Tag: ADC

  • 2027: ADC rules out automatic ticket for Atiku, Obi

    2027: ADC rules out automatic ticket for Atiku, Obi

    • Obidient Movement: Obi won’t go for anything less than presidential ticket

    There is no automatic presidential ticket for any aspirant in 2027, the African Democratic Congress (ADC) clarified yesterday.

    According to the party, while the consensus option would be adopted in selecting the standard bearer, members would resort to open, competitive and transparent primary, if the option fails.

    ADC National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, who spoke on a national television, noted the growing speculation, intrigues, coalition negotiations and the defection of prominent politicians from other parties to the ADC.

    However, he said that no decision has been taken on who will fly the presidential ticket, adding that all aspirants are eligible.

    Abdullahi stressed: “No conversation is going on at the moment about who will be the standard bearer or who will be running mate to who. Every single issue has not been resolved regarding who will fly the flag of the party in 2027.”

    Already, two chieftains, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar and former Anambra State Governor Peter Obi, who joined the party last week, are believed to be eyeing the ticket.

    Although the Atiku camp has maintained silence on his ambition, members of the Obedient Movement, who are Obi’s followers, declared yesterday that he would not play the second fiddle.

    The National Coordinator, Dr Yinusa Tanko, said Obi is the leading aspirant who will never accept to be running mate to anybody in the party.

    READ ALSO: Still on Anthony Joshua’s car accident

    Consensus, primary on front burner

    The Publicity Secretary said that when the time comes, the first option would be consensus, driven by the need to build a broad-based and winning coalition.

    He added: “But when that time comes, we are going to have a position, and our first recourse will be to try to engineer a measure of consensus based on the challenges that we have ahead of us. We are building a coalition, and we are building a winning coalition.”

    Abdullahi said if consensus proves impossible, the party would not hesitate to conduct a primary that meet democratic standards.

    He said: “If that doesn’t happen, of course, we are going to have competitive primary, and it’s going to be free, it’s going to be open, and it’s going to be transparent, and every Nigerian will see that this is the direction that ADC wants to go, as a party of rules, as a party that is transparent, that obeys its own laws and regulation.”

    Bwala, Tanko clash on Obi’s chances

    Presidential Adviser on Policy Communication Daniel Bwala and Tanko expressed contrasting views on the Obi’s chances.

    While Tanko insisted that the former governor would not accept the offer of running mate, Bwala predicted that the ticket and the running mate slot will elude him.

    The presidential aide added that the former governor would eventually contest for president on another platform.

    Obi, who ran on the platform of the crisis-ridden Labour Party (LP) in 2023, defected to the ADC last week.

    Justifying the defection in Enugu, where he was received into the party by the Interim National Chairman, Senator David Mark, he explained that he was motivated by the quest for national unity.

    In its reaction, the Anambra LP said his exit would not weaken the chapter, adding that members would not also miss him.

    Obi will get ADC ticket,  says Tanko

    Tanko, who spoke on a radio programme monitored in Ibadan, Oyo State, dismissed speculations that the ADC is under the influence of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, saying that “everybody that was in that particular coalition contributed their hard-earned momone”

    He added: “I am only focusing on my candidate. I’m selling my candidate to the public based on his capacity and credibility and what he has to offer Nigerians. That’s all.”

     Tanko said Obi is capable of providing a “moral solution” to the country’s leadership challenges.

    He emphasized that Obi’s alignment with the ADC followed extensive consultations, reflecting a people-driven strategy rather than personal ambition.

    Tanko stressed: “The decision to align with the ADC came from a conglomerate of diverse groups seeking to correct Nigeria’s problems and reclaim the country for its people.

     “When they came together, the ADC was chosen as the political vehicle. Ordinarily, Peter Obi would flow with the people who are calling for him.”

     The coordinator said that young Nigerians involved in the process would determine Obi’s political path.

     Defending Obi’s nomadic movement in politics, Tanko said structural challenges within the LP necessitated the shift.

     He added: “Forces in power deliberately undermined the party’s functionality. If your house is being deliberately set on fire, would you remain inside it? There was a calculated attempt to destroy what was being built.

     “Politics is a game of numbers, and that larger coalition was already evident in this grouping.”

     Tanko said Obi’s chances are measured on his own viability and electability, adding: “Politics has no permanent enemies, only permanent interests. The interest here is good governance, and Peter Obi represents that.”

     On Obi’s one-term pledge, Tanko said it is a promise to Nigerians, not just a political party.

    He stressed: “If elected in 2027, Peter Obi would complete the remaining four years for the South and return power to the North. This demonstrates credibility and national unity.”

    Bwala: Tickets will elude Obi

    Bwala said Obi would be denied both the presidential ticket and running mate slot in ADC.

     Speaking in an interview on The Clarity Zone Podcast, Bwala claimed that Obi lacks the capacity to serve as director-general of any coalition movement.

    He said Obi lost control of the political structure he built after the 2023 election, including his influence in the National Assembly.

    Bwala said: “After the election, he lost everybody he was leading. He had members in the House of Representatives. How many are there in the National Assembly?

    “The only governor he had, is the governor with him or with us? In fact, I have not seen one that identifies with him at the moment. All the elections where he supported candidates, all of them failed.

    “The army of Trojans that he has on social media, they attack people. They say you are two-faced, that you change party. That’s what they do every day.

    “But when you say their master and hero has been changing party like a player in the Premier League changes clubs every season, they don’t like it.”

    The presidential aide also accused Obi of hypocrisy over party loyalty, saying that he has switched political platforms repeatedly.

    Bwala stressed: “He started with PDP, then went to APGA. In APGA, he came back to PDP. From PDP, he went to Labour.

    “Right now, when you hear people talk about being between the devil and the deep blue sea, he is between ADC and Labour.

    “He will not be the presidential candidate, he will not be the vice-presidential candidate. Peter Obi is going to run on a platform other than Labour and other than ADC.”

    Bwala further said Obi will not secure even a quarter of the votes he recorded in the 2023 presidential election.

     ‘Obi’s exit won’t weaken LP in Anambra’

     Anambra LP said the exit of Obi will not affect its future electoral fortune.

     The chairman, Comrade Peter Okoye, said in a.  statement that is solid, united and well-positioned for the 2027 general election.

    The only LP member of the House of Representatives from Edo State, Murphy Osaro Omoruyi, has defected to the ADC.

     Omoruyi, who represents Egor/Ikpoba-Okha Constituency, said he obeyed the voice of his constituents to leave the LP.

    He said: “Inspite of all efforts, the intractable crises rocking Labour Party has made my continued stay in the party, practically impossible.

     “I joined the new coalition of the African Democratic Congress sequel to my resignation from the Labour Party conveyed in a letter to my ward chairman, Ward 10, Egor Local Government Area on the 30th December, 2025 which had since been accepted.”

    Obi, ADC leaders visit Nwobodo

     ADC leaders, led by Obi, visited former Anambra State Governor Jim Nwobodo at his Amaechi Awkunawnaw,  Enugu country home.

     Speaking on behalf of the delegation, Senator Ben Obi described Nwobodo as the “godfather of Southeast politics.”

    Nwobodo spoke with fondness about Obi, recalling their shared relationships.

    He reflected on the place of the Igbo in Nigeria’s political history, expressing hope that the aspiration for an Igbo presidency would one day be realised.

     He said: “We are one of the people that formed this country called Nigeria. We still pray to God that one day an Igbo man will be the president of Nigeria.”

  • Edo LP Rep member joins ADC

    Edo LP Rep member joins ADC

    The last Labour Party member in the House of Representatives in Edo State, Hon Murphy Osaro Omoruyi, has defected to the African Democratic Congress (ADC).

    Hon Omoruyi, who represents Egor/Ikpoba-Okha Federal Constituency, said he obeyed the voice of his constituents to leave the LP.

    Omoruyi said he has remained committed to the core responsibilities of lawmaking and oversight functions since he was elected to the National Assembly.

    He stated that his staunched support for the LP earned him the “The Last Man Standing” toga as an evident of his being loyal and committed party man.

    According to him, “However, inspite of all efforts, the intractable crises rocking Labour Party has made my continued stay in the party, practically impossible.

    “I joined the new coalition of the African Democratic Congress sequel to my resignation from the Labour Party conveyed in a letter to my ward chairman, Ward 10, Egor Local Government Area on the 30th December, 2025 which has since been accepted.

    “As I join the African Democratic Congress today, I pledge my fall commitment to working with party leaders, coalition partners, and stakeholders to advance the cause of good governance and effective representation. Together, we will strengthen our democratic institutions and ensure that the voices of ordinary Nigerians are heard and respected.

    “To my constituents, I reaffirm my unwavering loyalty to you. Your trust remains my guiding principle, and I assure you that this step is taken to better serve your interests and secure a brighter future for our constituency.

    “Our constituents are crying. They are on our neck. There are no good roads. The current government made life difficult for our people. 

    “How does the people feel impact if the budget was executed in 2025″ We had to rescue the country. As a Representatives of the people, I decided to pitch tent with our people. They want to remove this government and I have to join them to actualise the dream.”

  • Ekiti ADC stakeholders demand deputy governor slot for Ado-Ekiti

    Ekiti ADC stakeholders demand deputy governor slot for Ado-Ekiti

    Stakeholders of African Democratic Congress (ADC) in Ekiti State have called on the party’s national and state leadership to zone the deputy governorship slot for the 2026 election to Ado-Ekiti.

    The stakeholders, comprising five local government chairmen from Ekiti Central Senatorial District, alongside some of their counterparts from Ekiti North, made the demand in a communiqué issued yesterday after their meeting.

    The Chairman of ADC in Ado Local Government,  Abdulahi Awolokun, said zoning the position to Ado-Ekiti would strengthen the party’s chances in the forthcoming governorship poll and promote a sense of belonging among party members in Ekiti Central Senatorial District.

    He said Ado-Ekiti remained the local government area with the highest voting strength in the state and had historically played a decisive role in determining electoral outcomes.

    Awolokun said zoning the deputy governorship slot to Ado, particularly to a candidate with strong grassroots support and unalloyed loyalty to the party, would galvanise support and enhance ADC’s prospects in the 2026 governorship race.

    The ADC chieftain said since the party’s governorship candidate emerged from Ekiti South Senatorial District, fairness and political balance demanded that the deputy governorship slot be ceded to Ekiti Central, with Ado-Ekiti specifically favoured.

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    He hinged their position on the voting strength of Ado-Ekiti Local Government Area and the performance of Adegbite, who recorded significant votes during the party’s primary election in the area.

    “It is a fact that the people of Ado-Ekiti are solidly behind Adegbite. If selected as running mate, he will add immense value to the candidacy of Dare Bejide in the 2026 governorship election”, he added.

    Former member of Ekiti State House of Assembly, Musa Arogundade, described the demand as justifiable and politically strategic, saying zoning the deputy governorship slot to Ado-Ekiti would strengthen the party’s internal cohesion.

    He noted that Ado-Ekiti had consistently delivered the highest number of votes in governorship poll in the state, stressing that no serious political party could afford to overlook such a critical electoral bloc.

    The ADC said beyond its voting strength, Ado-Ekiti was adequately endowed with qualified, experienced and capable hands, who possesed the political depth, administrative prowess as well as grassroots connection required to support effective governance.

  • ‘ADC yet to decide method of picking presidential candidate’

    ‘ADC yet to decide method of picking presidential candidate’

    The African Democratic Congress (ADC) may opt for a competitive primary for the choice of its presidential candidate for next year’s election, if consensus fails, it was learnt yesterday.

    A top party source said the choice of a standard bearer has polarised the coalition party into two camps revolving around former Vice President Atiku Abubakar and Peter Obi, a former Anambra State governor who defected to the party from Labour Party (LP) last week.

    Atiku had pulled out his group from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and adopted ADC as platform for the purpose of realising his long standing ambition.

    However, Obi’s supporters have started mounting intense pressure on the party leadership to persuade Atiku to step down so that he can become the consensus candidate.

    Atiku’s camp, which currently dominates the party structure, has resisted the pressure, the source said.

    In 2023, when Obi was LP presidential candidate, he was picked through consensus without going through the hurdle of a n elective primary.

    But Atiku had always insisted on primary, even if he was the only aspirant.

    READ ALSO; Tears, tributes at Anthony Joshua’s friends’ funeral prayer in London

    On what informed the defection of Obi, a source, who pleaded for anonymity said the ADC remained the only platform that can be used to confront the ruling APC.

    The source said: “The Igbo intelligential are of the belief that they would persuade Atiku to step down and allow Obi to fly the ADC ticket.

    “They have looked at the available parties. They don’t want to gamble with the LP as they did in 2023. The PDP is weak and there is no time for experiment in 2027.

    “They are of the opinion that Obi’s candidacy will shore up the chances of the opposition coalition. That informed the official declaration of the former Anambra governor.”

    But a source within the Atiku camp ruled out the possibility of stepping down from the presidential race.

    The source said: “Atiku has welcomed Obi into the party. We are ready for ADC presidential primary. Nobody should be afraid of submitting to rules of the game for competition.”

  • Obi’s ADC defection unlikely to shift 2027 politics — Don

    Obi’s ADC defection unlikely to shift 2027 politics — Don

    Prof Jonah Onuoha says Mr Peter Obi’s defection to the African Democratic Party (ADC) may not change the political narrative ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    Onuoha, a lecturer at the Department of Political Science, University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN), spoke in Nsukka on Friday during an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    He was reacting to Obi’s decision to dump the Labour Party and formally join the ADC on Dec. 31, 2025.

    The political scientist said Obi’s 2023 electoral surge, especially in the South-East, where LP won several seats, was unlikely to be repeated in 2027.

    Read Also: Obidient movement will follow Obi to ADC – National coordinator 

    According to him, the Obidient movement that drove the 2023 surprise victories has weakened and would be difficult to revive before the next elections.

    “I don’t see Obi’s defection to ADC changing the narrative of electoral victories in the South-East or nationally in 2027.

  • ADC faults NNPC debt write-off

    ADC faults NNPC debt write-off

    The African Democratic Congress (ADC) has expressed concern over President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s approval of the cancellation of legacy debts owed by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd) to the Federation Account, warning that the decision raises serious constitutional and fiscal questions with implications for states and local governments.

    In a statement on Saturday by its National Publicity Secretary, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, the party said official documents presented to the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) indicate that approximately $1.42 billion and ₦5.57 trillion in legacy obligations accumulated up to December 31, 2024, were removed from the Federation Account following a reconciliation exercise with sector regulators.

    The debts, the party noted reportedly arose from production sharing contracts, domestic supply obligations, royalty receivables, and other outstanding balances.

    It noted with concern that about 96 percent of the dollar-denominated liabilities and 88 percent of the naira-denominated balances were written off through executive approval, without recourse to legislative authorisation.

    According to the party, this approach raises questions about compliance with Section 162 of the 1999 Constitution, which governs the operation of the Federation Account and the distribution of revenues among the three tiers of government.

    Read Also: Why ADC should not be trusted

    The party argued that while reconciliation of accounts is an important administrative process, it should not result in actions that effectively reduce revenues due to States and local governments without clear constitutional or parliamentary backing.

    It maintained that revenues accruing to the Federation Account are held in trust for all tiers of government and should not be altered solely by executive directive.

    The ADC further expressed disappointment at what it described as the absence of robust oversight from the National Assembly on an issue of such fiscal and constitutional significance, urging lawmakers to exercise their responsibility to safeguard due process and intergovernmental equity.

    Reaffirming its commitment to constitutionalism and fiscal transparency, the party called for greater clarity on the legal basis for the debt cancellation and urged all arms of government to act strictly within the bounds of the Constitution in managing natural resources.

  • Imprisoned by ambition: Peter Obi’s reckless misreading of politics and power

    Imprisoned by ambition: Peter Obi’s reckless misreading of politics and power

    By Sunday Dare 

    If the recent decamping of Peter Obi from the Labour Party to the African Democratic Congress was intended to detonate like a political bombshell, it failed spectacularly. What arrived instead was a dull thud—unremarkable, unsurprising, and terminally familiar. Nothing more. Nothing less. The script had been written long ago, recycled endlessly, and now—ironically—with this latest move, even that script has run out. All smoke. No fire. With his entry into the ADC, the plot does not evolve; it simply ends.

    Mr. Obi used the occasion not for clarity or restraint, but to fling predictable broadsides against a man who dwarfs him in political reach, institutional mastery, and historical consequence—Bola Ahmed Tinubu. This is a President who does not govern by tirade, who does not rely on subterfuge, and who does not court cheap populism as a substitute for policy. Mr. Obi would have been better served by silence than by yet another performance dressed up as conviction.

    What followed was entirely in character. Mr. Obi once again chose provocation over substance—an incendiary display that substitutes indignation for understanding and accusation for evidence. This is not courage; it is habit. It reflects a deeper pathology in Nigeria’s political discourse: performative outrage, permanent campaigning, and the restless hunt for relevance. Mr. Obi has made a career of all three.

    His political trajectory tells the fuller story. From APGA to PDP, from Labour to ADC, Mr. Obi has drifted across parties with the ease of a man unburdened by ideology or loyalty. Political platforms, for him, are conveniences—vehicles to be boarded and abandoned at will. Causes are temporary. Commitments are elastic. There is no enduring belief system anchoring these movements, only ambition in search of the next available ladder.

    This inconsistency was evident even in office. As governor, Mr. Obi perfected a style long on moral posturing and short on durable institutional legacy. He spoke the language of prudence, but left behind little that could withstand rigorous scrutiny. His public persona has always leaned on assertion rather than proof, repetition rather than record. That is not reform; it is rhetorical minimalism masquerading as depth.

    On national issues, the shallowness becomes even more pronounced. Mr. Obi’s commentary on macroeconomic management, federal structure, security, and public finance routinely betrays a thin grasp of complexity. Hard problems are flattened into slogans; structural constraints are moralized into personal failings. This is not analysis—it is sophistry. Noise without knowledge. Certainty without comprehension.

    The 2023 elections exposed these weaknesses brutally. Buoyed by an emotionally charged but politically unserious following, Mr. Obi misread the national climate entirely. He mistook social-media enthusiasm for nationwide structure, online applause for polling-unit presence, and moral grandstanding for electoral arithmetic. Politics, however, is not a vibes-based exercise. It is built on organization, coalition, discipline, and data.

    That absence of seriousness was laid bare in court. In a withering moment, the Supreme Court of Nigeria admonished Mr. Obi for failing to even demonstrate a clear understanding of his own vote tally, while simultaneously disputing the official figures released by Independent National Electoral Commission. To challenge an election without facts, without numbers, without preparation, is not principled opposition; it is political irresponsibility elevated to litigation.

    Underlying all this is an unmistakable deification of self. Mr. Obi’s rush to the presidency was not grounded in democratic credentials of sufficient weight, nor in a coalition patiently built across Nigeria’s diverse political terrain. It was propelled by an inflated sense of personal virtue—the dangerous illusion that moral self-regard alone qualifies one to govern a complex federation. History is unkind to such delusions.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Peter Obi dumps Labour Party for ADC

    Nigeria does not need saints auditioning for office. It needs leaders with gravitas, institutional memory, and a disciplined understanding of power—how it is built, negotiated, and responsibly exercised. These qualities are conspicuously absent from Mr. Obi’s record.

    If a New Nigeria is indeed possible, it will not be erected on insinuation, half-knowledge, and rhetorical arson. It will be built on competence, respect for institutions, and the discipline to distinguish facts from theatrics. Sadly, these remain in short supply in Mr. Obi’s latest outing.

    By contrast, President Tinubu offers focused leadership, measurable outcomes, and time-tested performance forged over decades of political engagement and executive responsibility. Governance is proceeding with intent, not noise.

    In that context, the political horizon is no longer murky. 2027 just got clearer. See you all in 2031.

  • Why ADC should not be trusted

    Why ADC should not be trusted

    By Allison Abanum

    The African Democratic Congress (ADC) increasingly looks less like a political party with a future and more like a loose gathering of yesterday’s politicians—retired, angry, bitter, expired, and visibly frustrated by their repeated rejection at the polls. It is hard to identify any clear vision, mission, or new idea driving the party. What stands out instead is desperation: a frantic search for power, not to serve Nigerians, but to satisfy long-standing personal ambitions and political greed.

    Take Atiku Abubakar as a central symbol of this exhaustion. Well into his late years and having contested the presidency multiple times, his political playbook appears unchanged. No fresh strategy. No bold new ideas. Just the same recycled promises, repackaged for each election cycle. Nigeria has moved on, but Atiku’s politics seem stuck in the past.

    The ADC’s conduct further exposes its emptiness. With the next general election fast approaching, the party has been reportedly busy begging Peter Obi to join them. This alone signals weakness. A party with confidence in its ideology and leadership would not be scrambling for borrowed credibility so close to an election. It would be building structures, inspiring citizens, and presenting a coherent alternative. ADC is doing none of these.

    Leadership choices also raise serious questions. A party that parades figures well into their seventies as its top leadership cannot convincingly claim to represent renewal or the future. Recycling the same old political faces—many of whom Nigerians already associate with years of stagnation—shows a deep disregard for the country’s youthful population and their aspirations.

    Including controversial figures like Nasir El-Rufai in its leadership mix only adds to the confusion. Rather than signalling strength, it reinforces the image of a party that is ideologically empty, clinging to any familiar name it can find. Appointing someone like Rauf Aregbesola as party secretary further underlines how disconnected ADC appears from public sentiment. It feels less like strategic leadership and more like an insult to Nigerians who are demanding competence, clarity, and accountability.

    READ ALSO; Guru Maharaj Ji predicts Tinubu, APC’s victory in 2027

    In sharp contrast stands the All Progressives Congress (APC). President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is not loved because he is perfect, but because he is decisive. He takes tough, often unpopular decisions—decisions many politicians fear—but necessary ones nonetheless. Tinubu is not managing Nigeria as a career politician obsessed with optics; he is confronting national challenges as a leader focused on long-term stability and reform.

    Leadership is not about telling people what they want to hear. It is about doing what must be done. While ADC looks backwards, APC—under Tinubu—pushes forward, making hard choices to reposition the country, even when the cost is political comfort.

    Nigeria does not need another gathering of angry, expired politicians recycling old ambitions. It needs leadership, courage, and direction. On that score, ADC offers little more than noise, while APC continues to define itself by action.

    Even the acronym ADC – borrowing a leaf from the APC- shows its lack of vision and originality. The old African saying that when one cries, one must see, encompasses the need for Nigerians to see beyond the confused, arm-twisting tactics of ADC and see the rich future the APC is taking the country to.

    The ADC is often portrayed as a platform that thrives more on grievance than on ideas. Rather than presenting clear policies, solutions, or a compelling vision for the country, its public conversation is dominated by negativity—anger at opponents, blame for the past, and endless complaints about who failed Nigeria and who should be removed next. What is striking is that the party appears louder in what it opposes than in what it actually proposes.

    Many of the figures around the ADC were central voices in the campaign to remove Goodluck Jonathan from office. At the time, they painted him as unfit to lead and rallied public sentiment against his administration. Today, however, those same actors are seen seeking Jonathan’s goodwill and support, a move that exposes a deep inconsistency and a politics driven more by convenience than conviction.

    Within the ADC, there is also a glaring credibility vacuum. There is no single figure who commands broad public trust based on integrity, performance, or fresh ideas. The leaders themselves seem aware of this weakness, which explains the desperation to court Peter Obi. Rather than building their own identity, ideology, and grassroots strength, they appear eager to hide under Obi’s popularity—hoping his reputation can serve as a canopy to mask their lack of substance.

    In the end, the ADC comes across not as a movement powered by vision and renewal, but as a gathering of political actors united mainly by bitterness, recycled ambitions, and the fear of irrelevance—talking endlessly about negativity because they have little else to offer.

    The ADC can be described as a group that appears unwilling to wish Nigeria well, a political camp that seems more comfortable with perpetual pessimism than honest national progress. They rarely, if ever, acknowledge reforms or positive steps taken by the current administration. Instead of engaging constructively, they choose selective blindness—ignoring policies, initiatives, and difficult but necessary decisions aimed at stabilizing the country.

    President Tinubu’s courage to take politically risky reforms, his determination to confront long-standing insecurity, and his willingness to make tough calls in the interest of long-term national recovery are met not with fair critique but with outright silence or dismissal. To the ADC, nothing is ever improving, nothing is ever commendable, and no effort is ever worthy of recognition.

    Their politics thrives on doom-saying. Every development is framed as failure, every reform as disaster, and every challenge as proof that Nigeria is beyond repair. Rather than offering alternative ideas, practical solutions, or balanced criticism, they recycle negativity as a strategy. In doing so, they project an image of a party more invested in seeing Nigeria struggle—so they can say “we told you so”—than in seeing the nation succeed.

    Such an approach does not inspire hope, unity, or progress. It reflects a mindset that feeds on despair, not patriotism, and opposition for its own sake, not for the good of Nigeria.

    Let it also be stated plainly: Peter Obi joining the ADC will make absolutely no difference whatsoever. Nigerians are not fools. They know who the ADC people are—career political failures that have moved from party to party, election to election, without ideas, integrity, or credibility. Slapping Peter Obi’s name on their decayed structure will not suddenly give them relevance. You cannot perfume political rot and expect the stench to disappear.

    This is also the time to tell Peter Obi the hard truth his supporters are too emotional to say: he should not contest the 2027 presidential election. Nigerian politics is not Twitter politics. It is about power balance, structure, and regional agreement. The North will never allow another southerner to take over immediately after Tinubu’s four years, because that would mean potentially eight uninterrupted years of southern presidency. That door is firmly shut.

    Running in 2027 under these realities will not make Peter Obi a hero; it will make him a political instrument for confused coalitions and desperate politicians looking for cover. It will only weaken the opposition further and make victory easier for those who actually understand the political terrain. Wisdom is knowing when the battle is unwinnable—and walking away before your political capital is wasted on an already dead arrangement.

    The ADC appears to have no real political structure or strategy for a few clear, interconnected reasons:

    It was not built as a grassroots party

    ADC was never patiently constructed from the ward–local government–state level upward. Strong parties in Nigeria grow structures over time: loyal ward executives, polling-unit agents, youth and women wings, funding pipelines, and dispute-resolution mechanisms. ADC skipped this hard work and instead operates like a meeting point for elite politicians, not a mass party.

     It is personality-driven, not institution-driven

    Rather than ideas and ideology, ADC revolves around who is angry with the ruling party at any given time. When a party depends on personalities instead of institutions, it collapses once those personalities lose relevance or disagree among themselves. That is why ADC keeps looking for a “saviour” instead of producing leaders internally.

    No clear ideology or policy direction

    ADC does not stand for anything concrete—no consistent economic philosophy, no social agenda, no governance blueprint. Without ideology, you cannot design a strategy. All that remains is reactionary politics: attacking whoever is in power and hoping public anger does the rest.

    Electoral opportunism instead of long-term planning

    Serious parties plan the election cycle years. ADC wakes up close to elections and starts shopping for popular candidates instead of grooming them. Begging Peter Obi to join them late in the game exposes the absence of succession planning and political foresight.

    Internal contradictions and credibility problems

    Many of its loudest voices once supported policies and leaders they now condemn. That inconsistency makes it impossible to sell a coherent message to Nigerians. Strategy requires trust; ADC lacks it—even among its own members.

    No discipline or command structureA functional party has hierarchy and discipline. ADC members speak anyhow, attack one another, and contradict party positions publicly. Without internal order, external strategy is impossible.

     Power-seeking, not nation-building

    At its core, ADC behaves like a coalition of politicians desperate to remain relevant, not a movement committed to solving Nigeria’s problems. When power is the goal, but vision is absent, structure and strategy become afterthoughts.

    ADC has no political structure or strategy because it was never designed to be a serious political institution. It is a convenient platform for frustrated politicians, held together by negativity, bitterness and ambition—not by ideas, discipline, or grassroots strength.

     • Allison Abanum writes from Orogun, Ibadan, Oyo State.

  • JUST IN: Peter Obi dumps Labour Party for ADC

    JUST IN: Peter Obi dumps Labour Party for ADC

    Former presidential candidate, Peter Obi, has announced his decision to leave the Labour Party and align with the African Democratic Congress (ADC), describing the move as part of his broader commitment to Nigeria’s socio-economic transformation.

    In a statement he issued on Wednesday, Obi said Nigeria is at a critical point in its history and requires clear purpose, unity and decisive action to address its challenges. 

    He noted that moments of national difficulty often demand fresh approaches and renewed resolve in order to secure a better future.

    According to him, Nigeria must recommit itself to true democratic values rooted in self-determination, equality and national cohesion. 

    He stressed that governance should reflect the will of the people and work in the collective interest of citizens.

    Obi reaffirmed his commitment to the defence and strengthening of Nigeria’s democratic system, emphasising the importance of credible, transparent and fair elections. 

    He called for comprehensive reforms of the electoral process, including strict adherence to electoral laws, improved transparency and institutional efficiency, noting that electoral integrity remains central to responsive and accountable governance.

    He warned that Nigeria, given its size, population and importance to Africa and the global economy, cannot afford democratic setbacks, adding that protecting democracy is essential ahead of future elections.

    Despite the challenges, Obi said he remains optimistic about Nigeria’s future, citing the country’s vast human and natural resources. 

    He reiterated his belief that a functional, inclusive and productive Nigeria is achievable with the right leadership, unity and policy direction.

    He explained that his political journey has been shaped by years of learning, leadership training and exposure to global best practices in governance and nation-building. 

    Drawing lessons from countries that have successfully achieved unity and development, Obi said Nigeria can also chart a new path towards stability and growth.

    Obi concluded by reaffirming his commitment to working with like-minded Nigerians within the ADC to pursue national unity, effective leadership and sustainable development for the benefit of all citizens.

  • 2027: Oyo governorship aspirant Aborishade dumps PDP for ADC

    2027: Oyo governorship aspirant Aborishade dumps PDP for ADC

    Human rights lawyer and 2027 Peoples Democratic Party governorship aspirant in Oyo state, Niyi Aborishade, has resigned from the PDP and joined the African Democratic Congress.

    Aborishade said his decision was informed by the deepening crisis within the PDP, which, according to him, raises concerns that the party may be unable to field a credible candidate in the next election.

    Speaking with journalists in Ibadan, he said persistent internal conflicts in the PDP made it impossible for him to continue, noting that the situation posed a threat to internal democracy within the party.

    He said, “In as much as PDP is not able to resolve its internal crisis, in as much as protagonist in PDP refuses to listen to any voice of reason, we are moving forward, we are moving to ADC.

    Read Also: Supreme Court orders resumption of Aborishade, others’ trial

    “ADC is prepared to give us opportunity to practice democracy, fairness, and equity. I’m moving with all my supporters from all the 33 local governments. Most of them are leaders of PDP, but they are moving with us.

    “We will make the party popular. When you see the caliber of people that have joined ADC, you will know ADC will become a formidable party in Nigeria.

    “The correct party now that is popular is ADC. And that’s where I belong. I will always work with the progressives. I will always work for the interests of justice and the best interests of Nigeria.

    In his remark, ADC chairman in Oyo State, Alhaji Yinka Olona said PDP is already dead and currently at the grave yard, and waiting for final burial, adding that the only viable opposition that will provide credible alternative is ADC.