Tag: atiku

  • Atiku vows to build strong ADC opposition in Bauchi

    Atiku vows to build strong ADC opposition in Bauchi

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has reaffirmed commitment to working with leaders of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) at all levels to build a strong and effective opposition in Bauchi State.

    Atiku made the pledge after hosting a delegation of key ADC stakeholders from Bauchi, led by Alhaji Aminu Ahmed Yapeco, Sarkin Yakin Katagum, at his residence.

    The former vice president disclosed details of the meeting on his social media platforms on Monday, stressing that discussions centred on strengthening the party’s structure and positioning it to better serve the people of the state.

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    “This afternoon, I hosted a delegation of Bauchi State’s critical stakeholders in our party, the African Democratic Congress (ADC), led by Alhaji Aminu Ahmed Yapeco, Sarkin Yakin Katagum.

    “Our conversation focused on how to strengthen the party’s structures in the state. We have examined the gaps, and I am committed to working with the party’s leaders at all levels until we achieve a virile opposition that will best serve the interests of the people of Bauchi,” he wrote. 

    Yapeco, who spoke on behalf of the delegation, underscored the importance of unity and strategic organisation within the party as it seeks to expand its influence and provide a credible alternative in the state’s political landscape.

  • Atiku’s son’s defection to our party, political earthquake, Lagos APC

    Atiku’s son’s defection to our party, political earthquake, Lagos APC

    The Lagos State Chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has described the recent defection of the son of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, as a political earthquake for the former presidential candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).

    A statement issued on Friday by the spokesperson of the party in Lagos, Seye Oladejo, noted ”with unmistakable clarity, the political earthquake occasioned by the decision of Abubakar Atiku Abubakar, son of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, to openly reject the pretentious ADC contraption and pitch his tent with the APC. This singular act has said more than a thousand press conferences ever could.”

    The statement read in part: ”When a man’s own son deserts his political judgment, repudiates his choices, and embraces an alternative path, Nigerians are entitled to ask: what deeper indictment of credibility is required? If those closest to you are unconvinced by your political convictions, how do you expect an entire nation to suspend disbelief?

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    ”For decades, Nigerians have endured Atiku Abubakar’s ideological wanderings -a restless political odyssey defined by serial defections, transactional alliances, and an obsession with the Presidency that has outlived both public patience and political relevance. From PDP to AC, back to PDP, and now to the ADC, his politics has been nothing more than a nomadic ambition in search of a party – any party -willing to mortgage its soul. That his own son has now drawn a clear line of departure is not a coincidence; it is a confession.

    ”Abubakar Atiku Abubakar’s decision to join the APC is a generational rebuke of recycled politics, expired ambitions, and the illusion of leadership without conviction. It is an emphatic vote of confidence in the APC’s record of governance and in the Renewed Hope Agenda being diligently implemented under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.”

    Oladejo added: ”Let it be said without equivocation: when credibility collapses at home, it cannot be rehabilitated in the marketplace of national politics. Nigerians are discerning enough to understand that trust begins from within, and leadership that cannot inspire loyalty in its immediate constituency cannot inspire confidence in a nation of over 200 million people.”

  • BREAKING: Atiku breaks silence on son’s defection to APC

    BREAKING: Atiku breaks silence on son’s defection to APC

    Former Vice President and 2023 presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar has broken silence on the defection of his son, Abba Abubakar from PDP to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Atiku described the decision of his son to join the ruling APC as “entirely personal”.

    The Nation reports Abba pledged to work for the re-election of President Bola Tinubu in 2027.

    The defection was announced on Thursday at the National Assembly, Abuja.

    Popularly known as “Abba,” the younger Atiku was formally received by the Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Barau Jibrin, alongside key APC leaders from the North-East geopolitical zone, in what party leaders described as a significant political realignment.

    Addressing party leaders and supporters at the event, Abubakar announced his resignation from the PDP and declared his alignment with the APC, describing the move as historic and deeply personal.

    He also directed all coordinators and members of his political structure, formerly known as the Haske Atiku Organisation, which he founded in 2022, to immediately join the APC and mobilise support for President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

    He said: “My name is Abubakar Atiku Abubakar, but everyone calls me Abba. I am here today to formally announce my exit from my former party, where we worked in 2023, and my decision to join the APC.

    Read Also: Atiku’s son defects to APC, vows to mobilise for Tinubu’s re-election

    “Today, I’m here to formally announce my exit from my former party to the APC following the outstanding leadership style and quality of His Excellency, the Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Barau I. Jibrin.

    “With this development, I will work with Senator Barau to actualise the second-term bid of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu come 2027. To this effect, I’m directing all coordinators of my association to join the APC and work for President Tinubu.”

    Reacting, Atiku on his verified X page (formerly Twitter) said: “The decision of my son, Abba Abubakar, to join the APC is entirely personal.

    “In a democracy, such choices are neither unusual nor alarming, even when family and politics intersect.

    “As a democrat, I do not coerce my own children in matters of conscience, and I certainly will not coerce Nigerians.

    “What truly concerns me is the poor governance of the APC and the severe economic and social hardships it has imposed on our people.

    “I remain resolute in working with like-minded patriots to restore good governance and offer Nigerians a credible alternative that brings relief, hope, and progress.”

  • Atiku’s son defects to APC, vows to mobilise for Tinubu’s re-election

    Atiku’s son defects to APC, vows to mobilise for Tinubu’s re-election

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) scored a major political gain as Abubakar Atiku Abubakar, son of former Vice President and 2023 Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, dumped the PDP and pledged to work for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s re-election in 2027.

    Abubakar, popularly known as Abba, formally announced his defection to the APC at the National Assembly, where he was received by the Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Barau Jibrin, with APC leaders from the North-East.

    Party leaders described the move as a significant boost to the APC’s consolidation efforts ahead of the next general election, given Abba’s political network and grassroots organisation.

    Announcing his resignation from the PDP, Abba said the decision was informed by his conviction in the leadership style of Senator Barau and the policies of the Tinubu administration.

    “My name is Abubakar Atiku Abubakar, but everyone calls me Abba. I am here today to formally announce my exit from my former party and my decision to join the APC,” he said.

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    He pledged to work closely with Senator Barau to actualise President Tinubu’s second-term ambition, directing members and coordinators of his political structure, formerly known as the Haske Atiku Organisation, to immediately align with the APC and support the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    “With this development, I will work with Senator Barau to actualise the second-term bid of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. To this effect, I am directing all coordinators of my association to join the APC and work for President Tinubu,” he added.

    Welcoming him, the APC National Vice Chairman (North-East), Comrade Mustapha Salihu, described the defection as symbolic and far-reaching.

    “Today is one of my happiest days. This is politics without borders. He has seen the policies and programmes of the Tinubu administration and decided to align with them,” Salihu said, assuring the new entrant of equal rights and opportunities within the party.

    Senator Barau congratulated Abba for what he called a “bold and principled decision,” stressing that the move was driven by ideology rather than sentiment.

    “You didn’t come here because of who your father is. You came because you believe in President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, his ideology and the Renewed Hope Agenda,” Barau said.

    The Deputy Senate President disclosed that Abba, who had been following political developments from the United States, was impressed by the administration’s reforms, which influenced his return home and decision to join the APC.

    “He is young, focused and determined to contribute to shaping the future of our country. This is the kind of youth Nigeria needs,” Barau added.

    A presidential aide, Alhaji Mahmoud Abdullahi, assured Abba of President Tinubu’s support, describing his defection as a homecoming.

    “Just like Atiku, Tinubu is also your father. Your decision is like returning home. You and your coordinators have a future in this party,” he said.

    Speaking on behalf of the group, Kano State Coordinator of the organisation, Hon. Mubarak Musa, said the defection was strategic, noting that all political activities of the group would now be coordinated through Senator Barau.

    “We have worked round the clock for our former platform. We will double our efforts and deliver for the APC in 2027,” Musa said, describing Senator Barau as their political father and a key pillar of the party in the North.

    The high point of the event was the renaming of Abba’s political organisation from Haske Atiku Organisation to Haske Bola Tinubu Organisation, signalling a full realignment ahead of the 2027 elections.

  • Onoh tackles Atiku over claims on BEA scholarship

    Onoh tackles Atiku over claims on BEA scholarship

    The former southeast spokesman to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu Denge.Josef Onoh has tackled former Vice President Atiku Abubakar on allegations regarding the BEA scholarship scheme. 

    Onoh said that Atiku’s statement paints a picture of callous abandonment and neglect but the facts reveal a responsible policy shift driven by economic realities and a commitment to Nigeria’s long-term educational self-sufficiency. 

    Onoh said that it wasn’t  “outright abandonment” but a pragmatic reform to prioritise domestic institutions amid fiscal constraints inherited from previous administrations, including Atiku’s own era under PDP rule.

    Onoh went further to dismantle these claims point by point with verifiable facts.

    Onoh, stated that firstly, Atiku alleged that the BEA scheme was “quietly obliterated” under President Tinubu without notice to parents or students. 

    This, he said, is patently false. The Federal Ministry of Education officially announced the discontinuation of government-funded foreign scholarships in May 2025, following a comprehensive policy review.

    Onoh said that the decision was communicated publicly through ministerial statements, emphasizing that Nigeria’s universities, polytechnics, and colleges now have sufficient capacity to offer equivalent programs locally—often of higher quality.

    Read Also: NNPP bars Kwankwaso from seeking 2027 presidential ticket

    Onoh said that far from being secretive, this shift was part of broader economic reforms initiated after Tinubu took office in May 2023 to address Nigeria’s strained public finances. 

    The initial five-year suspension Atiku references was indeed temporary, but the review concluded that full discontinuation was necessary, with only fully foreign-funded scholarships continuing.

    Onoh stated that Parents and students were not left in the dark; notifications were issued, including a July 2024 update on stipend adjustments due to exchange-rate pressures.

    Onoh, in response to the claim of “abandonment” leaving 1,600 students “stranded without support” said that it was a gross exaggeration because the Ministry of Education has categorically stated that no valid BEA scholar has been abandoned. All students enrolled before 2024 have received payments up to the 2024 budget year, in line with government obligations.

     Any delays in 2025 payments are due to temporary fiscal challenges, which are being actively addressed with the Ministry of Finance.

     Onoh maintained that no new scholarships were awarded after October 2025, and any documents suggesting otherwise are unauthentic.

    Futher more, Onoh said for existing scholars, the government of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu remains committed to supporting them until graduation, including covering return travel costs for those who wish to transfer back to Nigerian institutions.

     “This is hardly “abandonment”—it’s responsible stewardship of scarce resources, redirecting funds to bolster local education infrastructure that benefits far more Nigerians,” he stressed. 

    On the issue of unpaid stipends and arrears, Onoh said that Atiku dramatises “thousands of dollars” owed, citing over $6,000 per student.

     “The reality is more nuanced: Stipends were paid partially in 2023 and 2024, with a reduction from $500 to $220 monthly in 2024 to account for naira devaluation and budgetary constraints—a practical adjustment, not “cruelty.”

     Onoh stated that arrears from 2023 (including exchange-rate differentials) and 2024 were acknowledged, with partial payments made in September 2024.

    No payments occurred in 2025 due to ongoing fiscal reviews, but the ministry has assured that balances will be cleared as funds become available.

     This is not neglect but a reflection of Nigeria’s economic challenges, exacerbated by global inflation and currency fluctuations. President Tinubu’s administration has prioritized transparency, as evidenced by the House of Representatives’ investigation into stipend delays in November 2025, where parents’ concerns were heard and commitments reiterated.

    Onoh said that Atiku’s reference to hardship worsening between September and December 2023, with stipends slashed by 56% in 2024 and stopped in 2025, ignores the context. 

    These issues stem from inherited economic woes, including the removal of fuel subsidies and forex reforms necessary to stabilize the economy—reforms Atiku himself has criticized but which have prevented deeper crises. Students’ pleas have not been met with “cold, technocratic” indifference; the government has engaged through forums, Zoom calls with the Federal Scholarship Board, and public assurances.

    Protests in Abuja were acknowledged, and the minister suggested reintegration options for affected students, showing proactive care.

    Finally, the tragic death of a student in Morocco in November 2025 (not 2023, as Atiku’s statement erroneously implies) is heartbreaking but cannot be solely attributed to stipend delays without evidence. Parents and students have linked it to financial hardship, but the government has refuted claims of abandonment in Morocco specifically, noting that all valid scholars there were paid up to 2024 and that delays are being resolved.

    This incident underscores the need for reform, but it does not negate the administration’s efforts to support welfare, including health insurance provisions in the scholarship terms.

    “Atiku’s narrative is a desperate attempt to score political points ahead of 2027, ignoring that the BEA program—launched in 1993 and revitalized in 1999 under PDP governments—faced similar funding issues in the past. President Tinubu’s focus on local capacity building will create sustainable opportunities for thousands more Nigerians, rather than subsidizing a few abroad amid economic strain. 

    “We urge Atiku to join in constructive dialogue instead of spreading misinformation. The administration remains committed to education as a pillar of the Renewed Hope Agenda, and these reforms will yield dividends for generations to come,” Onoh stated. 

  • Atiku has been contesting presidency since my NYSC days—Baba-Ahmed

    Atiku has been contesting presidency since my NYSC days—Baba-Ahmed

    • APC debunks ex-chair Adamu’s alleged movement to ADC
    • Bauchi PDP says Bala Mohammed still with party
    • LP faction to INEC: Accord Usman recognition; wishes Obi well in ADC
    • Dickson: I’m still in PDP but keenly monitoring developments

    Vice-Presidential candidate of the Labour Party at the 2023 elections, Dr Yusuf Datti Baba-Ahmed, has expressed shock that former Vice President Atiku Abubakar  is still seeking Nigeria’s presidency in 2027.

     Datti  recalled that Atiku has been seeking to occupy the highest  office in the land since his (Datti)  National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) days.

     Baba-Ahmed made the remark yesterday during an interview on Channels Television’s The Morning Brief.

    He noted  that the country  needs a new generation of leaders, adding  that many capable citizens are willing to address the country’s challenges but are discouraged by what he described as an expensive and difficult political system dominated by godfathers and unfulfilled promises.

    According to him, “When I was doing my NYSC, Baba Atiku was an aspirant, and in 2018, we contested the primaries together. In 2023, we contested again, with me as a vice-presidential candidate elsewhere, when his vice president had left him. And, for God’s sake, in 2027 again.

    “There is a need for a new generation of Nigerian leaders, and they do exist. A whole new generation is waiting for a new leader to lead them to a new party.

    “There are good Nigerians capable of solving Nigeria’s problems, but they are discouraged by an expensive, difficult and treacherous system filled with godfathers and broken promises.”

     The Labour Party chieftain also dismissed claims that he had declared interest in contesting the 2027 presidential election.

     He clarified that he only reaffirmed his membership of the Labour Party and did not announce any presidential ambition.

     “I never declared to contest the presidency, even though there could be a possibility of that happening. I certainly did not declare for the presidency. I simply reiterated my membership of the Labour Party,” he said.

    Baba-Ahmed added that decisions on future elections would depend on the timetable of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the position of the party, urging the public to ignore what he described as sensational narratives circulating on social media.

    Meanwhile, the All Progressive Congress, APC has denied viral online reports  that its former National Chairman, Senator Abdullahi Adamu has defected to the opposition African Democratic Congress, ADC ahead of the 2027 general elections.

     The report, circulated online on Thursday, claimed that Adamu’s alleged defection was “neither sudden nor accidental, but the culmination of months of deepening rifts, quiet consultations, and growing dissatisfaction with the internal direction of the APC at both national and state levels. As a founding pillar of the ruling party and one of its most influential power brokers since 2015, Adamu’s exit would represent a symbolic and strategic blow to the APC’s cohesion.” 

    Debunking the rumour yesterday, the APC in Nasarawa State said Adamu  is still a committed member of the party.

     A statement signed by the party’s state organizing secretary and coordinator of the APC e-membership registration exercise, Barr Hassan Abubakar, a copy made available to our correspondent yesterday in Lafia, described the rumour as unfounded and mischievous.

    The statement reads: “We state categorically and without any ambiguity that this claim is false, malicious, and deliberately concocted to mislead the public and sow seeds of confusion within the APC family.

     “For the avoidance of doubt, Senator (Dr) Abdullahi Adamu, CON remains a steadfast, committed and card-carrying member of the APC. At no time did he defect, contemplate defection, or associate himself with any other political party.

     “The photograph being mischievously circulated online was taken during the ongoing APC e-membership registration and revalidation exercise, a nationwide programme aimed at strengthening the party’s database and consolidating internal democracy.

    “The said image clearly captures Senator Adamu revalidating his APC membership, in full alignment with the party’s constitutional processes and reform agenda.

    “It is therefore irresponsible, intellectually dishonest and politically desperate for faceless individuals and their sponsors to twist a legitimate party activity into a false narrative of defection. Such acts amount to deliberate misinformation and an affront to political decency.

     “Senator Abdullahi Adamu’s pedigree, sacrifices, and towering contributions to the growth and stability of the APC are well documented and need no validation from purveyors of fake news. His loyalty to the APC is unquestionable, unshaken, and unwavering.

     “We call on party members, the media, and the general public to disregard this falsehood in its entirety” the statement added

     Adamu, had in a newspaper report dismissed his rumoured defection to the APC as false and a social media attempt to attract attention, saying “I am not an ungrateful politician.”

     “Don’t mind the social media reporter. They want to draw me out, but I have nothing to tell anybody. I am not an ungrateful politician. I served at the highest level of my party, and I am where I am today,” the former APC chair was quoted to have said.

    A similar report about Bauchi State governor, Bala  Mohammed planning to defect to the ADC has also been debunked by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state. 

     The state PDP Chairman, Hon. Sama’ila Adamu Burga, described the defection claims as fake, baseless and politically motivated in a statement issued yesterday.

    He urged the public to ignore the misinformation being shared on social media.

    Burga said the rumour was already addressed at a stakeholders’ meeting held on January 4, 2026, where party leaders reaffirmed their loyalty to the PDP and passed a vote of confidence on the governor.

    The meeting was attended by top PDP officials, members of the Bauchi State House of Assembly, State Executive Council, local government chairmen, party executives, serving lawmakers, and other political stakeholders.

    Read Also: Showunmi to Atiku, Obi: EFCC probes not a threat to democracy

    According to Burga, stakeholders commended Governor Mohammed for his leadership and commitment to good governance as governor of Bauchi State and chairman of the PDP Governors’ Forum.

    He added that despite media attacks and political pressure, the governor remains committed to defending democratic values, fairness and constitutional order.

     Burga noted that Governor Mohammed expressed gratitude for the support and reaffirmed his loyalty to the PDP, promising to continue promoting peace and development in Bauchi State and Nigeria.

     He stressed that the governor has never discussed plans to defect to the ADC, APC or any other party, and that major political decisions in the PDP are taken collectively and through consultation.

    Burga concluded that Governor Bala Mohammed remains a loyal and principled leader of the PDP adding that the party is open to dialogue with others, but not on the basis of rumours or misinformation.

    LP faction to INEC: Accord Usman, Nwokocha recognition

      The Labour Party faction led by its interim chairman, Nenadi Usman has called on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to affirm  Senators Usman and Darlington Nwokocha as National Chairman and National Secretary, respectively of the party.

     The party in a communiqué after its National Working Committee (NWC) meeting, said this would be in compliance with the rule of law and the April 4, 2025, Supreme Court judgement referenced by the commission.

     The communiqué, which was signed by Senator Nwokocha, said the NWC unanimously adopted Abia State governor, Dr Alex Otti, as the National Leader of the Labour Party.

    It wished its former presidential candidate in the 2023 general election, Peter Obi, who left the party for the African Democratic Congress (ADC) well in his future political endeavours and in his new political party.

     The communiqué reads: “The NWC reaffirmed that the Labour Party remains united, indivisible, indissoluble and steadfast in its mission to build a Nigeria founded on equal opportunity, social justice, and good governance.

    “Accordingly, as the party continues to monitor political developments across the country, the Labour Party remains a strong and viable political force and shall continue to operate as an independent, ideologically driven political organisation.”

    The party noted the recent expressions of interest by certain individuals to contest elective positions under its platform, stating that “this growing interest reflects the increasing confidence Nigerians have in the party.”

     It maintained that the congresses and the National Convention will still hold as scheduled and urged members at all levels to actively participate in the congress processes.

    “The Labour Party leadership remains committed to ensuring credible, transparent, and inclusive congresses,” the communiqué added.

      I am still in  PDP— Senator Dickson

    Former Governor of Bayelsa State and Senator representing Bayelsa West, Senator Henry Seriake Dickson, has dismissed as false reports circulating in sections of the media alleging that he has defected from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the African Democratic Congress (ADC).

    In a statement issued yesterday  by his media aide, Ajiri Daniels, Senator Dickson categorically stated that he remains a committed member of the PDP and has not decamped to any other political party.

    The Senator explained that he is presently in mourning following the death of the Deputy Governor of Bayelsa State, Dr. Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo. He noted that, as a mark of respect, he has since stepped back from political activities during this period of mourning and has been busy receiving condolence visits from friends, political leaders, allies and well wishers all over the country.

    These visitors cut across political leaders from different political parties and persons from all spheres of life.

    While noting that he is keenly following developments in the political space, Senator Dickson assured that after the burial, he will consult widely with friends and political allies across the country before taking any decision, which will be formally announced. But in the meantime he still remains a key leader in the PDP, hoping that the party will get its act right in view of its legacy contribution to Nigerian politics.

    He urged members of the public, party faithful, and supporters to discountenance the report, describing it as fake news and a deliberate attempt to mislead the public, and advised them to rely only on information from his verified communication channels.

  • Obi, Atiku, and the coalition gambit

    Obi, Atiku, and the coalition gambit

    Peter Obi’s announcement last Wednesday that he has joined the African Democratic Congress (ADC) brought new energy to Nigeria’s opposition politics. Still, questions about who will get the presidential ticket—Obi or former Vice President Atiku Abubakar—could threaten the alliance. Deputy Political Editor Raymond Mordi looks at the challenges facing the new coalition partners.

    Excitement grew in the Southeast last Wednesday as a convoy of vehicles headed to the Nike Lake Resort in Enugu. Inside, many key figures from Nigeria’s opposition gathered, waiting for Peter Obi. When the former Labour Party (LP) presidential candidate arrived, he did more than announce his move to the African Democratic Congress (ADC).

    He set in motion what could become Nigeria’s most significant political shift since the All Progressives Congress (APC) was formed more than 10 years ago.

    “This decision is guided solely by patriotism and national interest,” Obi declared, framing his move as a mission to “rescue Nigeria from poverty, disunity and democratic decline.”

    The choice of Enugu was important. As the political centre of the Southeast, it demonstrated Obi’s strong influence in a region where he won a significant victory in the 2023 general election. The crowd was also telling: party leaders, civil society members, former allies from his LP days, and new supporters from across the country all suggested this was more than just a personal decision.

    Political economist Pat Utomi, who has long supported Obi, said the move came after “wide-ranging consultations across political, civic, and regional lines.” Utomi explained that the ADC appealed to them because it was “less encumbered by legacy factions” and more open to negotiation among its leaders.

    “It is very significant because he didn’t defect alone,” says Chief Chekwas Okorie, founding national chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA). “He practically took all the political heavyweights in the PDP in the Southeast, those with him in the LP, and even some APGA chieftains—including the only APGA lawmaker in the Senate, Eyinnaya Abaribe.”

    Okorie believes this move is more than just symbolic. “That is a significant challenge to the APC in the Southeast, irrespective of the defections we’ve seen. It’s not going to be a one-party thing running through the whole country like a knife running through butter. So, it would compel the presidency to return to the drawing board and reassess its 2027 strategy.”

    Marriage of convenience:

    The event in Enugu marked the official start of a grand coalition. Political heavyweights have decided that joining forces through the ADC is their best chance to challenge President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in 2027.

    Obi’s move is the latest and most exciting in a series of high-profile defections that have turned the ADC into the leading platform for a united opposition.

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar joined the party in November, confirming his fifth presidential bid. Nasir el-Rufai, the former Kaduna governor and a key architect of the APC’s 2015 victory, brought his formidable northern network weeks earlier, vowing to “repeat what we did in 2015.” Former Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi and a growing list of federal lawmakers have also signed on.

    Experienced leaders lead the coalition. Former Senate President David Mark is the interim national chairman, and former Osun Governor Rauf Aregbesola is the national secretary. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has officially recognised this leadership team.

    “The vehicle of ADC kick-started yesterday (last Wednesday) with one ignition kick, and that is the excitement that His Excellency Peter Obi has brought to it,” says Tanko Yunusa, national coordinator of the Obidient Movement, Obi’s formidable youth support base.

    Filling the opposition vacuum:

    The rise of the ADC is a response to the decline of opposition politics. The ruling APC, led by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, continues to attract opposition governors, lawmakers, and local leaders. Leadership struggles and many defections have weakened the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). The Labour Party (LP), which gained momentum in 2023 through the Obidient Movement, is now mired in internal conflicts and legal battles.

    “Nature abhors a vacuum,” political economists often say, and the ADC is trying to fill that gap.

    Read Also: Troops recover large cache of  ammunition in Maiduguri

    The big question now is whether this group of prominent figures can come together as a strong team to challenge Tinubu’s re-election. Or will they face the same internal problems that hurt past opposition efforts?

    The allure of a unified front:

    The ADC’s main strength right now is its lineup. It has brought together the three most well-known leaders of the anti-Tinubu opposition, each with their own base of support.

     Peter Obi’s youth and southeastern appeal: Obi’s move is likely the coalition’s most significant boost. In the 2023 election, he showed he could bring together young, urban voters from different backgrounds, especially in the South. His joining the ADC has “effectively planted the ADC’s flag in the Southeast,” where he is still very popular. His supporters seem ready to follow him. Just days after he joined, major support groups—the Obidient Movement, the Big Tent, the Coalition for the Protection of Democracy, and the Coalition for Obi—set up a joint steering committee to plan for the next general election.

    “They have made that position very clear,” Yunusa says. “They are going to move in their millions into the ADC.”

    Okorie also believes this is more than just for show. “The impression in the APC circles was that southern governors would automatically deliver their states,” he says. “But we’ve seen that governors’ defections don’t necessarily translate to votes. Nigerians are more politically sophisticated now.”

    He mentions Delta State in 2023, where Peter Obi beat both the APC and the PDP, even though there were strong incumbents backing the PDP flagbearer. “These defections don’t impress me at all,” Okorie adds. “Nigerians never follow those kinds of leads.”

     Atiku Abubakar’s northern network and experience: Atiku gives the coalition strong connections in the North, which is key to winning nationally. His political network, built over many years, brings organisation and helps balance the APC’s influence in the region. He quickly welcomed Obi, calling his move a “landmark development,” showing he is open to working together, at least for now.

    The scene in Enugu was revealing. “The presence of Aminu Tambuwal says a lot,” Okorie observes. “Tambuwal is one of the caliphate’s princes. Seeing his excitement suggests that the North is watching this very closely.”

     El-Rufai’s kingmaker credentials: Adding El-Rufai is both symbolic and strategic. As a former APC insider, his move is a clear criticism of the ruling party. His talk of repeating the 2015 merger success appeals to those hoping for a major opposition victory.

     A leadership of elders: With David Mark and Rauf Aregbesola at the helm, the coalition gains stability and experience. Their job is to manage egos, help reach compromises, and offer a balanced ticket that can handle internal competition.

    The fault lines beneath the surface:

    Despite its big names, the ADC coalition is fragile. It is built on competing ambitions and unresolved differences.

    1. The presidential ticket dilemma:

    Atiku, Obi, and Amaechi all want to run for president. National Publicity Secretary Bolaji Abdullahi says the ticket is “open to all eligible aspirants,” but only one will be chosen.

    Most people believe Atiku has the advantage because he has been in the party longer, has more resources, and a strong northern network. However, Obi has made it clear he will not “play second fiddle” in 2027.

    “It’s possible Obi went to the party because he was assured of the ticket,” Okorie insists. He added, “Don’t forget, it took a long time for him to reach a decision, to the point that some of his followers were already confused.

    “But now he has taken a position, and one would imagine that he has also consulted very widely. So, if there is another level of challenge, it will also be to Atiku, who, before now, would have been considered as an anointed candidate of the ADC. With Obi’s eventual defection to the ADC, Atiku may no longer be the party’s anointed candidate.”

    Political analyst Prof. Gbade Ojo captures the stalemate succinctly: “If Atiku surrenders, Peter Obi will run. If Atiku insists on running, then Obi becomes his running mate.”

    A ticket combining North and South, Muslim and Christian, could be powerful. However, convincing Obi to be a running mate again, as he was in 2019, will be difficult.

    From within the APC, scepticism is sharper. “Obi cannot defeat Atiku in any primary,” argues Mashood Erubami, a civil society activist-turned-politician in Oyo State. “Wherever Atiku has contested, he has done everything necessary to secure the ticket. Obi is likely to leave the ADC in annoyance after losing.”

    2. The Obidient wildcard:

    Obi’s supporters are loyal to him, not to the ADC. Yunusa has promised that the Obidient Movement will stay with the party even if Obi loses the primary, but that promise will be tested if supporters feel let down.

    “Even his loyal supporters would not permit him to be Atiku’s running mate again,” Erubami insists. “That is not what they bargained for.”

    3. Grassroots and structure:

    Apart from its national leaders, the ADC lacks strong local structures like the APC. El-Rufai’s influence in Kaduna or Obi’s popularity in the Southeast does not guarantee a nationwide effort to get out the vote.

    Okorie points out that this was a significant weakness for the LP in 2023. “The party didn’t have polling agents in over 120,000 polling units,” he says. “Obi was like a one-man riot squad.”

    He believes the ADC is better prepared this time. The APGA leader said, “Many party aspirants will be able to sponsor their nominations and campaigns. The LP didn’t have that leverage in 2023. Obi had already purchased the PDP presidential nomination form for N50 million before he abandoned the party for the LP.

    “So, he was practically begging people to come and contest the other positions on the platform of the party. This time, there will be candidates in every contestable office. That means funding, agents, and nationwide presence—something they never had before.”

    4. The APC magnet:

    Tinubu’s position as the incumbent is still a decisive advantage. Governors and lawmakers keep joining the ruling party, increasing its influence and resources. “The party’s popularity has been boosted by the number of governors who have defected,” Erubami says, adding that performance, not sentiment, will decide the 2027 election.

    Scenarios for 2027:

    Several pathways now present themselves.

    The unity ticket scenario: If Atiku and Obi agree to run together, either as Atiku-Obi or Obi-Atiku, they would present the most substantial challenge by combining northern support with southern and youth appeal.

    The fractured primary scenario: If the primary is contentious, the coalition could break apart, making it easier for Tinubu to win a second term with little opposition.

    The third-force scenario: Even if united, the ADC must overcome the advantages of incumbency and state power. Its chances depend on making the most of the ongoing economic hardship. “The coalition could capitalise on insecurity, economic hardship and over-taxation,” Prof. Ojo notes.

    Conclusion: A vehicle in search of a driver:

    Right now, the ADC has plenty of energy but no clear leader. Obi’s move has given it momentum, but personal ambition could still slow things down.

    The coalition is clearly strong, but also vulnerable. Its future—whether it changes Nigeria’s opposition or becomes just another warning—depends on whether it can unite its powerful members into one team.

    The road from Enugu to Aso Rock is a long one. The first challenge, deciding who will lead, is already approaching.

  • Showunmi to Atiku, Obi: EFCC probes not a threat to democracy

    Showunmi to Atiku, Obi: EFCC probes not a threat to democracy

    Former spokesman for Vice President Atiku Abubakar during the build-up to the 2019 presidential election, Otunba Segun Showunmi, has said the arrest and investigation of former public officials by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and other federal agencies should not be seen as a threat to Nigeria’s democracy or an attempt to suppress opposition leaders.

    Showunmi said the real danger to democracy lies in attempts by some political actors to present opposition status as immunity from arrest and prosecution for alleged offences.

    The former governorship aspirant of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ogun State in the 2023 general elections made the remarks on Monday, reacting to concerns raised by leading opposition figures who on Sunday warned of an increasing threat to Nigeria’s multiparty democracy.

    The Nation reports that former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, ex-Labour Party presidential candidate Peter Obi, former Senate President David Mark, former APC National Chairman and ex-Edo State governor Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, PDP leader Chief Bode George and others had, in a joint statement, alleged that state institutions, particularly the EFCC, the Nigeria Police and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), were being used to intimidate and weaken opposition leaders ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    They also warned that Nigeria was drifting towards a de facto one-party state through pressure on opposition governors and political actors rather than through a transparent democratic process.

    However, in a statement to The Nation, Showunmi, who is the Convener of The Alternative, a movement advocating credible leadership, good governance, and accountability, said anti-corruption efforts are neither anti-opposition nor acts of persecution.

    He stressed that being in the opposition does not confer a licence to steal or protection from accountability, adding that investigation should not be mistaken for persecution.

    According to him, the EFCC and other anti-graft agencies are legally obligated to investigate allegations of economic and financial crimes.

    Showunmi said Nigeria must not sacrifice the rule of law for political convenience, noting that those with clean records have nothing to fear, while former public officials with questions to answer should do so before the law.

    He said, “Nigeria’s democracy is not under threat because public officials are being investigated. It is under threat when political actors attempt to weaponise opposition status as immunity from the law.

    “The Constitution mandates the state to abolish corruption and abuse of power. It does not create exemptions for opposition leaders, former office holders, or political coalitions. The only immunity recognised by law is limited and temporary, and it ends when a public officer leaves office.

    “Investigation is not persecution. The EFCC and other anti-graft agencies are legally bound to investigate allegations of economic and financial crimes. Investigation, arrest, and prosecution carried out within the law do not violate fundamental rights.

    “Calling an investigation victimisation does not make it so. What truly threatens Nigeria’s multiparty democracy is the attempt to intimidate or delegitimise anti-corruption institutions whenever probes involve politically exposed persons.

    “Democracy does not mean freedom from scrutiny. It means submission to the law, especially by those who once held public trust.”

  • Abductions revive Atiku’s opportunistic politics

    Abductions revive Atiku’s opportunistic politics

    Despite a pending case instituted by the Nafiu Bala-led faction of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) in the Federal High Court, Abuja, former vice president Atiku Abubakar has finally registered with the party in his ward in Adamawa State after pussyfooting for a little over four months. The registration caught reporters napping. In July when the former vice president and his men orchestrated the official takeover of the ADC, and former senate president David Mark and ex-Osun State governor Rauf Aregbesola were appointed interim party chairman and interim national secretary respectively, it was expected that Alhaji Atiku would follow hard on their heels by consummating his registration. For inexplicable reasons, it took more than four months before he finally crossed the Rubicon. His months of dithering reflected the tentativeness of his politics and the opportunism of his ambition. Characteristically uncommitted to anything save his ambition, or to ideology or to political party, or to persons or principles, he has always had an eye on the main chance.

    Months before the July ADC takeover, he had assembled a flotilla for the unique purpose of finding a platform with which to make his final bid for the Nigerian presidency in 2027. The flotilla comprised sundry politicians grieving over their displacement in the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), men and women anxious to see Alhaji Atiku announce his membership of the party in consonance with his huge financial commitments. Instead, he balked. Some suggested it was because the party was rent in two by discord over who was the legitimate chairman of the party, especially seeing how controversially the previous chairman Ralph Nwosu hastily relinquished office. Others suggested that though he resigned his membership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on July 14, 2025, the former vice president was at sixes and sevens over whether to finally commit himself to the ADC into which he had led most of his lieutenants. Gen. Mark coaxed him; Mr Argbesola entreated him; the talkative and vengeful Nasir el-Rufai tugged at his flowing robes; and the vast assemblage of journeymen looking for political relevance raised a din – all of them to have him lead the charge, not remotely or virtually, but from the front, physically, even if sluggishly.

    The 2027 party primaries are just months away. When by early November Alhaji Atiku was still vacillating, many members of the ADC, particularly those bewitched by his uncompromising talk, were beginning to panic. They wanted a political war in 2027, and were eager to draw their swords; but they were sobered by the enormity of the task ahead and chastened by what needs to be done to secure victory. Vacillations, they reasoned, would not deliver the main prize. But the more the former vice president was entreated, the more detached he became, until of course early last week when he dropped the other shoe. The party leadership may be flummoxed by their leader’s reluctance to take risks and are vexed by his seeming indifference to the dangers his tentativeness exposed them to, but the party rank and file are now openly animated. Alhaji Atiku had kept a tight grip on the funds needed to vivify a party long used to being hijacked and ravaged by ambitious politicians; now, they seem assured that at last, the spending would begin in earnest.

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    As unflattering as Alhaji Atiku’s political style is, and regardless of the many contradictions in which his presidential ambition over the decades had weltered, he is at bottom a cautious man and spender. He waited long enough to see that the PDP had become irredeemable; waited still to see that the ADC was unlikely to unravel over its disputed chairmanship and leadership fights; and also waited until the last two weeks when a spate of terrorist killings and abductions began ruffling the feathers of the ruling party. He was indeed still prepared to wait even further to gauge the right moment when he would feel and see the Achilles heel of the administration. But suddenly, buoyed by the terrorist abductions in Kebbi and Niger States as well as the startled incomprehensibilities of the APC administration in responding to the siege being woven around the country, Alhaji Atiku has found his voice and seemed to gain political weight. Finally, he senses that the APC can be beaten. Though he sometimes rails against the administration’s economic policies, he knows at bottom that the APC is not doing badly at all in reviving and, even more encouragingly, resetting the Nigerian economy. Using economic issues as a campaign tool, he suspects, will not resonate. It has to be insecurity. And in the last two weeks, a carefully choreographed wave of abductions and merciless butchering has triggered a jaunty response from the ADC and Alhaji Atiku. Forgetting that he is of the Fulani stock accused of being the main inspirators of insecurity in Nigeria, a charge also levelled at former president Muhammadu Buhari for being the chief originator of insecurity, Alhaji Atiku appears emboldened to claim he has the magic wand to cure the insecurity cancer. Few are likely to believe him.

    But it hardly matters. The former vice president is probably the most accomplished exponent of political opportunism. He has seen enormous possibilities in the choreographed terrorist attacks and abductions across some northern states, not to talk of the intensification of other attacks in states torn between suing for peace or fighting it out. He will deploy the ensuing public anger and helplessness to drive his campaign and position himself, despite his old age, as the deus ex machina Nigeria desperately needs. That mentality – of seizing the opportunity of lawlessness to make political profit – is rife among a section of the political class. It is illogical, but it is rife. Former Kaduna governor Nasir el-Rufai also once enthused, as governor, that being Fulani, he was in a position to stop the killings pervading the southern part of the state. However, all he did throughout his governorship was to pay the killers and, by his reckless statements and prejudiced disposition, stoked the fire of more killings in the state. Should Alhaji Atiku become president as he hopes, he cannot do better than President Buhari or Mallam el-Rufai. He will make stupendous promises, but he would be chary of drawing too much blood from his kinsmen. If his kinsmen saw the Buhari presidency as licence to deliver carnage, and found plausible excuses to justify and bask in the bloodletting, it would not be different under Alhaji Atiku. He has not shown himself a principled and ideological politician, and had in his past campaigns urged Muslims and the political North to be discriminating in their voting.

    No one believes that the killings and abductions are happenstances. Some, however, say they are enacted to thumb the nose at the United States which had threatened to bomb the perpetrators of Christian genocide to smithereens. This view is sheer nonsense. While baiting the US may seem foolhardy, perpetrators of killings and abductions, though they are in many instances Fulani, know that executing a military campaign by air or on foot in Nigeria is indeed hard to carry out with precision. Most Nigerians think the intensity of the terrorist attacks, particularly in the Northwest, was designed to produce both a political message and a political advantage. Alhaji Atiku is unbothered by whatever anyone thinks or whatever justifications are adduced for the rampage. All he sees is an administration discomfited by the events of the day, and an advantage for him and his beleaguered party to soldier on. Whether he can sustain the advantage beyond a few months remains to be seen. Though chafing under the table, the administration should count itself fortunate to have to contend with the recrudescing terrorist attacks about six months before the primaries and more than a year before the elections. If they cannot find a way to neutralise the political effect of insecurity as a factor in the campaigns, then they have themselves to blame.

    The attacks and abductions have clearly made the ADC and its leaders both hopeful and exuberant, a sort of profiting from an opponent’s misery. This is politically legitimate. But there is also increasing realisation that cells of terrorist attackers lurking in the forests in many southern states, their agenda speculated to be either land grabbing or the establishment of a religious caliphate inspired by ISIS ideology, is a disincentive to vote Atiku. Those speculations stand more chance of dooming the Atiku campaign than energising it as he anticipates. Mallam el-Rufai is characteristically more upbeat than even Alhaji Atiku. He swears that with the ADC’s newfound zeal and the muddle in which the APC has found itself, Governor Uba Sani of Kaduna would be swept away in 2027. His fixation is predictably with Kaduna where his reputation had been bludgeoned by former supporters who encountered and embraced the inspiringly urbane style of the governor and marveled that governance could be so easy and entrancing. The ADC national secretary, Rauf Aregbesola, has not met with such good fortune. His reputation is in tatters and his politics generally uncouth and unappealing. He zeroes in on Osun; but as regicidal as that state is, they do not have the reputation of being calculating and nostalgic. To them, Mr Aregbesola is history, and in Osun, they forget history, especially when it traumatises them.

    If the ruling party manages to turn the corner in respect of insecurity, the lull the ADC experienced for months when their dithery leader, the former vice president, agonised over whether to commit himself lock, stock, and barrel to the fringe party, will return to haunt them. But having been inattentive to and mystified and mortified by the country’s economic recovery, Alhaji Atiku will do everything in his power to prevent the APC from getting a reprieve. The abductions chaos has now gifted the great opportunist a chance to indulge his pastime of profiting from other people’s misery; he will nurture that anomaly for as long as he can manage. Given the brittleness of his politics, his unsteady gait in withstanding headwinds, and the way he plays ducks and drakes with the love and support of his followers, it is hard seeing him weather the storm when the political hurricane against his ambition reaches Category 5.

  • BREAKING: Atiku officially joins ADC

    BREAKING: Atiku officially joins ADC

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has officially joined the African Democratic Congress (ADC).

    He formally registered as a member at Jada Ward 1 in Jada Local Government Area of Adamawa State.

    Recall Atiku in July, resigned from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which had been mired in a prolonged internal crisis.

    Atiku’s formal entrance follows the prior announcement of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola on November 19 officially commencing registration and membership validation.

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    “As a demonstration of my commitment, I completed my own symbolic registration at Ward 8, Unit 1, Ifofin, in Ilesa East Local Government Area of Osun State,” Aregbesola had said via his social media handles, urging existing members to validate their membership and new entrants to register.

    In an announcement on Monday through his official X handle, Atiku posted a photo of himself holding his ADC membership card with the brief caption, “It’s official.”  

    Atiku in July had led the adoption of the ADC as the coalition platform for opposition figures to challenge President Bola Tinubu in 2027.