Tag: Southeast APC

  • Why Southeast APC endorsed Tinubu ahead 2027 elections

    Why Southeast APC endorsed Tinubu ahead 2027 elections

    Southeast leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) last weekend gathered in Enugu for what they called “Izu Umunne,” where they not only endorsed President Tinubu for a second term but also engaged in political self-examination—an attempt to redraw the region’s place in Nigeria’s power equation ahead of 2027. DAMIAN DURUIHEOMA reports

    The Enugu gathering of Southeast leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) was not a routine political meeting. It was a statement of intent—a deliberate attempt by a region long trapped at the margins of national power to re-enter the centre of Nigeria’s political equation. The APC stakeholders’ meeting, which took place at the Presidential Hotel under the banner of Izu Umunne (family meeting), marked a turning point: the Southeast, or at least its dominant political leadership, openly chose pragmatism over protest and strategy over sentiment.

    At the heart of the meeting was the unanimous endorsement of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for a second term in 2027. Beyond the symbolism of endorsement, however, the gathering represented a collective self-assessment by the Southeast political elite—an admission that the politics of isolation has yielded diminishing returns and that relevance in Nigeria’s power structure is negotiated, not wished into existence.

    Governor Hope Uzodimma, Chairman of the Southeast Governors Forum and the APC’s lead strategist in the zone, framed the moment with rare candour. He called on leaders to confront the hard truths of the 2023 election, in which the Southeast delivered barely six per cent of its votes to the APC, even as other regions spread their political bets and secured leverage at the centre. In Nigeria’s transactional political system, Uzodimma argued, predictability is a weakness. A region that votes monolithically against the mainstream forfeits bargaining power, regardless of the righteousness of its cause.

    This admission is significant. For decades, the Southeast has complained—often rightly—about marginalisation. Yet the Enugu meeting suggested a new diagnosis: that marginalisation is sometimes reinforced by strategic choices. While other zones practised bridge-building, the Southeast chose moral isolation, placing all its chips on a single narrative and expecting national outcomes to bend accordingly. The result was emotional satisfaction but political exclusion.

    It was this reality that gave weight to the intervention of former Senate President, Ken Nnamani, who described the Southeast’s endorsement of President Tinubu as both courageous and strategic. Nnamani warned that the region’s long-standing complaints of marginalisation could persist longer than necessary if Ndi Igbo failed to play what he termed “the right politics.” He likened the Southeast’s predicament to crying in the rain—an exercise in futility, no matter how justified the grievance.

    READ ALSO; Arewa, this has to stop

    “If you cry in the rain, nobody will notice you. If you want to avoid the rain, you must enter the shade,” he said, urging the region to move away from emotional protest and towards calculated engagement as the only realistic path to influence and equity in Nigeria’s power structure.

    From the APC’s perspective, this was the central lesson of the 2023 election. While the Southeast delivered overwhelming votes to Peter Obi and enjoyed the moral satisfaction of unity, the region remained outside the winning coalition and, therefore, outside the decisive room where power is negotiated. In a federal system driven by alliances across zones, moral victories that lack national spread rarely translate into political capital.

    The APC leaders’ decision to endorse Tinubu, therefore, was presented as a conscious break from that cycle. Politics, Uzodimma insisted, is “pay as you earn.” No single zone produces a president on its own, and no region can afford to remain permanently outside the corridors of power while still expecting equity. Supporting Tinubu’s second term, from this perspective, is not subservience but investment—a down payment on future relevance.

    Governor Peter Mbah reinforced this argument with concrete examples. He described the Southeast’s recent political realignment as a paradigm shift grounded in pragmatism rather than opportunism. According to him, alignment with the centre is already yielding dividends: the Eastern Rail Line has returned to the national agenda; Enugu Airport has been approved for concessioning as an international gateway; and long-neglected gas and energy prospects in the region are receiving renewed federal attention.

    For Mbah, these are not symbolic gestures but strategic interventions—evidence that the federal government now sees the Southeast as a partner rather than a peripheral observer. His assertion that “we are not standing at the crossroads of history; we are shaping history itself” captured the optimism that pervaded the meeting. The endorsement of Tinubu was framed not as blind loyalty but as a calculated alignment of vision at the centre with delivery at the states.

    Critically, the Enugu meeting did not deny the emotional undercurrents of Southeast politics. The so-called “Peter Obi factor” hovered over the gathering—unspoken but unmistakable. In 2023, Peter Obi swept the Southeast almost entirely, making it his strongest electoral base nationwide. That performance demonstrated the Southeast’s capacity for mass mobilisation when inspired by a compelling narrative of competence and reform.

    However, APC leaders in Enugu argued that 2023, while emotionally satisfying, exposed the limits of protest politics. Obi’s impressive vote haul did not translate into national power, nor did it improve the Southeast’s bargaining position within the federal structure. The region celebrated moral victory, but power gravitated elsewhere. In a political system driven by coalitions and cross-zonal numbers, the Southeast discovered that purity without spread is insufficient.

    Obi’s recent defection to the African Democratic Congress (ADC) further sharpened the APC’s argument. For Southeast APC leaders, the move symbolises the danger of fragmented ambitions—of scattering votes across platforms that lack national depth. The communiqué’s pointed rejection of “self-serving interests of any individual, however highly placed” was a clear call for discipline and unity—not a personal attack but a strategic warning.

    From the APC perspective, the lesson of 2023 is not that the Southeast was wrong to aspire, but that aspiration must be sequenced. Supporting Tinubu to complete an eight-year tenure is presented as bridge-building—a way of earning trust, influence, and goodwill that can later support a credible Southeast presidential bid. Politics, as several speakers emphasised, is give-and-take, not winner-takes-all.

    The statistics cited at the meeting were meant to reinforce this sense of momentum. Since 2023, the APC’s footprint in the Southeast has expanded significantly: three governors instead of two, increased representation in the Senate and the House of Representatives, and greater control over state assemblies and local councils. These shifts suggest that the political class in the Southeast is already recalibrating, gravitating towards a platform perceived as viable and nationally competitive.

    As Uzodimma bluntly put it, “No serious politician joins an unpopular party.” Each defection, he argued, brings with it thousands of grassroots supporters. The task ahead is to consolidate this elite consensus into popular support by 2027, ensuring that the growth recorded at the top is reflected at the ballot box.

    Deputy Speaker Benjamin Kalu captured the strategic thrust of the meeting when he urged leaders to abandon sentimental politics in favour of numbers-based alliances. In his view, relevance at the centre is restored not by isolation but by participation in dominant coalitions. Increased national revenue and improved federal allocations to Southeast states under the current administration, he argued, are early indicators of what alignment can achieve.

    Equally important was the economic argument advanced by the APC leadership. Tinubu’s reforms—currency unification, subsidy removal, and fiscal restructuring—were defended as difficult but necessary corrections to decades of distortion.

    While acknowledging short-term pain, party leaders insisted that the stabilisation of the naira, improvements in security, revival of infrastructure, and initiatives such as the student loan scheme represent foundations for long-term growth. Denying Tinubu a second term, they argued, would interrupt reforms whose benefits are only beginning to crystallise.

    The Enugu communiqué, with its emphatic language and collective resolve, was designed to send a message beyond the Southeast. It declared that the region is ready to negotiate its place in Nigeria from within the mainstream, not from the sidelines. By pledging to mobilise “massive bloc votes” for Tinubu in 2027, Southeast APC leaders signalled a willingness to back words with numbers—the ultimate currency in Nigerian politics.

    Ultimately, the significance of the Enugu meeting lies in its realism. It acknowledges past errors without self-flagellation, recognises present opportunities without illusion, and outlines a future anchored on strategic alignment. Rather than dismissing popular sentiment, the APC’s challenge is to channel it—convincing voters that proximity to power, not perpetual opposition, offers the Southeast its best chance at equity.

    In endorsing Tinubu, the Southeast APC leadership has chosen the path of engagement over estrangement. Whether this gamble pays off will depend on execution, trust-building, and tangible outcomes. But one thing is clear: the region has signalled that it no longer wants to be a spectator in Nigeria’s power game. In 2027, the Southeast intends to be counted—not merely as a moral voice, but as a strategic player in the national equation.

  • Southeast APC wants review of NASS positions zoning

    •Says Igbo deserve more rewards
    •Kalu calls for sanctions against leaders indicted for anti-party activities

    Stakeholders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Southeast yesterday told the leadership of the party that the zone deserves more rewards than the APC’s subsisting zoning of principal offices in the 9th National Assembly is offering.

    They asked that the present arrangement be reviewed in a more equitable manner that would accord more deserving positions to the Southeast.

    The APC Southeast leaders in a communiqué at the end of a  meeting in Enugu urged the national leadership of the party to draw strength from the need “to utilize the zoning of principal offices in the 9th National Assembly to further deepen and strengthen the electoral appeal of the party, especially in parts of the country where it may be considered as weak.”

    A former governor of Abia State, Dr. Orji Kalu, speaking at the meeting, called for sanctions against APC leaders from the zone who allegedly negotiated 25% for President Muhammadu Buhari from the Southeast in the last presidential election.

    In the communiqué read by APC national vice chairman, Southeast, Emma Eneukwu, the party stakeholders said that since democracy is a dynamic process, the party should remain a truly national political party with broad based support in all parts of the country, the Southeast inclusive.

    The stakeholders deplored in strong terms, what they called “the undue interference and unwholesome meddlesomeness by forces by forces from outside the zone in the affairs of the Southeast of our great party aimed at factionalising and destabilizing the party in the zone.”

    Present at the meeting were Science and Technology Minister Ogbonnaya Onu; Labour and Employment Minister  Chris Ngige; Director General of the Voice of Nigeria (VON), Osita Okechukwu; Nkeiru Onyejeocha and Chile Okafor both aspirants to the Speakership of the House of Representatives.

    Others include Senator Chris Adighije, Dr. Orji Kalu, Chief Uche Ogah, General J. O. J. Okoloagu (rtd), Dr Emeka Worgu, and a host of others.

    The stakeholders at the end set up a contact (lobby) committee to reach out to other zones of the country with regards to their demand.

    The committee is headed by Dr Ogbonnaya Onu with Dr. Ngige, Geoffrey Onyeama, Azubuike Udah, Senator Chris Nwankwo, Mrs Ugo Okoye and Austin Chukwukere as members

    A reconciliation committee was also set up to be headed by Emeka Worgu while Sunny Onyeukwu would serve as secretary.

  • Southeast APC gets reconciliation committee

    The All Progressives Congress has set up a Peace and Reconciliation Committee for Imo State and the Southeast, following grievances resulting from its National Convention.

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha spoke in Owerri yesterday when APC supporters visited the Government House to congratulate him for a successful outing at the National Convention.

    He said: “The essence is to ensure that peace returns to the party in the Southeast and Imo in particular.

    “The Southeast APC Peace and Reconciliation Committee is headed by Senator Emmanuel Agboti from Ebonyi State, while the Imo State committee is headed by Prince Macdonald Akano.”

    Okorocha added that there would be a Mega Victory Rally in Owerri. The rally, tagged: “Southeast for Buhari”, is aimed at “redirecting the mindset of Ndigbo in the current political dispensation to join the national ideology,” he said.

    He added: “This rally will be attended by many governors, with Secretary to the Government of the Federation as a representative of the President. The idea is to promote the ideals of what President Buhari stands for, and to ensure that the Igbo are not left out again. It is also to rebuild all broken bridges between the north and west and position Ndigbo better.

    “I also assure the people that the party’s leadership will look into the aborted State Congresses that there will be fresh congresses as soon as possible. That will now stabilise our party and get us ready for elections.

    “I thank Imolites who have remained calm in the face of provocations and insults. The victory is for all of us.”

    “The local government elections will still go on as scheduled and I hope everyone will participate, and the exercise will be credible.”

  • Southeast APC gets reconciliation committee

    The All Progressives Congress has set up a Peace and Reconciliation Committee for Imo State and the Southeast, following grievances resulting from its National Convention.

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha spoke in Owerri yesterday when APC supporters visited the Government House to congratulate him for a successful outing at the National Convention.

    He said: “The essence is to ensure that peace returns to the party in the Southeast and Imo in particular.

    “The Southeast APC Peace and Reconciliation Committee is headed by Senator Emmanuel Agboti from Ebonyi State, while the Imo State committee is headed by Prince Macdonald Akano.”

    Okorocha added that there would be a Mega Victory Rally in Owerri. The rally, tagged: “Southeast for Buhari”, is aimed at “redirecting the mindset of Ndigbo in the current political dispensation to join the national ideology,” he said.

    He added: “This rally will be attended by many governors, with Secretary to the Government of the Federation as a representative of the President. The idea is to promote the ideals of what President Buhari stands for, and to ensure that the Igbo are not left out again. It is also to rebuild all broken bridges between the north and west and position Ndigbo better.

    “I also assure the people that the party’s leadership will look into the aborted State Congresses that there will be fresh congresses as soon as possible. That will now stabilise our party and get us ready for elections.

    “I thank Imolites who have remained calm in the face of provocations and insults. The victory is for all of us.”

    “The local government elections will still go on as scheduled and I hope everyone will participate, and the exercise will be credible.”

  • Southeast APC in disarray ahead of convention

    There are indications that the three National Working Committee (NWC) members from the Southeast who were recently endorsed at a meeting of party leaders in Abuja may lose out in the ongoing realignment of forces, as majority of party members from the region are said to be unhappy with the manner of their adoption. TONY AKOWE reports that contestants are intensifying their lobby for their inclusion in the so-called Unity List.

    Barring any last-minute change of plans, many members of the National Working Committee of the All Progressives Congress (APC) may not find their way back to the party leadership. Various interest groups within the fold are lobbying for their candidates to be included in the “unity list” being worked on by party leaders.

    A highly-placed source, who was privy to what transpired at last week’s meeting between the APC governors and President Muhammadu Buhari, said the meeting agreed that steps be taken to ensure a rancour free convention and the governors were mandated to go back home and meet with stakeholders from their zones with a view to coming up with a “unity list” that will be adopted at the convention.

    It was reliably gathered that the three NWC members from the Southeast who were recently endorsed at a meeting of party leaders in Abuja may lose out in the ongoing realignment of forces, as majority of party members from the area are said to be unhappy with the manner of adoption.

    At a meeting at the Ladi Kwai Hall in Abuja recently, former Abia State Governor, Orji Uzor Kalu announced that they have decided to return Senator Osita Izunaso, Chief George Moghalu and Chief Emma Eneukwu as National Organising Secretary, National Auditor and National Vice Chairman (Southeast) respectively.

    The three outgoing NWC members are currently in the race to return to their various positions, which The Nation gathered is being hotly contested by equally strong candidates from their states.

    But a highly dependable source close to the party said some of the leaders who attended the meeting are not happy that they were tricked into coming for the meeting to endorse some candidate.

    He said the lobby for inclusion in the unity list is more intense in the Southeast, where some party stakeholders have already adopted the three members of the NWC from the zone for re-election.

    But, the source who attended the meeting of the Southeast APC leaders in Abuja however dismissed the endorsement, saying the information given to the world about what transpired during the meeting which he said was poorly attended was different from what the former Abia governor told the world.

    He said: “The meeting was very stormy. Many people believe that such an important meeting of the zone should have taken place at the zonal headquarters, which is Enugu. The meeting was hurriedly put together and this informed the poor attendance of stakeholders from the Southeast.

    “Former Senate President, Ken Nnamani, who attended the meeting, left midway into the proceedings. He did not know the agenda of the meeting before coming and when he knew what they were up to; he left the meeting. He is not in support of the decision to adopt anybody, because he has his own preferences.

    “Rochas is the only APC governor in the Southeast for now. Whether you like him or not, there is no way you can hold such an important meeting without his knowledge and you expect the decision from that meeting to be binding. You are journalist; go and find out the details of what happened at the meeting where the three NWC members from the Southeast were supposedly endorsed.

    “There was a reason why that meeting was called at a very short notice, so that reason was to force through the supposed endorsement of those officers. One interesting thing about that meeting was that several people indicated their interest to vie for the offices.

    “They discovered that if the states were allowed to decide the fate of these NWC members, none of them will come back. That is why they rushed that endorsement on the argument that the NWC positions were not state, but national, positions.”

    The source said power brokers from the south east opposed to the return of the three members are already pushing for other candidates from their states to step into their shoes.

    The source said: “We are pushing for people like Hon. Chukwuemeka Nwogbo and Oyebuchi Nnamani to take over from George Moghalu and Emma Eneukwu as National Auditor and National Vice Chairman, South East respectively.”

    Another group which called itself the Chuba Okadigbo Rainbow Organization is asking President Buhari to honour the memory of his late running mate, Chuba Okadigbo, by including one of his strong supporters, Hon. Chidi Nwogu, in the unity list for the office of the National Organising Secretary.

    The source said one of the things working against Senator Izunaso’s return as National Organising Secretary is his running battle with Governor Okorocha and the fact that President Buhari has shown interest in Hon. Chidi Nwogu from Imo State, another candidate who was a former member of the House of Representatives for the office of the National Organising Secretary.

    For Moghalu, his dilemma is believed to stem from his previous decision to run for the governorship of Anambra State, by resigning from office to achieve that. But, he returned to NWC when he failed to secure the party ticket.

    The source said: “We are not happy that after resigning, he returned to the same office, because he did not secure the party ticket. The party constitution did not provide for that and we believe that having resigned, that position is vacant. So, the question of returning him does not arise, because as far as we are concerned, he is not a member of the NWC any longer.

    “We also expect him to follow the part of honour just like Engr. Segun Oni did. You remember that Oni resigned as Deputy National Chairman (South) to contest the governorship of Ekiti State. When he failed to secure the ticket, he did not return to that office and he is not contesting any position in the NWC.”

    He believes that Hon. Nwogbo who also hails from Anambra State stands a chance of succeeding Moghalu as the National Auditor of the party, given his requisite experience as a former member of the 7th House of Representatives amongst other credentials.

    He said most leaders of the party from the Southeast have also thrown their weight behind Nwogbo.

    The source said that although majority of party stakeholders from the Southeast believe that Governor Okorocha has not done much to help the fortunes of the party in the region and that they are not confident in the ability of the three current NWC members from the zone to represent them anymore.

    He added: “We have decided that we don’t want any of them. We are not taking away their right to contest. But they should not be forced on us. We have decided on those we want to represent us and are working to get them into the unity list.”

    Other NWC members who may not make it back to the Leadership include the National Youth Leader, Ibrahim Waziri Jalo, who is not recontesting, because he is gunning for the governorship ticket of the party in Gombe State; and National Legal Adviser who is believed to have also decided not to recontest.

    Others are National Woman Leader, Hajia Ramatu Aliyu and National Treasurer, Mohammad Gwagwawa, who are believed not to have received the backing of their state governors.

    While Gwagwawa is a staunch supporter of former Kano State governor, Senator Rabiu Musa Kwakwanso who has been having a running battle with his former deputy and now governor, Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, Hajia Ramatu is said to have lost the confidence of Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello, because she was nominated for the job by the late Prince Abubakar Audu.

  • Southeast APC seeks more appointments

    The Southeast caucus of the All Progressives Congress (APC) rose from its meeting yesterday with a call on President Muhammadu Buhari to give more appointments to the region.

    The party also advised regional agitators to embrace dialogue through their representatives in government with the Federal Government.

    It said: “This, we believe, will help achieve the desired goal under a very peaceful atmosphere. Nothing compares with dialogue as a conflict resolution strategy.”

    The meeting was convened and chaired by the region’s National Vice Chairman of the party, Emma Eneukwu.

    It was attended by the Minister of Science and Technology, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu; newly sworn-in Senator Ben Uwajumogu; National Organising Secretary, Senator Osita Izunaso; National Auditor, Chief George Moghalu and Board of Trustees (BoT) member, Mrs. V. N. Chukwuani, who represented Southeast women.

    Others included: Senators Ifeanyi Ararume, Chris Nwankwo, Fide Okoro, Anthony Agbo and other national officers of the party from the region, prominent party leaders, former APC National Assembly members, among others.

    A communiqué issued at the end of the meeting reads:

    “We reiterate our zone’s implicit confidence in the ability of the Federal Government under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari to return Nigeria on the path of economic growth, soonest. We know that the current recession in the country is a product of years of planlessness, reckless spending and massive looting of our common resources. We, therefore, appeal for patience to all Nigerians, particularly Ndi Igbo, and support President Buhari as he takes the country to the Promised Land.

    “The APC Southeast commends the Federal Government for releasing funds to contractors to reconstruct the Enugu-Onitsha and Enugu-Port Harcourt highways. The roads, which were abandoned for over 16 years, are death traps to commuters plying them. We hereby call on the contractors to …complete the jobs on schedule. We shall constitute a committee to monitor the execution of the projects…”