, who is the PDP governorship candidate in the 2018 election, served as the Deputy Governor between 2014 and 2018 under the former Governor Ayodele Fayose-led administration.

    The letter reads, “I write to formally resign my membership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), effective today.

    “My sincere appreciation goes to the party leadership at all levels, as well as to the numerous members and supporters who have stood by me over the years in Ekiti State and beyond.

    Read Also: We’ll support whoever emerges ADC presidential candidate in fair primary-Amaechi

    The PDP has offered me notable platforms for service, including the opportunity to serve as Deputy Governor of Ekiti State between 2014 and 2018, and as the party’s gubernatorial candidate in the 2018 governorship election.

    “I remain deeply grateful for the trust and responsibilities vested in me. However, after deep consultations and reflection, I have concluded that the party has significantly derailed from the path of constructive opposition and credible leadership that once defined its identity. Consequently, I find it difficult to continue associating with the PDP in its current state.

    “I wish the party success in its future endeavours”, it added.

    Although Olusoka-Eleka did not disclose his next political destination, multiple sources within his political family say he may join the African Democratic Congress (ADC).

  • We’ll support whoever emerges ADC presidential candidate in fair primary-Amaechi

    We’ll support whoever emerges ADC presidential candidate in fair primary-Amaechi

    A former Rivers Governor Rotimi Amaechi has said everyone aspiring to fly the presidential flag of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) in 2027 will support anyone that emerges from a free and fair primary election of the party.

    Amaechi described Rivers as a state notorious for writing election results and asked his supporters to prepare to defend their votes.

    The former Transport Minister spoke to his loyalists at the Port Harcourt International Airport on Wednesday 

    He said his coming was to reassure supporters and Rivers people that there was a new coalitoon under the ADC in town.

    Amaechi said the ADC was formed to end the second-term ambition of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, which he claimed had brought hardship to the people.

    He asked every Rivers man “that thinks good of the state and the country” register with the new party and vote out the present administration.

    Read Also: Amaechi: frantic, immoderate and self-absorbed

    On ADC presidential ticket, he said:  “The moment anybody emerges from the primaries, we insist on a free, fair and transparent primary, all of us will support whoever emerges”.

    He added: “If you are not tired of President Tinubu, I’m tired of President Tinubu. If you’re not hungry, I’m hungry. If the rich men are spending N4million a month for electricity, only God knows how you are surviving. And the President says he doesn’t care.

    “The President says he is not here to make you happy. But ADC is here to make you happy”, adding that “Rivers State is notorious for writing (election) results. When they write results, they claim they have won. I will not work with you if you work with those result snatchers to announce results. God will bless all of us.

    Addressing the supporters, Amaechi added: “Most importantly, have your eyes on 2027. Please go home and start registration. We will form a committee local government to local government to ascertain the number of people we have. If you allow them rig you out, our state is notorious for writing results and we must stop them from writing results.

    “They make noise after writing results. Go home now and start mobilizing people that will come and vote. Let me tell you one bad thing that we should not do; when you say they have already written the results, you discourage voters from coming out.”

  • Ex-Labour guber aspirant Imasuagbon joins ADC in Edo

    Ex-Labour guber aspirant Imasuagbon joins ADC in Edo

    A former governorship aspirant of the Labour Party in Edo State, Barr. Kenneth Imasuagbon, has officially joined the African Democratic Congress (ADC) along with his supporters.

    Imasuagbon, popularly known as the ‘Rice Man’, picked up his ADC membership card in Benin City, the Edo State capital.

    The seasoned politician, who had previously contested elections under the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), now part of the All Progressives Congress (APC), said his decision to join the ADC was driven by concern over growing hunger and hardship in the country.

    He lamented that the rising cost of food items, particularly rice, has made it difficult for him to continue his tradition of distributing rice to the poor.

    According to him, “Nobody will come from Jupiter to repair and rescue the country. It is only Nigerians that can rescue this country. It is no longer hunger but starvation that is happening in Nigeria. Prices have sky rocketed. I can no longer buy rice to Edo people.

    Read Also: ‘Separate Imasuagbon from Ogiewonyi & other political Almajiris’

    “Nigerians are tired. Unemployment is on the rise and Naira has fallen in value.

    “I have found a credible alternative and that alternative is the ADC.

    I am here to join the ADC. It will take us to the promise land. We are all Nigerians. Nobody can threatened anybody. We want to make Nigeria and Edo better than we met them.

    I am not satisfied with the poverty in the land. I am calling on all Nigerians to come on board. I am ready to lead the battle for change.”

    Edo ADC Chairman, Kennedy Odion, said there would be no sitting on the fence ahead of 2027.

    He acknowledged that the journey to 2027 would be tough and rough. 

  • Defection of Senator Onawo, others to ADC rattles Nasarawa PDP

    Defection of Senator Onawo, others to ADC rattles Nasarawa PDP

    The defection of the only People’s Democratic Party (PDP) Senator in Nasarawa State, Muhammed Ogoshi Onawo to the African Democratic Party (ADC) appeared to have rattled PDP leaders in Nasarawa State.

    The defection took place in Kini Hotels in Akwanga during the weekend when the Senator attended the ADC stakeholders meeting that produced a former deputy Governor Dr John Mike Abdul as ADC interim chairman for Nasarawa State.

    But the PDP chairman in the State, Hon Adamu Bako described the ADC coalition members as noise makers who have no electoral value, saying their exit does not constitute any threat to the party.

    The statement by the party’s Public Relations officer, Hamza Ibrahim on behalf  of the Chairman in Lafia, noted at 70, those fronting the coalition ADC in the country especially in Nasarawa State have nothing to offer as such cannot form a stumbling block as far as elections are concern.

    The statement reads: “At the age of 70s to 80s, most of them have since exhausted their individual and collective political relevance. We therefore, challenge the media to conduct a popularity search on them from their respective polling units, wards and even LGA to attest to this well known fact

    “We made bold to ask them to publish the results of their individual polling units, wards and LGAs for public scrutiny. For instance, it’s on INEC record that a former Minister in the State got just 7 votes delivered to Alhaji Atiku Abubakar in the 2023 presidential election that he served as a high ranking member of his campaign.

    “A former Senator couldn’t deliver both his polling unit and ward. In a district in Karu LGA, a serving minister at that time list woefully” the statement declared 

    Onawo, who represents Nasarawa South on the platform of the PDP defeated former Governor, Senator Umaru Tanko Al-Makura of the APC during the 2023 general elections.

    Read Also: Tinubu, govs, senators attend Barau’s children’s wedding

    Prominent PDP members in the State who defected to the ADC and attended the coalition meeting in Akwanga include former Minister of information, Senator Patricia Akwashiki; former Minister of State for Justice, Barr Musa Elayo; immediate past Minister of Environment under the late Muhammadu Buhari administration, Barr Hassan Mohammed Abdullahi.

    Others who also attended the meeting are a three term former Senator representing Nasarawa South, Sulieman Adokwe; former House of Representative member AbdulKarim Ombamas; 2023 PDP Governorship aspirant, General Nuhu Angbazo (Rtd); ESV Umar Musa Galadima who was also a PDP governorship aspirant in 2023.

    The PDP Senatorial candidate for Nasarawa North in 2023 Hon Nathaniel Aboki also attended the ADC coalition meeting as well as Miss Farida Umar who recently contested for the PDP national ex-officio and Mr William Alaku, the ADC chairman in the State who step aside for the emergence of the former deputy Governor Dr John Mike Abdul.

  • Atack on Buhari’s state burial insensitive, unacceptable, APC slams ADC

    Atack on Buhari’s state burial insensitive, unacceptable, APC slams ADC

    The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) has berated the opposition African Democratic Congress (ADC) for accusing President Bola Tinubu-led administration of exploiting the state burial accorded the late President Muhammadu Buhari for political gains. 

    The opposition party, in a statement on Friday, picked holes in the state burial organized in honour of Buhari, describing it as an exploitative venture. 

    APC National Publicity Secretary, Felix Morka, in a reaction on Saturday said the opposition party must have been shocked by the dignified state burial and the show of compassion and support for his bereaved family by the government and the people, describing the ADC’s criticism as “spooky, unconscionable,” and a reflection of its “duplicity and insensitivity.”

    Dismissing the criticism Morka said: “ADC has showcased itself to be without any understanding of customary state practice, and lacking empathy and essential humanity. It has cut its own portrait as a party of mindless political dregs, a dump of Nigeria’s internally displaced politicians, ready to do or say anything in chase of attention but sinking itself deeper in quicksand of ignominy. 

    “That the ADC is blowing up over the state burial of the late President only reflects the party’s duplicity and insensitivity. What would the ADC have had President Tinubu do? Deny the late President Buhari the honour of a befitting state burial? Withhold empathy and support for the bereaved former first family? As a party that can begrudge the dead, the ADC must surely disdain the living.

    “It is unacceptable for the ADC to politicize a solemn moment of national grief, more so, as its senseless statement was issued during the week of national mourning for the late President. 

    “The party’s reference to heartfelt gestures and activities of the government in honour of the late President as “exploitation” is beyond the pale.  It falls far outside the widest and wildest stretch of justifiable opposition politics. Clearly, the party and its villainous leaders have allowed their humanity to be corroded by desperation for inordinate and self-serving power.”

    Eulogising Buhari, the ruling party said the late President lived a life of illustrious service to country as a soldier, military Head of State, a two-term democratically elected President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. 

    The party stressed that “just a human being, a father, survived by a loving but grieving family worthy of our collective empathy and support at this difficult time. 

    “President Bola Tinubu showed compassion and a deep sense of loss of a friend, close political associate, and predecessor. He demonstrated patriotism and leadership by overseeing and participating in honouring the late president who gave so much to our dear nation.”

  • Presidency slams ADC over Buhari’s burial remarks

    Presidency slams ADC over Buhari’s burial remarks

    The Presidency has fired back at the African Democratic Congress (ADC) over its recent statement accusing President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration of exploiting the death of former President Muhammadu Buhari for political image laundering, describing the opposition party’s claims as “shameless” and “obnoxious.”

    Reacting through a statement on Saturday, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Public Communications, Mr. Sunday Dare, the Presidency accused the ADC and its leading figures of “disrespecting Buhari and dancing on his grave for relevance.”

    “Let it be said clearly: the ADC is the one exploiting Buhari’s death for political attention, not this government. From Atiku and El-Rufai’s choreographed arrival in Daura — greeted with chants seeking to make political capital from the solemnity of the moment — to this disgraceful press statement, the ADC has shown itself to be utterly shameless,” it stated.

    The Presidency dismissed the ADC’s criticism as a “laughable tantrum” and part of a pattern of opportunistic outrage. 

    “This is not the first time the ADC — in its pitiful, stuttering attempts at reinvention — has embarrassed itself with hollow, attention-seeking criticisms. A party still grappling with an identity crisis presumes lecturing the President of the Federal Republic on governance, decorum, and public accountability. How utterly ridiculous”, the statement read.

    In contrast to the ADC’s allegations, the Presidency insisted that President Tinubu’s conduct during the mourning period was both dignified and befitting of the stature of the late former President. 

    “The burial of former President Buhari was conducted with the complete honour befitting a leader of his stature. That is why world leaders showed up, millions of Nigerians tuned in on television and across social media, and even ADC promoters were falling over themselves in Daura, prancing about the Buhari family compound like eager real estate agents scouting new territory,” it noted.

    Highlighting the administration’s focus and performance, the statement outlined what it described as President Tinubu’s growing list of achievements, including naira stabilisation, improved oil production, a 60% increase in FAAC allocations, and the restoration of electricity to long-neglected communities.

    Other milestones, it said, include the ongoing Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, the Ogbia-Nembe Road, and the new Sokoto-Badagry Road; student loans under the NELFUND scheme benefiting 400,000 young Nigerians; the creation of regional development commissions; and the launch of Nigeria’s first-ever Consumer Credit Scheme.

    “These are not press statements. These are results. Tangible, measurable, and ongoing. That is leadership,” Dare declared.

    The Presidency described the ADC as a political “contraption” plagued by internal strife and legal woes, noting that the party has become consumed by “internal squabbles” and is “reduced to issuing these baseless attacks to cling to the fringes of relevance.”

    In a final swipe, Dare stated: “Let it be said without equivocation: Nigerians are not fooled. No press statement — however venomous — can erase the facts of progress. President Tinubu honoured Buhari with dignity in death and continues to honour his legacy through hard work, not hollow words.”

    It urged Nigerians to ignore the “political noise” from what he called “an outfit gasping for attention,” affirming that President Tinubu remains focused on delivering the Renewed Hope Agenda.

  • Dumebi Kachikwu rejects alleged ADC takeover, insists party is not for sale

    Dumebi Kachikwu rejects alleged ADC takeover, insists party is not for sale

    Former presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Dumebi Kachikwu, has dismissed ongoing attempts by political figures led by former Senate President David Mark to assume control of the party as fraudulent and illegitimate, declaring that the ADC remains a platform for fresh ideas and younger leadership, not a political retirement home for failed elites.

    This comes as five State chairmen of the party on Thursday initiated a legal challenge at a Federal High Court in Abuja over the takeover of the ADC by the Opposition Coalition.

    They are contesting the process through which the Senator David Mark-led group assumed control and the stance taken by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on the matter.

    Speaking on Thursday at a press conference in Abuja, Kachikwu rejected claims that he is no longer a party member, calling such suggestions part of a deliberate misinformation campaign aimed at destabilizing the ADC. 

    Responding to the interim national secretary of the party on the status of his membership in the ADC, Kachikwu clarified, “I have never claimed to be a party official. 

    “But as a member and former presidential candidate of the party, I have to speak out and defend its values.”

    According to him, the claim by former Chairman Ralph Nwosu that he was suspended from the party after the 2023 elections was baseless, as Nwosu lacked the authority to take such action.

    “Nwosu had no power to suspend me because he was no longer the chairman of the party, his tenure had lapsed two years earlier. So on what grounds did he derive the authority to suspend me?

    “I am a full-blooded Nigerian, and I have the right to aspire to the highest office in the land. The presidency is not and will never be the birthright of one section of this country,” he declared.

    Kachikwu accused the group of politicians, whom he described as “a political gang,” of attempting to hijack the ADC as a vehicle to revive their stalled political careers and advance the presidential ambitions of a northern candidate, particularly former Vice President Atiku Abubakar.

    “This is not a political coalition. This is a gang of desperate politicians unable to survive outside political office.

    “They are truly on a rescue mission but it’s to rescue themselves from the harsh economic realities they created.”

    He specifically accused the group of offering bribes to ADC state chairmen in a bid to force resignations and create artificial vacancies. 

    “Some of the State chairmen are being offered as much as ₦20 million to step down. But even if they succeed, our constitution does not allow them to assume those positions,” he noted.

    Kachikwu refuted claims that he was working for President Bola Tinubu, for which they dubbed him Tinubu’s spokesman, saying, “It would be an honour to be a spokesperson for the president of the largest Black nation on earth. But I am not.”

    He also alleged that the ongoing drama is being orchestrated by former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as part of a larger plan to dominate the 2027 presidential race. “Atiku doesn’t believe anyone from a certain part of Nigeria should be president. 

    “He almost stopped Obasanjo’s second term, undermined Jonathan, and now wants to convince Peter Obi he can’t win unless he becomes Atiku’s running mate,” Kachikwu stressed.

    Challenging Atiku directly, Kachikwu said, “If equity and justice matter to him, he should support a southern candidate for the presidency in 2027. But he won’t, because the plan is about self-preservation, not national unity.”

    Nonetheless, he reiterated his belief that the presidency should remain in the South for at least another six years, emphasizing that equity demands it. 

    “This is about fairness. We must not allow ourselves to be manipulated into perpetuating injustice,” he stressed.

    Kachikwu also addressed questions regarding internal leadership confusion in the ADC, admitting that the tenure of former chairman Ralph Nwosu had lapsed without a proper convention to elect new leadership. 

    “This lacuna created an opening for these hijackers. But the courts have ruled that Nwosu is no longer chairman, and we have sought guidance from INEC on how to organize a new convention,” he explained.

    He accused the self-declared faction of creating a false public narrative, saying, “These people are from other parties, PDP, APC, Labour. They have no business in the ADC. They just want to use our party as a platform for their so-called coalition.”

    When asked about legal efforts to challenge the attempted takeover, Kachikwu confirmed that the matter is already in court, with a ruling expected soon. 

    “We are seeking a court declaration that these individuals are not members of the ADC and have no power to seize its structure.”

    Kachikwu also took issue with the quality of opposition politics in Nigeria, especially those belonging to the coalition to oust President Tinubu, arguing that mere criticism of the sitting president is not enough. 

    Challenging the media and political elite to focus on policy, not propaganda of the so-called coalition, he said, “It’s not about shouting that Tinubu must go. What’s your plan for the economy, healthcare, or unemployment? Nigerians deserve answers, not slogans.

    “What will you do about doctors leaving Nigeria? What about the killings in Benue? Why has Atiku never condemned those atrocities? Because it’s politically inconvenient.”

    Speaking further, he said the ADC had always practiced a constructive form of opposition, he noted, “Our opposition comes with propositions. What we need now is substance, not sensationalism.

    “The ADC is not for sale. We are a party of fresh faces, fresh ideas, and fresh ideals. No matter how loud they shout or how much they spend, we will not surrender this party to political gangsters.”

    As legal battles continue, Kachikwu says the fight to rescue the ADC and preserve its founding vision is far from over.

    He also decried the media’s role in legitimizing impostors, accusing certain outlets of misreporting. 

    “Anyone can claim to own Channels TV or Arise News, but that doesn’t make it true. Just because someone claims to be the ADC chairman doesn’t mean they are. The media must stop amplifying lies,” he said.

    Meanwhile, as confirmed by Kachikwu, the leadership crisis rocking the party took a legal turn, as five state chairmen have filed a suit at the Federal High Court in Abuja to challenge what they describe as an unlawful takeover of the party.

    The chairmen involved in the legal action are from Benue, Akwa Ibom, Nasarawa, Borno, and Niger States.

    According to a party source familiar with the development, the case was mentioned in court on Thursday with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in attendance. 

    However, the two key figures at the center of the controversy, former National Chairman Ralph Nwosu and Senator David Mark, who is claiming the position of interim national chairman, were absent and unrepresented.

    “The five chairmen were in court, INEC was there, but Nwosu and Mark neither showed up nor gave any reason for their absence,” the source said. 

    The court has adjourned the matter to allow proper service of court processes.

    The plaintiffs argue that individuals who are not registered members of the ADC are attempting to hijack the party’s leadership. 

    “Someone who just joined the party cannot suddenly become the national leader. That’s unconstitutional. Our constitution does not recognize an interim national chairman,” she said.

    Read Also: Dumebi Kachikwu goes low profile

    At the core of the legal challenge is the claim that Nwosu, who was removed as national chairman, issued a membership card to General Amartey, who was then declared interim chairman shortly after. 

    “The party’s rules are clear. Membership begins at the ward level. You cannot become a leader by proxy,” the source added.

    The chairmen also raised concerns over attempts to dismantle existing party structures. “None of them has resigned. Yet they claim they are no longer in office and want to install a caretaker committee. On what basis?”

    According to her, the plaintiffs maintain that in the absence of a National Working Committee (NWC), only the National Executive Committee (NEC), made up of state chairmen, has the constitutional authority to steer party affairs.

    They are urging INEC to urgently fix a date for a national convention to elect new officers, citing what they describe as a dangerous leadership vacuum, “INEC must act now to preserve the party’s integrity,” the source said.

  • Buhari: ADC declares suspension of political activities nationwide

    Buhari: ADC declares suspension of political activities nationwide

    The African Democratic Congress (ADC) has declared a three-day national mourning period in honour of former President Muhammadu Buhari, who recently passed away at the age of 82.

    The party’s Interim National Chairman, Sen. David Mark, in a statement on Monday by his media aide, Paul Mumeh to ex-President of the Senate, in a statement on Monday announced the immediate suspension of all political activities at both the national and state levels for the duration of the mourning period.

    Mark described Buhari as a statesman of exceptional character whose life was defined by discipline, patriotism, and service to the nation.

    Calling on the party members and supporters across the country to observe the declared period of mourning with solemnity and respect, Mark said, “President Muhammadu Buhari was a statesman of exceptional character.

    READ ALSO; Adeleke slams Aregbesola Over 2026 guber threat, labels his tenure worst in Osun history

    “As a soldier, he fought bravely to preserve the unity and territorial integrity of our nation.

    “As a democratically elected President, he contributed significantly to the growth and consolidation of democratic governance in Nigeria.

    “His leadership reflected discipline, commitment, and a deep sense of patriotism.”

    The ADC interim chairman further urged the federal government to immortalise the former President by naming national monuments or institutions after him, as a tribute to his contributions.

    “We believe it is only fitting that his name and contributions be etched permanently into the national memory through the establishment of monuments, institutions, or initiatives that reflect the values he stood for,” he added.

    The party extended its deepest condolences to the Buhari family, the Government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, and all Nigerians mourning the former leader.

  • Hegemony, national decline and anomie

    Hegemony, national decline and anomie

    Several readers of this column have been asking the columnist to comment on current political developments in the country, particularly the gathering of the tribe of the discontented and disaffected under the aegis of the perennially mercantilist and irresponsible party known as ADC. This is a cartel of political courtesans willing to submit and surrender its flag to anybody provided the price is right. The first impulse is to dismiss the whole caucus, minus one or two misguided idealists such as our friend and beloved aburo, Rauf Aregbesola, as a stellar assemblage of crooks, conmen and compulsive carpetbaggers. But that will be sheer emotive diatribe, not in keeping with the stated ethos of this column to always historicize, that is to look analytically at matters arising and view things from a deeper historical perspective.

     Consequently, this column will not join in the demonization and stigmatization of Rauf Aregbesola. It offends the deep cannons and ethos of Yoruba Omoluabi culture to pour public scorn and invectives on a person with whom you have shared deep fraternal bonding.  A quirky, cerebral and intensely competitive fellow, Rauf loves to argue and contend at the highest dialectical level. An early sticking point was how to wean Rauf off his romantic idealization of the eponymous Soviet worker and his insistence on transposing this mythical personage to the Osun subsoil. As a person on ground, one had impressed it on the then governor that unlike his idealized Soviet worker with his promethean feats of endurance and self-denial in the service of a greater cause, the Osun people are joyous royalist regicides who brook no nonsense from any overreaching ruler.

      Under any draconian rule, they will chafe first in polite disavowal before embarking on a wholesale rebellion. This insistence on ramming unpalatable choices down the throat of a fiercely independent and freedom loving people has led to a political catastrophe in the state. When news of his political rebellion against his boss and benefactor began filtering out, God knows how many times one remonstrated with the erstwhile governor now minister which included two private trips to Abuja. On one occasion on a major Muslim holiday, the two of us were huddled together in his Abuja home in fierce contention for about four days. Alas, it was all to no avail as one of the greatest mobilisers of his generation appears to have crossed the Rubicon. We do not know what his former master knows, being a master gamesman in this deadly political polo, rumours swirled around that his boy had succumbed to combination of Fulani tira and even more potent political treachery.

    READ ALSO: 10 African countries without an operational national airline

     This lethal potion is normally administered on notable Yoruba politicians who are stranded by choice, feeding them with the illusion that as better Muslims and more competent administrators, they are more acceptable choices than their leaders where it mattered most. At the tail end of the Second Republic, the rumour was rife that a famous disciple and aspiring clone of Chief Awolowo was about to succumb to the deadly diet before the military intervened. But he was to meet his comeuppance in not too dissimilar circumstances exactly ten years after.

      This is the stuff of another epic tragedy being enacted before our very eyes. It is not that a leader cannot or must never be deposed. But apex followership in a fraught multi-ethnic nation demands its own obligations, visionary sacrifices and political savvy. As we have seen in the Awolowo and Abiola saga, the Yoruba people have developed a sense of permanent siege in the roiling postcolonial coliseum that Nigeria has become and no matter the failings and the vulnerabilities of their subsisting arrowhead, the people never forget or forgive leaders who desert the trenches, particularly if they do not represent a clearer pathway to freedom and emancipation from the hell that is Nigeria. According to a Yoruba proverb, it is the stick at hand that one must use in killing or warding off a menacing snake. Unfortunate as it is for a nation aspiring to an organic cohesion of values, the ethnicization of politics among Nigeria’s major nationalities is a reflection of our badly skewed federal arrangement. In the absence of a pan-Nigerian avatar, the ethnic menagerie will survive until competing and countervailing ethnicities exhaust themselves either within the current nation space or without it.

      Before moving to the broader historical sweep, this is the political and sociological context to view current political developments, particularly the gale of defections and the berthing of notable refugees and other wayfarers in ADC. It has been said that Nigeria is a country of one major drama per day. But a lot of this is unproductive drama enacted for the entertainment of bemused and bewildered masses and spectators alike. Before now, it was the threat of a one-party state that had preoccupied the political imagination of the average Nigerian. The dramatic emergence of the ADC coalitionists suddenly changed all that jolting the ruling party out of its lethargic and self-absorbed complacency. Some APC topnotches were beginning to sound like the APP decamp who famously proclaimed a sixty year Reich for the PDP. This is what the lack of a viable opposition does to dominant political parties.

      In a sense then, there is a ring of inevitability about the emergence and structuring of the ADC. The problem with a murky pool is that it can only throw up muck. With the badly wounded PDP heaving in terminal trauma, there was bound to be some consequences. As this column has noted several times, Nigeria is too volatile, too combustible to naturalize a one-party state. But if there is some inevitability about the emergence of the ADC as a behemoth umbrella, there is also something eerily unsettling about the lack of freshness and originality in its form and format, its obsession at this early stage with post and preferment and the startling absence of any emancipatory zeal and vigour.

      You cannot give what you don’t have. It is a combination of farce and tragedy. This is the surviving rump of a supplanted post-military hegemonic coalition exhausting its historic and political possibilities in full public glare. It is a measure of how far its putative leader, Brigadier David Alechenu Mark, himself has journeyed down the road to political infamy. Forty two years ago Mark’s name travelled round informed circuits as the mastermind of a looming putsch by radically disaffected junior officers who were bent on terminating the mess and embarrassment the Second Republic had become. That was before their conservative seniors stepped in to preserve the dominant ethos.  Now, he is heading a conservative gathering of political desperadoes after his antidemocratic hell-raising during the June 12 debacle. 

       Political hegemonies are made of sterner stuff. It has never been a pounded yam and bush meat party. There are rumours however that acutely aware of its electoral deficits, its unpopularity with the wider masses and its lack of strategic and organizational acumen, the ADC innermost caucus are not actually gunning for an outright victory but seeking for a massive disruption of the electoral process which will eventuate in anomie and a total breakdown of law and order in the country. They will be hoping that their anti-democratic exertions will feed on and in turn be fueled by the rising wave of insecurity in the nation, the growing political discontent among segments of the elite whose federal feeding bottle has been taken away and the undeniable apocalyptic hunger in the land. It will be left to economic historians of the future to determine how measures taken to boost the economy and to reprieve the nation from certain fiscal collapse could also engender catastrophic political consequences in an ethnically polarized nation with contrasting and countervailing modes of production. This is where President Tinubu will face his stiffest political test in the coming months as elections almost two years away begin to assume a disproportionate centrality in the affairs of the nation. A famished soul is the devil’s ultimate play station. As far as the generalized masses of impoverished people are concerned, all the number-crunching about economic growth and promising indices of recovery are nothing but elite games of figures without any direct relevance to their parlous condition.

    Hegemony is structured domination over a period of time by a group, a people, a party or an organization. The domination is often so complete and “natural” that it rarely resorts to force, violence or coercion to impose its order and authority. The bane and tragedy of post-independence politics in Nigeria is that those who have shown themselves to be masters of hegemonic domination have not shown the same mastery in nation-growing or inclusive and egalitarian development. Hence the constant slide into decline and anomie as seen in the First, Second and Third Republics.

     Among the first crop of leaders thrown up in postcolonial Nigeria, the late Ahmadu Bello remains in a class of his own. He was a master of hegemonic politics. Through sheer heft of number, he was able to bluff his way and browbeat the other two regional rivals into substantial compliance. Through strategic gaming and brilliant bridge-building, he managed to weld a disparate and amorphous region into substantial cohesion turning it in the process to a forbidding and formidable threat to genuine federalism. But he was no visionary national avatar. His was not a pan-Nigerian vision of an all-inclusive economic growth and egalitarian emancipation but a northern-based subordination of modern citizenship to feudal subjecthood. Towards the end of it all with the Tiv forcibly subdued, with the west in conflagration and the east chafing from coerced cohabitation, the nation was sliding into anomie and it was left to Igbo artillery to break the political deadlock with ruinous consequences. With no lesson learnt, the Second Republic was upended by soldiers after economic and political profligacy buoyed by a sense of feudal entitlement pushed the nation in the direction of anarchy and chaos.

      Discounting the aborted Third Republic which summarily imploded as a result of military overreach based on a narrow and circumscribed regional ethos, it is now obvious that if care is not taken the Fourth Republic faces very much the same grim prospects. The fraught and contradictory ensemble of strange bedfellows which produced the APC has been fraying at the edges since the advent of General Buhari and his divisive proclivities. But they often manage to patch things up.  However, the gathering clouds this time around appear very portentous. Tinubu is a dogged fighter; a heavyweight bruiser in the classic American tradition. But it is not clear whether in the shifty and treacherous quicksand of Nigerian politics, he has managed to stitch and cobble together a sturdy hegemonic coalition which can withstand adversarial pressures.

     In a sense, it is beginning to feel as if we are back in the First Republic but with reverse dynamics. In the First Republic, a hegemonic project of political domination without an agenda for an all-inclusive national development and genuine elite harmony led to a fiasco. This time around, a push for an all-inclusive economic transformation of the nation relying on an artificial elite integration may well backfire on all of us. The historical process with its underlying morbidities often transcends individual actors however important or self-important. We must hope for inclement weather.   

  • Lagos council poll: Why we fielded candidates only in 20 LGAs – ADC

    Lagos council poll: Why we fielded candidates only in 20 LGAs – ADC

    The African Democratic Congress (ADC) says it is fielding candidates in the 20 Local Government Areas (LGAs) in Saturday’s local government council election in Lagos State, in compliance with a Supreme Court judgment.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Lagos State Independent Election Commission(LASIEC) is conducting election in the 20 LGAs and 37 local council development a in the state.

    NAN also reports that 15 out of 18 political parties are participating in the ongoing local government election.

    A document obtained from LASIEC shows that only 15 of the 19 political parties that initially expressed interest in the elections, submitted candidate lists ahead of the poll.

    The Lagos State Chairman of ADC, Mr George Ashiru, explained that the party’s decision  to field candidates in the 20 local government council areas was guided by the Supreme Court judgment on local government autonomy delivered in 2024.

    He said that that judgment reaffirmed the constitutional recognition of 774 LGAs across Nigeria, including the 20 in Lagos.

    “In line with the Supreme Court ruling on local government autonomy, we chose to focus our campaigns and field candidates only in the 20 constitutionally recognised local government areas,” Ashiru said.

    He noted that the ADC remained committed to upholding the rule of law and constitutional provisions in its political activities.

    “In the beginning, we were against participation but our members and aspirants insisted on participating, especially those who felt that have strength in some areas.

    “The party chose to abide by the constitution and focus our participation on the recognised councils,” he said.

    Ashiru urged LASIEC to conduct the election with transparency and impartiality.

    “At the end of this election, people will rate the commission because, ideally, parties win in their areas of strength,” he added.

    Read Also: Lagos council polls: Police deploy air assets, special forces

    NAN reports that the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) remains the most represented party in the contest, fielding candidates in all 57 local councils and 376 wards.

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) followed with candidates contesting in 45 councils and 259 wards.

    The Labour Party presented 22 chairmanship and 130 councillorship candidates, while the Zenith Labour Party has six chairmanship and 21 councillorship candidates.

    Other political parties with approved candidates, as listed by LASIEC, include: Accord; African Action Alliance (AAA); Allied People’s Movement (APM); and All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

    Others were, Social Democratic Party (SDP); National Rescue Movement (NRM); Young Progressives Party (YPP); Youth Party (YP); Action Peoples Party (APP); and the ADC.

    (NAN)