Tag: All Progressives Congress (APC)

  • Ojelabi calls for unity in Badagry Division

    Ojelabi calls for unity in Badagry Division

    The Chairman All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State, Cornelius Oyefolu Ojelabi, has urged the people of Badagry Division to unite and work for development.

    He assured the people that the grassroots competition—Ojelabi Football Competition, will be a regular programme.

    The tournament, which is aimed at identifying and rewarding outstanding talents and engender peace within the Badagry Division of Lagos State, is sponsored by Ojelabi.

    The first edition of the competition tagged: ‘Ojelabi Football Competition Badagry Division’ featured 74 teams from 10 Local Government Areas and Local Council Development Areas within Badagry division. 

    The tourney came to an end last Saturday, as Sporting Hotspurs of Ajeromi-Ifelodun emerged champions after a 2-0 victory over LASU Blazers of Ojo in the final match held at the Lagos State University playing field on Saturday.

    After goalless first half, Sporting Hotspurs scored a two brilliant second half goals to emerge winner and went home with the trophy and a cash award of one million naira. LASU Blazers were rewarded with N750, 000 for winning silver medal.

    In the losers’ final, Abiodun Kings of Ato-Awori defeated New Era of Badagry by 1-0 to claim bronze medal and a sum of N500, 000. 

    Speaking at the Closing Ceremony/Grand finale, Ojelabi said the competition is an opportunity to contribute to the growth and development of football in the Division.

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    “The major objectives of initiating and organising this competition were to promote inter-ethnic unity and harmony, identify and reward outstanding talents, and engender peace within the Badagry Division of Lagos State which has produced several national stars like Sunday Olise, Emmanuel Amunike, etc.,” Ojelabi said.

    He added: “It is particularly gratifying to note that since the opening ceremony on Saturday, 15th November 2025, at LASUED, no incidence of violence or disruption was recorded. This is particularly encouraging when you remember that altogether many teams from the LGAs and LCDAs within the Division took part in the competition.

    I am also very happy that 86 matches have been played up to the semi-final stage without any formal protest received.

     “I am equally grateful to the members of the LOC, who have not disappointed us but have proven their experience in Sports Administration. I also commend all the teams, players, coaches, the media, security,  medical personnel, and supporters/fans of all the various teams for adding color to the competition without any violence.”

    The highlights of closing ceremony/grand finale include awards for the Most Valuable Player, Highest Goals Scorer, Best Goalkeeper, Best Behave Team among others.

    It is understood that many scouts and coaches of big clubs watched many of the matches to pick outstanding players.

    Thrilled with the success of the first edition and his resolve to make a meaningful impact in the youths in Lagos State, Honourable Ojelabi has announced that the competition which is being organised within Badagry division will be expanded to cover all councils and LCDAs within Lagos West Senatorial District starting from the next edition.

    He made a promise of N20 million to the Local Organising Committee (LOC) for the organisation of the next edition of the competition.

    The chairman also revealed that a mini-stadium will be erected at Isasi for the benefit of the people of Badagry division.

    In his remarks, the chairman of the LOC, Mr Deji Williams commended Hon Ojelabi for sponsoring the tournament.

    He presented a proposal for a SPORTS ACADEMY to be named OJELABI SPORTS ACADEMY(OSA). The academy, according to him, is to ensure that all discovered talents are brought together under this platform and to involve five other sports aside football namely Athletics, Basketball, Volleyball, Table Tennis and Tennis.

    “Let me emphasise that what I submit today is a paperwork expecting the perusal and consideration for approval for a final BLUEPRINT to be submitted,” Mr Williams stated.

    Dignitaries at the final match on Saturday include Royal fathers, Hon. Commissioner for Tertiary Education Lagos State, Tolani Sule, Members of Lagos State House of Assembly, Executive Chairmen of Local Government and LCDAs in Badagry, respected political leaders, the representatives of Vice Chancellors of LASU and LASUED, erudite Academics, Community/Religious Leaders, members of the MOC, LOC, Sport Administration and member of the press.

  • How ideological vacuum fosters unchecked power

    How ideological vacuum fosters unchecked power

    • By Samuel Akpobome Orovwuje

    Hans J. Morgenthau warned in Politics Among Nations (1948) that politics is a struggle for power guided by interest. Power, he argued, does not restrain itself; it must be limited by ideas, institutions, and moral purpose. Decades later, Randall G. Holcombe, writing on politics as exchange in Political Capitalism: How Economic and Political Power Is Made and Maintained (2018), described a system where political loyalty is traded for access, protection, and advantage. When ideas lose value, exchange replaces conviction.

    Together, these insights help explain Nigeria’s present condition. Power is expanding not because it is defended by clear beliefs, but because the political marketplace has thinned out. Ideas no longer compete; interests do. And where ideas retreat, power advances.

    This helps make sense of the recent wave of governors defecting to the All Progressives Congress (APC). These moves are rarely explained in terms of policy disagreement or belief. They are framed instead around alignment and national interest. In practice, they reflect calculation in a system where federal power is concentrated and opposition looks uncertain. Party labels become temporary; access becomes permanent.

    Sadly, unchecked power thrives where opposition is weak. The APC’s growing dominance is less about persuasion than gravity. Control of federal power draws actors inward. In such a climate, survival replaces belief, and silence becomes strategy. The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has struggled to counter this pull. Internal disputes, leadership uncertainty, and a lack of clear direction have weakened its standing. Indecision sends a signal: that loyalty is optional and the future unclear. When a party cannot say firmly what it stands for or where it is going, it loses the authority to ask members to stay and fight.

    Smaller parties and coalition efforts were expected to widen choice, but many have repeated the same mistake. The African Democratic Congress (ADC), often cited in coalition talks, illustrates the limits of alliances without shared purpose. Meetings and announcements create excitement, but without an agreed programme, leadership structure, and discipline, such coalitions remain fragile. They gather ambition, not agreement. Politics then becomes exchange in Holcombe’s sense: temporary arrangements driven by advantage rather than belief. These arrangements rarely last long enough to challenge entrenched power.

    The implications for the 2027 general elections are serious and immediate. First, the field of choice is narrowing. As defections continue and opposition weakens, voters risk facing elections with fewer real alternatives. Elections may still be competitive in form, but thin in substance. When parties sound alike and stand for little, voting becomes a ritual rather than a decision.

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    Second, incumbency advantage will deepen. With power concentrated and opposition fragmented, the ruling party’s reach into institutions, narratives, and resources will expand. This does not require overt abuse; imbalance alone shapes outcomes. Where competition is weak, accountability fades.

    Third, voter confidence is at risk. Nigerians have shown resilience and commitment to the ballot, even under difficult conditions. But confidence depends on belief that choices matter. When mandates are transferred through defections and coalitions dissolve before taking shape, citizens begin to feel side-lined. Turnout and trust suffer when politics appears closed.

    Fourth, politics will tilt further toward personalities and regions rather than programmes. Without ideology, campaigns rely on identity, fear, and short-term promises. This may mobilize support temporarily, but it weakens national cohesion and policy debate. Elections become louder, not clearer.

    Finally, institutions will feel the pressure. A weak opposition and dominant executive environment discourage robust legislative oversight and independent action. Even well-meaning officeholders become cautious when the cost of dissent is isolation. None of this is inevitable. But time matters. Rebuilding ideas takes longer than building coalitions of convenience. If parties wait until election season to define themselves, the damage will already be done.

    For 2027 to strengthen Nigeria’s democracy rather than hollow it out, several shifts are necessary. Defection must carry political cost, not reward. Opposition parties must settle disputes early and speak with clarity. Coalitions must be built around programmes and shared commitments, not announcements. And citizens must demand positions, not just promises.

    Morgenthau reminds us that power seeks expansion. Holcombe reminds us that politics without ideas becomes exchange for advantage. Nigeria today reflects both warnings. Democracy survives not because power exists, but because it is challenged. It thrives when ideas compete and citizens choose between real alternatives. If the political marketplace remains empty, power will continue to grow unchecked—and elections will decide offices, not direction.

     In the final analysis, the question before Nigeria as 2027 approaches is simple: will ideas return to politics, or will access continue to replace belief? The answer will shape not just the next election, but the character of the republic itself.

    •Orovwuje is public affairs analyst.

  • Dateline 2027: Anatomy of an unworkable coalition

    Dateline 2027: Anatomy of an unworkable coalition

    Lagos State chapter of All Progressives Congress (APC) has said it has observed with keen interest, the renewed theatrics in opposition circles, particularly the much-advertised ‘coalition talks’ being peddled as a grand strategy ahead of 2027 general election.

    The party in a statement in Ogba by its spokesman, Seye Oladejo, said: ‘’Beneath the noise and contrived optimism, however, lies a fragile contraption wobbling under the weight of personal ambitions, mutual distrust and irreconcilable contradictions.

    ‘’What is being marketed as a coalition is, in reality, a congregation of serial presidential aspirants, each unwilling to subordinate ego to collective purpose. From the outset, this assemblage has lacked ideological glue, moral cohesion, or a shared vision for Nigeria-beyond a desperate fixation on power. Coalitions thrive on compromise; this one suffocates under entitlement.

    ‘’Recent public posturing has further exposed the fault lines. Pre-conditions, ultimatums and thinly veiled threats have replaced dialogue and consensus. When leading figures openly demand guaranteed presidential or vice-presidential tickets before “alignment,” it becomes clear that this is not a partnership, but a transactional bargain destined to collapse at first contact with reality.

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    ‘’Indeed, the latest development from the opposition stable is both revealing and instructive. We now hear appeals to supporters and sympathisers of various aspirants to refrain from attacking one another while simultaneously promoting their respective interests. This is a classic case of a house divided against itself-where internal hostility has become so intense that public pleas for restraint are issued even before any meaningful structure is formed. A coalition that must beg its own followers for peace has already conceded defeat to its internal chaos.

    ‘’The presence of multiple power centres within the same tent-each convinced of its own inevitability-renders the project unsustainable. History is unkind to coalitions built on convenience rather than conviction, on arithmetic rather than ideology. Nigeria has seen this movie before, and the ending is always the same: fragmentation, recrimination and implosion.

    ‘’In contrast, the APC remains a tested platform with a proven capacity to manage diversity, resolve internal differences through established democratic processes, and present a coherent governance agenda. While the opposition rehearses discord and manufactures outrage, the APC is focused on governance, reforms and consolidating the gains of the Renewed Hope Agenda under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    ‘’Let it be said clearly: 2027 will not be decided by press conferences, social media theatrics, or hastily assembled alliances of convenience. Nigerians will choose stability over chaos, performance over propaganda, and a party with a clear sense of direction over a motley crew united only by fear of political irrelevance.

    ‘’As the countdown to 2027 continues, the question before the opposition is no longer whether to form a coalition, but whether such a coalition can survive its own contradictions. The signs are unmistakable: what looms is not a formidable alternative, but an impending implosion.’’

  • Osun ALGON chair defends continued stay of reinstated LG executives

    Osun ALGON chair defends continued stay of reinstated LG executives

    The Chairman of the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria (ALGON) in Osun State, Hon. Abiodun Idowu of the All Progressives Congress (APC), has explained why reinstated local government council executives remain in office despite the statutory expiration of their tenure in October 2025.

    Speaking with The Nation on Sunday, Idowu insisted that their continued occupancy of office is supported by law and ongoing legal proceedings at the Federal High Court in Osogbo, where they have sought judicial clarification on the status and duration of their tenure.

    The APC council executives were elected in October 2022 but were later removed following a Federal High Court ruling.

    Governor Ademola Adeleke subsequently sacked them through an Executive Order in November, citing the court’s verdict.

    However, the Court of Appeal reportedly reinstated the executives on February 10, 2025, after which they resumed control of the councils. The appellate court’s decision, Idowu noted, has not been challenged at the Supreme Court.

    He explained that although their tenure would ordinarily expire in October 2025, it was interrupted for more than two years by the governor’s action, and that the reinstatement effectively reset the tenure timeline.

    According to Idowu, who also serves as Chairman of Ifedayo Local Government Council, the executives are not seeking tenure extension but a legal determination of when their term should properly end.

    “We are currently in court. We are not asking for tenure elongation; we have been correcting that impression. What we want is tenure determination. We are not begging for any extension but for the court to determine whether our tenure ends in October or not, since we effectively resumed office on February 10, 2025,” he said.

    “Adeleke used executive order to sack us from office, instead of waiting for us to exhaust all legal means to determine the matter.”

    He averred that, “When he (Adeleke) was elected as the governor but later sacked by the Tribunal, was he forcefully removed from office? He was given the free hands to exhaust all the legal means till the Supreme Court. But he denied us that privilege.”

    Responding to a question about a pending court matter, he said, “Our case is still in court to determine our tenure, the matter is coming up on February 3rd 2026. If the matter went otherwise, we are still going to exhaust all our legal avenues to the Supreme Court.”

  • Community rallies support for party

    Community rallies support for party

    Political leaders and stakeholders of Obinagu, Udi Local Government of Enugu State, have begun mobilisation of residents for All Progressives Congress (APC) e-registration.

    Commissioner for Chieftaincy Affairs and Rural Development, Charles Egumgbe, said the goal was to ensure that Obinagu keyed fully into the development vision of the APC government in the state.

    Egumgbe said Governor Peter Mbah’s decision to align the state with the federal leadership would make development faster at the grassroots.

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    He lauded the leadership of President Bola Tinubu, citing progress in addressing economic, security and infrastructure challenges.

    The commissioner stressed that it was the responsibility of community leaders to mobilise residents to register as APC members and support the shared vision of the state and federal governments.

    Also,  past Chairman of Udi, Nze Okoh, described the council as a formidable political bloc whose poll results often make a difference in the state.

    He said the political awareness of the people was reflected in the pace of registrations already recorded in Obinagu.

    Okoh said registration began before commencement of the exercise, following a unified meeting of leaders from different political backgrounds, who agreed to build a strong APC structure in the community.

    Special Adviser to the governor on Power, Joe Aneke, said the impressive turnout demonstrated that Obinagu was solidly behind APC.

    He praised the inclusive leadership approach of Tinubu, adding that it encouraged many to identify with APC.

    Aneke also acknowledged the role of Mbah in creating an environment conducive to political mobilisation. 

    Chairman of Udi council, Hyginus Agu, reaffirmed the ward’s commitment to the APC, saying over 600 residents had already been registered.

    He emphasised that formal registration was essential for members to benefit from party and government programmes, urging participants to take the message to their villages.

    Agu noted that security had improved in Udi, attributing this to the responsiveness of federal and state governments to concerns of the people.

    State Coordinator of the  E-registration, Flavour Eze, said the visit to Obinagu followed a review of data, which showed the community had capacity to do even better.

    He encouraged leaders to intensify mobilisation to surpass current figures.

  • Osun APC concludes e-registration training for LG supervisors 

    Osun APC concludes e-registration training for LG supervisors 

    The Osun state chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has concluded the e-registration trainingfor the local government supervisors of the programme drawn from all the council areas of the state ahead of the registration exercise directed by the national secretariat. 

    The APC Director of Media, Chief Kola Olabisi, while speaking with The Nation, disclosed that the training was led by the party’s Organising Secretary, Mr. Akeem Bello, who took place at the state secretariat of the party. 

    He explained, “The e-registration is the migration of the APC membership register from analog to digital and that it involves registering of members of the party on a portal in view of responding to the demands of modern politics, data integrity and credible internal democracy.

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    “Bello stated further that all the members of the party and those who are wishing to join are all eligible to partake in the exercise. He disclosed that the full training involving all the supervisors and agents would start on Monday.”

    He continued “Bello also disclosed that the supervisors are to onboard and supervise all the agents in their local government while the agents are to register the members in their wards.

    In his words: “The Senatorial administrator is to onboard and supervise the supervisor under their Senatorial District.

    “Onboarding means registering the supervisors and agents on the portal and creating username and password for them to enable them gain access to certain areas on the portal”, he explained.

    Other members of the training team are: Dr. Babatunde Olawale who is the administrator for Osun Central Senatorial District; Mr. Olatunde Owojori, the administrator for Osun East Senatorial District and Mr. Bisi Ogunkale who is the administrator for Osun West Senatorial District.

    Bello explained further that the objective of the intervention of his team in the programme is to make it seamless in a way that would be beneficial to the party and its members.

    He enjoined all the members of the party to cooperate fully with the field agents who are responsible for registering members of the party. Party members are to come with their National Identification Number (NIN) and voters identification number (VIN) in order to get register on the portal by their ward agents as part of the ongoing efforts to institutionalise party membership records and strengthen grassroots mobilisation across Osun State.

  • Ona Ara constituents demand fair representation in Oyo

    Ona Ara constituents demand fair representation in Oyo

    Residents of Ona-Ara Federal Constituency in Oyo State have called  for intervention by the leadership of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in a long-standing issue of marginalization and unfair representation.

    The constituency, created in 1989, was promised equitable representation, with the seat alternating between Egbeda and Ona-Ara Local Governments every 8 years.

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     The constituents alleged that Ona-Ara has been denied its rightful turn for nearly 20 years, with the local government being overlooked in 2018 and 2023.

     The appeal, made by Honorable Ashimiu Afeez Adio, Aspirant for the 2027 election, enjoined the party leadership to ensure a free and fair primary and general election, prevent the imposition of undeserving candidates, and uphold fairness and justice in representation.

     The residents of Ona-Ara are seeking justice and equity, and their plea is a call to action for the APC leadership to demonstrate its commitment to Oyo State and its people.

  • APC youth wing holds maiden Christmas carol of nine lessons

    APC youth wing holds maiden Christmas carol of nine lessons

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) National Youth Wing has hosted its maiden Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols.

    The APC National Youth Leader, Dayo Israel, said the festival was conceived as a national gathering for all Nigerians, deliberately designed to transcend party affiliation, age and ideological divides.

    Held at the National Universities Commission Hall in Abuja, penultimate Friday, the service featured the Right Reverend (Dr) Henry Chukwudum Ndukuba, Archbishop, Metropolitan and Primate of the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), who was represented by Venerable Princewill Ireoba.

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     Ireoba commended Israel for his visionary leadership, praising the APC Youth Wing for its sustained empowerment initiatives and purpose-driven programmes that continue to make a positive impact on young Nigerians across the country.

    Anchored on the theme, “Peace on Earth, Progress in Our Land,” the festival drew rich biblical reflections from Luke 2:14 and Revelation 12:12, underscoring a renewed call for peace, hope and national transformation.

    The event was further enriched by soul-lifting ministrations from the Amazing Love Mass Choir and Orchestra, alongside the presence of eminent ministers of God. Members of the diplomatic corps, party leaders, key stakeholders, friends and well-wishers were also in attendance, making the festival a compelling testament to faith-inspired leadership, unity and progress for Nigeria.

  • How defections are reshaping  2027 electoral landscape

    How defections are reshaping  2027 electoral landscape

    A surge of defections from opposition parties is changing Nigeria’s political landscape, making the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) look stronger ahead of the next general election. However, economic troubles, voter frustration, and new northern alliances could still alter the outcome of the election. Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI reports.

    Last Tuesday, Nigeria’s wave of political defections peaked at the Rivers State Government House, Port Harcourt. In front of a packed audience, Governor Siminalayi Fubara announced he had “the full support” of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and could not stay in a party that “could not protect him”.

    After his speech, he ordered the flag of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) removed from the building. The crowd quickly began chanting “On your mandate we shall stand,” the main slogan of the All Progressives Congress (APC). This moment was more than just a defection; it was a public display of political realignment.

    This was just the latest and most dramatic example in a series of defections. Fubara is not alone. Earlier this year, Delta State Governor Sheriff Oborevwori and other PDP governors—Akwa Ibom’s Umo Eno, Enugu’s Peter Mbah, and Bayelsa’s Duoye Diri—also left the opposition for the ruling party.

    In the North, Taraba’s Agbu Kefas is already seen as an APC member, even though he has not been officially welcomed into the party. His formal entry, initially planned for November, was suspended due to national mourning over abducted schoolgirls. Officials now expect him to join the APC in early 2026. At the same time, Plateau’s Caleb Mutfwang is reportedly preparing to join, which would bring the APC’s total to 26 out of 36 governors.

    Even when governors are not joining the ruling party, they are still leaving the PDP. Last Tuesday, Osun’s Ademola Adeleke became the Accord Party’s candidate for the 2026 governorship election, after he joined the fold, saying his old party suffered from “internal decay”. What started as a few defections has now become a significant movement that has changed Nigeria’s political landscape.

    By December 2025, the APC controls 26 states, the PDP has six, and four smaller parties each control one state. Many observers see this as a clear advantage for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s re-election bid in 2027. However, issues such as economic hardship, regional concerns, and unpredictable voters make the outcome still uncertain.

    Carrot, stick & the calculating politician:

    Analysts and insiders say several factors are causing the wave of defections, with political survival often more important than ideology. In Nigeria’s changing political scene, these reasons can be grouped into four main categories.

    The lure of federal might: Nigeria’s highly centralised political system makes access to federal power a potent incentive. “Governors don’t want to be in opposition when crucial funding and development projects are being shared. It’s political survival,” says Chika Ibe, a public policy expert at the University of Abuja. Enugu’s Governor Peter Mbah framed his own defection as a move for “development, not politics,” emphasising the need to work more closely with President Tinubu.

    The reasoning is straightforward: in a system where federal funding and infrastructure decisions shape a governor’s legacy, joining the ruling party often seems necessary rather than optional.

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    Fear and coercion: However, many argue that attraction alone does not explain the scale of the defections. The Forum of State PDP Chairmen has accused the APC of orchestrating “undemocratic and desperate efforts to intimidate PDP leaders… into defecting.”

    Dr Naseer Kura Ja’afaru, a pro-democracy activist, is even more direct: “The ruling party is using its state apparatus and coercive powers, including bodies like the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and other agencies, to whip key opposition figures, particularly those considered threats, into submission.”

    Although these claims are disputed, they show that many people see politics as a struggle where power can both reward and punish. This belief helps explain the rush to defect.

    The PDP’s self-inflicted crisis: Yet the opposition’s collapse is not merely imposed from outside. The PDP has been weakened by years of internal warfare, most notably the bitter rift between former Vice President Atiku Abubakar and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister Nyesom Wike. “The damage inflicted on the PDP by the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, has made any attempt to resuscitate the party wishful thinking,” argues Ja’afaru. A top PDP official, speaking anonymously, lamented, “There’s no longer a sense of unity or purpose in the PDP. People are looking out for their own interests.”

    A haven for the vulnerable:

    For some defectors, the move to the APC is a hedge against accountability or electoral defeat. “Many of them joined the APC because of their liabilities for what they have not done well for their people. They are looking for a place of safety,” says Chief Chekwas Okorie, founding national chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA). Policy strategist Sam Amadi frames the shift as “the need for self-preservation,” noting that many governors “have no confidence in the electoral process.” In this environment, defection is more than a political strategy; it is a way for politicians to protect themselves. This trend changes the system and also shows its weaknesses.

    Conflicting visions of a one-party state:

    The large number of defections has sparked debate about the state of Nigeria’s democracy. Inside the APC, people are celebrating. Comrade Moshood Erubami, a party leader in Oyo State, sees the defections as proof that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope agenda is working. “It indicates that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope agenda is gaining ground… This is not necessarily to create a one-party state, but because the party they are joining has become so popular,” he says. He rejects concerns about a one-party state, saying that the presence of INEC-recognised parties makes this impossible.

    He is confident that the APC is on course for an easy victory in 2027.

    The opposition and civil society, however, sound the alarm. PDP National Publicity Secretary Ini Ememobong warns that “democracy is terribly threatened by acts of this kind,” accusing the APC of pushing toward a “one-party system” that he argues poses a profound threat to democracy.

    But seasoned observers like Chief Chekwas Okorie urge caution against interpreting the moment as a permanent structural shift. “Any keen observer of Nigerians’ political attitudes would recognise that this sort of thing happens every election cycle,” he says. In his view, the political pendulum is already preparing to swing again. “In the near future, perhaps early next year, there will be an exodus of especially northern politicians from the APC, the PDP, and other political parties to the ADC. That exodus would alter the balance of power.”

    History shows that Nigeria’s political landscape rarely follows a straight path.

    Incumbency not a magic wand:

    The main question is how these changes will affect voting in 2027. On paper, the APC’s advantage as the ruling party is strong. With control of 26 states so far, President Tinubu has access to most state government resources, which helps organise, shape the message, and distribute resources.

    The decision of southern governors like Eno and Mbah to switch parties is also viewed as a way to strengthen support in areas where Tinubu barely won in 2023. At first glance, this seems like a smart move.

    Yet incumbency is not an automatic guarantee. Chief Okorie is sceptical about these defectors’ ability to deliver electoral value. “How can they help him? Have they helped anybody before?” he asks, pointing to the 2023 election, where several sitting governors failed to win Senate seats. Even more telling, Peter Obi defeated the PDP machinery in Delta State despite Governor Okowa being Atiku’s running mate. The message, Okorie argues, is clear: “The political machinery is overrated.”

    There is also the electorate, which is frustrated, tired, and hard to predict. Nigeria faces a severe cost-of-living crisis, insecurity, and widespread disappointment. “There is a general fear that the ruling party will deploy significant resources to win the upcoming election. But the electorate would still vote with their conscience,” says Dr Ja’afaru.

    In Nigeria, political leaders often think they can control election results, but voters are always the unpredictable factor.

    The fragmented opposition:

    For President Tinubu to face real competition, the divided opposition would have to come together. Right now, that seems unlikely.

    The PDP is disorganised. The Labour Party (LP) is dealing with leadership and organisational problems. Smaller parties like the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), which controls Kano, and the growing African Democratic Congress (ADC) are trying to present themselves as alternatives.

    Much of the uncertainty centres on key figures. Peter Obi, who led the “Obidient” movement in 2023 and changed Nigeria’s political scene, is expected to run again. Okorie thinks Obi’s support is strong: “He has his own core supporters… who would follow him wherever he goes.” Still, it is unclear which party Obi will choose. Whether he stays with the LP, joins another party, or tries to form a coalition, each choice would change the situation.

    Meanwhile, the ADC is quietly emerging as a potential rallying point for northern politicians disenchanted with both the APC and the PDP. Okorie reveals that “between 11 and 12 immediate past ministers under former President Muhammadu Buhari from the North are in the ADC,” and that former Kaduna Governor Nasir El-Rufai has also joined. This sets the stage for a significant northern bloc operating outside the APC.

    Comrade Erubami does not think the opposition can get past its internal problems. “Only the unity of purpose among the opposition parties can threaten the ruling party’s dominance,” he says. The APC leader believes the opposition is too divided, suspicious, and focused on its own issues to challenge the ruling party. “From the body language of key opposition figures, unity is unlikely due to selfish interests,” he adds.

    However, history shows that even a divided opposition can disrupt an election if voters are upset enough. Right now, Nigerians are facing more economic hardship than at any time since the return to civil rule in 1999.

    As frustration grows, even smaller parties might gain more support than expected. The NNPP’s control of Kano shows that regional parties still have influence. Peter Obi’s continued popularity, especially with Gen Z and urban middle-class voters, keeps the election outcome uncertain.

    In Nigeria, the political situation is rarely clear until just before the election. The 2027 race looks to be the same.

    Democracy at a crossroads:

    As Nigeria moves toward 2027, the wave of defections has created an apparent paradox. The APC looks stronger than ever, with former rivals now part of it. The opposition seems divided, weak, and focused on internal conflicts. Some commentators worry that the ruling party’s strength could undermine democracy’s competitive nature.

    But Nigerian politics often defies predictions. The same economic problems that drive politicians to the ruling party may be pushing ordinary Nigerians to oppose it. Across markets, schools, religious groups, and social media, frustrations are growing.

    In many states, governors who switch parties to protect themselves may find they have little influence when it comes time to ask for votes. A governor can change a flag, but voters decide the future.

    Meanwhile, though divided, the opposition still has potent symbols and new alliances. Peter Obi remains an essential figure for many, especially younger voters. The ADC’s growing support in the North could change old voting patterns, and the NNPP’s control of Kano could shift regional power.

    In the end, the 2027 election may not just be a fight between the APC and a divided opposition. It could become a vote on hardship, leadership, and trust.

    In the next few months, it will become clear whether these defections will lead to long-term one-party rule or set up a major political shift. Nigerian politics is unpredictable and rarely favours those who take things for granted.

    One thing is sure: the defections have changed the political landscape. But the contest, constantly evolving and uniquely Nigerian, is far from finished.

  • ‘Delusions don’t win elections, performance does’

    ‘Delusions don’t win elections, performance does’

    Lagos State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has noted the latest political fantasy being peddled by the African Democratic Congress (ADC) – a party that cannot hold a worthwhile ward meeting, now suddenly seeking “citizens’ cooperation” to take over Lagos, a state globally acknowledged as Nigeria’s model for sustained governance, innovation and leadership.

    The party in a statement yesterday in Ogba by its spokesman, Seye Oladejo, said: ‘’Let it be stated clearly: Lagos is not a laboratory for political apprentices. Lagos is not up for grabs Lagos is certainly not a charity project for emergency parties seeking relevance through laughable headlines.

    ‘’ADC’s posturing is nothing but a comical attempt to inflate political balloon with the hot air of wishful thinking. A party without structures, without ideas, without credible candidates and without electoral footprints cannot – and will not – take over a state built through decades of vision, continuity, competence and unmatched performance.’’

    He said in 2023 and even before then, ADC struggled to fill a bus stop with its entire membership, adding that ‘’the same party is now promising to overrun a state with over 20 million people, world-class infrastructure and the most sophisticated electorate in Nigeria. Indeed, there should be limits to political comedy.’’

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    Oladejo said: ‘’We encourage the ADC to first take internal attendance at its next party meeting.

    If they achieve a quorum, perhaps they can graduate to contesting councillorship seats before dreaming of Alausa.

    ‘’Lagosians know the difference between real governance and idle political theatrics.

    They have witnessed transformative leadership from the days of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, through Babatunde Fashola, Akinwunmi Ambode and now Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu – leaders whose vision and continuity have placed Lagos on the global map.

    ‘’What exactly does the ADC offer beyond press statements and periodic fantasy-driven declarations? No blueprint. No record. No structure. No credibility.’’

    The APC spokesman said ADC’s hallucination about “taking over Lagos” was dead on arrival because Lagos remained the stronghold of progressive politics and would continue to consolidate on decades of unmatched results.

    ‘’Our party remains deeply rooted at the grassroots, fully aligned with the aspirations of Lagosians, and committed to the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    ‘’The people of Lagos are not confused.

    They know who works. They know who delivers.

    They know who has a plan – and who merely has press releases.

    ‘’We advise ADC to focus on building a party before dreaming of governing a state. Lagos APC welcomes competition, but what the ADC brings is not competition – it is political comedy. And Lagosians are far too enlightened to be entertained by such amateur performances.

    ‘’Lagos is not in play. Lagos is not confused. Lagos is not an experiment. Lagos is firmly APC – in 2027 and beyond,’’ the statement said.