Tag: ADC

  • Presidency slams ADC over criticism of Buhari’s state burial

    Presidency slams ADC over criticism of Buhari’s state burial

    The Presidency has rebuked the African Democratic Congress (ADC) for its criticism of the state burial accorded former President Muhammadu Buhari.

    ‎In a strongly worded statement issued in Abuja, Sunday Dare, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Public Communications, described ADC’s criticism as “opportunistic, dishonest and politically desperate.”

    ‎“The latest outburst from the African Democratic Congress (ADC) regarding former President Buhari’s state burial is nothing but an opportunistic exercise in manufactured outrage.

    ‎”It’s a laughable tantrum by a poorly amalgamated political contraption desperately clutching at straws for relevance it will never attain.

    ‎”This is not the first time the ADC, in its pitiful, stuttering attempts at reinvention, has embarrassed itself with hollow, attention-seeking criticisms and press releases,” Dare said.

    ‎The ADC had accused the Tinubu administration of politicising Buhari’s death, a claim the presidency strongly rejected.

    ‎It argued that the ADC, not the government, was the one seeking political mileage from Buhari’s passing.

    ‎”Let it be said clearly: the ADC is the one exploiting Buhari’s death for political attention, not this government.

    ”They have chosen to dance on his grave for relevance.

    ‎”From Atiku and El-Rufai’s choreographed arrival in Daura, greeted with chants seeking to make political capital from the solemnity of the moment, to this disgraceful press statement, the ADC has shown itself to be utterly shameless.

    ‎”For clarity, President Tinubu’s administration is neither desperate nor searching for cheap popularity,” Dare said.

    He emphasised that Buhari’s burial was dignified, honourable, and drew both national and global attention.

    ‎“World leaders showed up, millions tuned in, and even ADC promoters pranced around Daura like eager real estate agents,” Dare added.

    ‎He also highlighted key achievements under President Tinubu, including economic recovery and infrastructure development.

    ‎Major milestones listed included stabilised currency, increased oil output, and revitalised state finances through improved FAAC allocations.

    ‎The rollout of the student loan scheme was also cited as a sign of reform-focused governance.

    He added: ‎”These are not press statements. These are results. Tangible, measurable, and ongoing.

    ” That is leadership. What does the ADC offer Nigerians beyond sanctimonious whining?”

    ‎He questioned the ADC’s relevance, describing it as a party riddled with internal crises and legal confusion.

    ‎Dare reaffirmed the administration’s commitment to the Renewed Hope Agenda, refusing to dignify what he called “political scavengers.”

    ‎He urged Nigerians to ignore what he called the noise from a party “gasping for attention.”

  • Former APC chairman gets ADC membership card

    Former APC chairman gets ADC membership card

    Chief John Odigie, the former national chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), on Tuesday obtained his membership card of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) in Benin City where he registered as a member.

    The chairman of the Edo State chapter, Kennedy Odion while presenting the card to him said Oyegun isn’t new to formation of political coalitions.

    The state chairman referenced Oyegun’s involvement with the formation of a coalition that led. to the emergence of the APC in 2013.

    “He has put together what is called a coalition before, and he succeeded. So, in mathematics, once you understand the formula, the answer is in view. So, he understands how he did it before, so doing it again is not a difficult task.

    “So as God may have it, he is not from any other state but from the heartbeat of this nation, Edo State and we are moving the coalition together.

    “He was the chairman of the implementation committee that decided that ADC would be the platform,” Odion said.

    Responding, Oyegun said there was extensive consultations among stakeholders before settling for the ADC, stressing that the ADC has the interest of Nigerians at heart.

    “We talked to a lot of parties, about seven of them. Up till the very last minute. We made a report and we said ADC. And some said, ‘No, no, no, you must still talk to this, you must still talk to that.’

    “So, we delayed the decision for another fortnight. At the end of our meeting, we still came back. I said, ‘yes, what you ask us to do, we have done. We have talked to the others, but we have not seen a party as dedicated as the ADC,” Oyegun said.

    The former APC national chairman blamed the ruling party for the economic hardship an worsening insecurity in the country.

    According to him, Nigeria has never been so divided as it is under the President Bola Tinubu’s administration.

  • 2027 poll: ADC/COP’s northern presidential gambit – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    2027 poll: ADC/COP’s northern presidential gambit – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Among the big political parties in the race for the 2027 General Election, only the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) has endorsed a sole presidential candidate in President Bola Tinubu who, also, is currently the only candidate representing Southern Nigeria in the election.

    But for his rolling-stone rhetoric, and crisis in his platform, the 2027 ticket for former Anambra State Governor Peter Obi would’ve been cast in stone by now under the Labour Party (LP), which he used to ply his momentous candidacy from Southern Nigeria in 2023.

    Obi’s romance with the Coalition of Opposition Politicians (COP) – which’s adopted the African Democratic Congress (ADC) as the special purpose vehicle (SPV) to challenge President Tinubu’s re-election bid – has left him virtually roaming in the political wilderness.

    As for ex-Rivers State Governor and former Minister of Transportation, Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, his aspiration had more traction in 2023, when he placed a distant second to Tinubu at the primary, than in 2027. Having no visible structure to his name, his undisguised animus towards Tinubu is propelling his Southern bid that may land him the running mate slot, or left disappointed entirely!

    Being a first-term president, Tinubu’s the privilege to declare early his interest in re-election by exploiting his “Right Of First Refusal (ROFR).” But without much ado, he’s gotten a “first shot” at the presidency for a second term, courtesy of all organs of the APC at federal, state, local government and ward levels, the governors, lawmakers and other stakeholders of the party across Nigeria.

    It’s strategic, though, that the President’s received a reprieve from going into a gruelling and potential-for-crisis primary election, as he and his administration face severe economic and security headwinds amidst threats by the COP to terminate his government in 2027.

    To achieve the opposition’s goal to throw Tinubu out of Aso Rock Presidential Villa, Abuja, and sack the APC from the governance of Nigeria, the ADC’s declared the collapse of its structures, to enable the former Vice President Atiku Abubakar-powered and led coalition leadership to drive the process towards 2027.

    Ahead of the make-or-mar presidential contest, the wave-making ADC needs the tact, discipline, transparency and Solomonic wisdom to pick its flagbearer among highly-ambitious, and fiercely-individualistic contenders, who see themselves as unmatched for the job.

    They include thrice presidential candidate, Alhaji Abubakar; Messrs Obi and Amaechi; and former Kaduna State Governor and ex-Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai.

    It’s uncertain if former Senate President and ex-Kwara Governor Bukola Saraki; former Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Mallam Abubakar Malami, and other aspirants lurking in the shadows are in the running for president.

    The presumption in political circles is that whoever the ADC picks as its presidential candidate will automatically become the standard bearer of the COP that faces scrutiny if truly it’s a coalition, or a gathering of disparate politicians looking to bolster their chances to gain the ticket, failing which they’ll revert to their mother platforms to run for president. This explains why some of the gladiators in the COP are hedging to defect to, and register as members of the ADC.

    So, how do the opposition politicians tackle the daunting task of selecting, from among them, the candidate to face President Tinubu – a familiar but formidable foe, who defeated Atiku of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and Obi to second and third positions, respectively, in the February 25, 2023 presidential election?

    At this juncture in the race for 2027, going solo, as Atiku and Obi did in 2023, may result in a similar outcome: Tinubu wins the election, and leaves Atiku and Obi to lick their wounds, and blame alleged “electoral malpractice” for the avoidable wrong choice of running on separate tickets.

    Whereas in 2023, Atiku and Obi singly scored 6.9m votes and 6.1m votes, and each failed the election; had they contested on a joint ticket, their combined total of over 13m votes – a margin of lead of 5m votes – would be enough to overwhelm the 8.7m votes secured by Tinubu, and give them the Presidency on May 29, 2023.

    The BIG QUESTION is: Can Atiku and Obi bury their individual ambition, and the one step down for the other as the presidential candidate in 2027? It’s doubtful due to a number of factors, principally the “unwritten” rotation of the Presidency between the North and South of Nigeria every eight years since the return of democracy in 1999.

    Southern Nigeria kicked off the rotation in 1999 via former Head of State, retired Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo of the PDP, who handed over in 2007 to President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, who died three years after in 2010, with his successor, then-Vice Goodluck Jonathan, contesting and winning the 2011 poll under the PDP.

    Dr Jonathan’s presidency “distorted” the swinging rotation of power between the North and South. Had he allowed a northerner to complete the four years (2011 to 2015) remaining in Yar’Adua’s eight-year tenure, there wouldn’t be talk, till date, about the “South shortchanging the North of its presidency.”

    The question remains which party supports rotation of the presidency at any tenure? Whenever they’re out of power, the opposition parties don’t recognise rotation, and aren’t on the same page with the ruling party, thus creating a wiggle room to circumvent zoning at every election cycle!

    For instance, between 2015 and 2023, it’s presumed that the APC – which won the 2015 presidential poll through retired ex-Head of State, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari – was representing the Northern bloc’s rotation of the presidency, and would return power to the South after Buhari’s eight-year tenure.

    Hence no major party fielded a candidate from the South to mount a challenge to Buhari’s presidency. But the opposition PDP, via Atiku, a northerner, rubbished the rotation principle, and dared the APC and LP that presented Southern candidates for the 2023 poll.

    For 2027, the opposition and Atiku are again poised to confront the APC and Tinubu. So, Atiku or any other Northern opposition candidate winning the election would abridge the 2023 return of power to Southern Nigeria, and further distort the rotation between the North and South.

    This is the dilemma that might burden especially a section of the ADC and the coalition in picking their presidential candidate for 2027. For starters, Atiku – floating the COP and leading the members to the ADC – has one objective: to clinch the ticket, and meet Tinubu at the poll!

    This qualifies to label the ADC as “Atiku Democratic Congress” (my copyright (c)) with several things already going for him in the platform, including the choice of “indirect primaries” to pick the candidates for elective offices; and PDP members dissolving into the ADC, reportedly starting in Atiku’s North-East zone stronghold.

    Looking at the presidential materials in the ADC/COP, none can defeat an “old warhorse” Atiku where the language of the game is availability of nationwide structures, and deployment of Naira and hard currencies to woo the “beautiful-bride-delegates.”

    If Atiku gets the ADC/COP ticket, it’ll leave the Southern aspirants, including Obi and Amaechi, in limbo, and may spur an unending crisis going into the 2027 poll. But there’re two possible mitigating factors: All the ADC/COP aspirants support Atiku’s candidacy; and Atiku picks Obi or Amaechi as running mate.

    Yet, neither of the choices is a problem solver, as Southern voters, and supporters of those denied the ticket – particularly the “Obidients” who propelled a “politically-structureless” Obi to the third position in the 2023 presidential contest – may revolt against the ADC/COP and Atiku in 2027.

    In a worst-case scenario, Obi may jettison the coalition – as he did in 2023 when he ditched the PDP – and fall back on the LP for his presidential bid, which his ardent supporters vow is “non-negotiable,” even as some want him to accept pairing, as running mate, to any Northern candidate “so long as it will lead to removing Tinubu and the APC from power in 2027.”

    Will Obi accept to be a running mate, or stand only for the top position? As of now, he’s neither here nor there. He’s ambivalent in statements and interviews on the issue. Below are his responses to quizzing on his 2027 aspiration and the platform to realise the dream. He apppeared on Channels TV’s ‘Sunday Politics’ on July 6, 2025:

    On running only for president, Obi said: “I’m going to contest for the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, and I believe I am qualified for it (the position).”

    On being a running mate to Atiku in 2027, Obi said: “This is not in play; nobody has ever discussed that (with me). People assume so many things. Nobody has ever discussed with me whether I am going to be A or B or C. I am part of the coalition which will be able to produce a president with the capacity and compassion to save this country.”

    On leaving the LP, Obi said: “Where we are now, the coalition might have other parties that will come together, like it did in the past and change the name of the party. But right now, we have adopted one party. The other ones are coming in; so, we cannot say we are going to leave or stay but what is constant now is that we have all agreed to work together.”

    And on if he’s joined the ADC, Obi said: “Today, I remain in the Labour Party, but we have all agreed to work in coalition for the 2027 elections. For that, we have adopted the ADC, but as we grow, other parties and individuals will still come on board. What we did was the unveiling, but we are still going to bring other people and individuals under the same umbrella. For now, we want a better country for everybody.”

    It remains the same scratchy-and-patchy affair for Southern Nigeria in the opposition camp! Will the aspirants, particularly Obi, diss rotation of the presidency between the North and South, and settle for the vice presidential slot to a Northern candidate in 2027? That answer is blowing in the wind!

    Mr Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria. Can be reached on X, Threads, Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp @EhichioyaEzomon. Tel: 08033078357.

  • 2027: Stop heating up polity – APC chieftain warns coalition leaders

    2027: Stop heating up polity – APC chieftain warns coalition leaders

    Mr Olatunbosun Oyintiloye, a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun, has warned opposition political leaders to stop heating up the polity ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    Oyintiloye, a member of the defunct Presidential Campaign Council (PCC), gave the warning while addressing newsmen on Sunday in Osogbo.

    The APC chieftain said that the utterances and actions of opposition leaders had started causing unnecessary tension across the country.

    Oyintiloye said that while the general elections were still almost two years away, the tension being generated in the country was becoming worrisome.

    Specifically, Oyintiloye said that a statement credited to former Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, calling for violent protest for a change of government ahead of the elections was unpatriotic.

    He said that what the country needed at this point in time was to consolidate on the gains of democracy and address agitations that could lead to unrest.

    Oyintiloye said that while coalition was not a new in any democratic setting, using the platform to set citizens against the government ahead of the general elections should not be tolerated.

    According to him, many coalition leaders are hungry for power and are ready to get it at all costs, not minding the negative implications on the country.

    Oyintiloye, a former lawmaker, said that although the country was yet to reach its desired destination, President Bola Tinubu had made significant changes to reposition the country.

    “We don’t have any other country except Nigeria, and it would be unwise to destroy it with our utterances and actions due to power hunger.

    “What the country need now is patriotic leaders who can work together to build a better future, peace and stability,” he said.

    He urged opposition leaders to support the President in moving the country forward and stop causing unnecessary tension.

  • ADC messiahs owe Nigerians apologies for 2014 lies – By Ikeddy Isiguzo

    ADC messiahs owe Nigerians apologies for 2014 lies – By Ikeddy Isiguzo

    By Ikeddy ISIGUZO

    NIGERIAN politics thrives on a moral deficit. Do you agree? So, why do you still agree that there are lines that must never be crossed? Why are you pained by the lies politicians heap on you on their way to power? They are at it again.

    With nearly two years to the next elections, they have started unleashing their lies about their love for Nigeria. They are latest patriots to rescue Nigerians from the hardship that the same fellows imposed on the country with uncaring policies that saw all sides of Nigerian life decline to unimaged depths.

    Is there any name they did not call Goodluck Jonathan? What story did they not tell about Nigeria collapsing unless they were allowed to assume control?

    They are back to seek rehabilitation as they have lost their hold on power. They cannot live outside power.

    Truth is not permitted here, is a line that fits with most politicians. In rare cases of momentary forgetfulness, semblance of truth seeps out to the annoyance of those who believe they have all tracks covered.

    Ask today’s messiahs who have found shed in the African Democratic Congress, ADC, what suddenly made the All Progressives Congress, APC, unfit for their membership. Almost all those in ADC are haunted by the lies they told Nigerians in 2014. They need bigger lies to cover them. They told lies, they knew they were lies. They deceived gullible Nigerians into handing our country to power mongers.

    Which of them is willing to admit his role in getting Nigeria to where we do not know? They join us in complaining about insecurity, hunger, hardship, poverty, that are roaming all over the land. Could that be their apology? Like in 2014 when they spewed lies everywhere for the 2015 elections, they have started much earlier this time.

    Alhaji Abubakar Atiku propelled APC to prominence in 2015. He was leading to the podium for the party’s ticket when Muhammadu Buhari beat him to it. Atiku relocated to Dubai to count his losses, unavailable to provide critical leadership until he returned to contest in 2019 as presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP,  the same party he abandoned because Jonathan, a sitting president would not be cast aside for Atiku.

    Has Atiku apologised to Nigerians for his part in Nigeria’s precipitous descent to harm? His obsession with being president leaves no room for Atiku to consider how his ambition has affected Nigeria since his on-and-off affiliations with PDP since 2007.

    If ADC is to retrieve whatever is left of Nigeria, should Atiku be waiting to be asked to step down in 2027? He is already campaigning that delegates should decide ADC’s presidential candidate.

    One of the arguments in 2015 was that the North needed to complete its eight years that Umaru Musa Yar’Adua’s death abbreviated. Does Atiku remember that? Is he the one to complete the 2027-31 four-year stretch for the South?

    There is Nasir el-Rufai who cannot stand discussions that do not recognise the primacy of cattle over human beings or any security plans that include getting Fulani herders out of the forests and farmers. He supported and campaigned for Tinubu’s victory, our current plight. If Tinubu had appointed him a Minister, would he be in ADC?

    Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi shredded the Governors Forum, he once led, to mark the exodus of PDP Governors to APC, some of those who remained in PDP were dangerous insiders. His expectation was that Buhari would have rewarded his loyalty in 2023 with the APC presidential ticket. He wants to save Nigerians from Tinubu?

    And have you ever wondered what Peter Obi is doing in that crowd? Is he not seeing the signs that ADC is not the coalition to rescue Nigerian? Obi ran with Atiku in 2019 but Obi’s politics should be more elevated than this type of coalition.

    There are others, but these are the most prominent figures in ADC. If you watch, they are consumed with who will be President. They have no document to bring our country back to relevance, save our people from rampaging terrorists in our forests, farms. Tinubu, in rare moments, gives every excuse for not tackling the criminals frontally.

    When we think of voting Tinubu out in 2027, it is not to replace him with those whose selfishness sees them flinging the interest of Nigerians around for them to access power as they have done since 2015.

    In 2019, like now, Tinubu’s government is insensitive, inattentive, uncaring, unprepared to attends to the daily challenges before Nigerians. Nigerians still voted APC because of the weight of the lies they were told by many of the APC messiahs.

    Tinubu, his government, his officials are lethargic. They are short of blaming Nigerians for the state of the country. They could be right.

    After eight years of Buhari blighted Nigeria in ways that left the country beyond recognition, Nigerians gleefully voted for a worse version of Buhari.

    Tinubu is jittery, desperate and will do all he can to cling to power. His admirers say he is a strategist. His strategies leave Nigerians poorer, hungrier, more insecure, driving thousands abroad – abroad now means any country but Nigeria – at the slightest imagined opportunity.

    A coalition of Nigerians who are passionate about the health of our country is required to lead Nigerians out of the current miasma. The present pretenders to that role would have to explain to Nigerians why the lies, hatred, bigotry, and propaganda that they procured in 2015 to sink a government that was by far better than anything that they have supported in the past 10 years.

    Not apologising to Nigerians before assuming they are the new ideal is the sort of arrogance that should have no place in post-Tinubu Nigeria.

    Finally…

    WE heard what Vice President Kashim Shettima said about the fact, constitutional too, that the President cannot remove an elected Councillor not to talk of a Governor. We also understood what he meant.

    Those who understood that to mean that Bola Ahmed Tinubu was wrong to remove Governor Sim Fubara are also right. I have seen a rejoinder from State House which laboured to get people to re-learn, and un-learn how President Goodluck Jonathan did not remove Shettima, as Governor of Borno State in 2014 through state of emergency.

    Why is State House ever scared of history? Shettima’s remarks were at the presenation of “OPL 245: The Inside Story of the $1.3 Billion Oil Block” by Mohammed Bello Adoke, SAN, which held at the Yar’Adua Centre, Abuja, on Thursday, 10 July 2025.

    DONALD Trump, US President, is unaware of very basic things, among them, that Liberia, which was established as a colony for ex-slaves from the US, is an English-speaking country, hence his remark that the President of Liberia speaks “good English”. Obviously, Trump reached his decision too quickly. He should have waited to hear Tinubu’s Chicagoan accent.

    JAMB has spent years praising the efficiency of its systems. The fidelity of the systems is coming under another scrutiny in a matter of months. The highest scorer in JAMB’s just chaotically concluded exam is reportedly a Nigerian university undergraduate. How did he sit for JAMB which claims “nobody can matriculate twice”? The best answer from JAMB is a speculation that he could be a mercenary who wrote the exam for another candidate.

    Isiguzo is a major commentator on minor issues

  • ADC opposition coalition welcomed – Gbajabiamila

    ADC opposition coalition welcomed – Gbajabiamila

    Chief of Staff to President Bola Tinubu, Mr Femi Gbajabiamila, has welcomed the adoption of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) by opposition leaders.

    He described the development as a healthy sign for democracy and a move that could promote broader political engagement across Nigeria’s multi-party system.

    Gbajabiamila stated this on Saturday during the Local Government Area Councilorship and Chairmanship election in Surulere, Lagos State.

    He spoke shortly after casting his vote at Elizabeth Fowler Memorial Primary School, one of the designated polling units in the local government.

    According to him, a functioning democracy must accommodate opposition voices to prevent the risk of reverting to a one-party system.

    He emphasised that the strength of any democracy lies in vibrant and credible opposition that can hold the ruling party accountable.

    “There has to be some level of opposition in a democracy,” Gbajabiamila told reporters while fielding questions after voting.

    He noted that without checks and balance, democracy could easily slip into authoritarianism, which would undermine public trust in governance.

    Gbajabiamila, however, expressed scepticism about the future and effectiveness of the coalition formed around the ADC.

    “However, for whatever the coalition is worth, I am not sure where it will go — that is, if it will go anywhere,” he said.

    In spite of his doubts, he reiterated that the presence of alternative voices in the political space was important for national progress and political maturity.

    The former Speaker of the House of Representatives also commended the peaceful conduct of the local government elections in Surulere.

    He encouraged Nigerians to actively participate in the democratic process, noting that grassroots elections were key to good governance at the local level.

    Gbajabiamila urged all political actors to place national interest above personal ambition and promote unity, regardless of party affiliations.

    Local government autonomy still in progress – Gbajabiamila

    In addition, Gbajabiamila said local government autonomy is still being perfected for full implementation.

    Gbajabiamila stated this on Saturday after casting his vote during the Lagos State council elections held on Saturday.

    The chief of staff voted at his ward, Elizabeth Fowler Memorial Primary School, Surulere, Lagos.

    He said the Supreme Court’s ruling on local government autonomy was widely welcomed across Nigeria and represented a major step forward for grassroots governance.

    “The challenge lies in execution and implementation. I believe that, in time, we will achieve full local government autonomy,” he said.

    Gbajabiamila stressed that effective grassroots governance was impossible without full autonomy at the local government level.

    “That’s what we’re working towards. The Supreme Court’s pronouncement is law. In time, autonomy will be fully realised,” he added.

    He, however, expressed concern about low voter turnout across the 20 local government areas and 37 local council development areas in Lagos.

    “There is generally low turnout so far, perhaps because many do not understand the importance of local government elections.

    “In some countries, this level of election is even more important than others. We must sensitise and educate our people more,” he urged.

    He commended the peaceful nature of the election, noting there were no incidents or disruptions during voting across the areas visited.

    “The election has been peaceful, free, fair and calm — and that’s what we all desire in any democratic process,” he stated.

    Gbajabiamila praised Surulere LGA Chairman, Mr Sulaiman Bamidele, for his developmental efforts and encouraged him to build on the progress made.

    “I hope he wins. He must double his efforts and work even harder for the people,” he advised.

    He noted that local government remains the closest tier of governance to the people and deserves capable leadership.

    “He has done well within his limited resources. I believe he will perform even better going forward,” he said.

  • Lagos LG election: Why we fielded candidates in only 20 LGAs – ADC

    Lagos LG election: Why we fielded candidates in only 20 LGAs – ADC

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

    The Lagos State Independent Election Commission (LASIEC) is conducting election in the 20 LGAs and 37 local council development a in the state.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • We’re not interested in truncating democracy – ADC

    We’re not interested in truncating democracy – ADC

    The African Democratic Congress (ADC) says it is not interested in truncating Nigeria’s democracy.

    It said its mission was to rescue power from the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) through democratic means.

    Interim National Publicity Secretary of ADC, Bolaji Abdullahi, stated this in statement on Thursday in Abuja.

    Abdullahi was reacting to a tweet by the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Mr Bayo Onanuga.

    He said that Onanuga had alleged that the opposition was planning to overthrow the President Bola Tinubu government before 2027.

    Abdullahi described the allegation as a baseless and false narrative aimed to clampdown on opposition leaders and activities under the guise of national security.

    “We are not soldiers, we are politicians. We don’t have bullets; we only have the ballots.

    “When the time comes, we will only present our solutions and an alternative vision of the future to the Nigerian people and leave them to make their choice,” he said.

    He wondered why the APC, the first opposition party to “come to power in Nigeria now appeared to find it strange that there is an opposition at all.”

    Abdullahi urged Tinubu to caution his aides from further baseless and dangerous allegations that may heat up the system even two years ahead of the next election.

    He also called on Nigerians to reject any underhand tactics to discredit the opposition and silence alternative voices.

    Abdullahi stressed that the health of Nigeria’s democracy depends on a free, open, and competitive political environment.

    He said that the ADC remained committed to building a better Nigeria, through peace, democratic participation.

  • Coalition beware: Tinubu is not Jonathan – By Abraham Ogbodo

    Coalition beware: Tinubu is not Jonathan – By Abraham Ogbodo

    The one that is already in and seated is called APC. The one that is outside and itching to be admitted to unseat the one that is seated is called ADC. The difference is in the displacement and replacement of letters P and D.

    On the surface, this distinction lacks the firmness to affect a clear choice. This means that either of the entities can go or stay, and nothing significant will be lost in content. It is the same as saying that if, per adventure, ADC replaces APC in 2017, it will look like replacing six with half a dozen.

    Or like the national team, the Super Eagles, breaking into two sides of 11 players each, to compete for the same trophy. Either way, Nigerians are going to suffer. That is the devil’s alternative.

    This perception is gradually strengthening into a national consensus. The good thing is that it is not the only consensus regarding 2027 that is building up in the country. There is another that is equally high-pitch.

    It is somehow close to what people said in 2014 when Dr. Goodluck Ebelle Jonathan was President. Then, these same perennial issues of nation-building were carefully and deliberately orchestrated to practically turn Goodluck to Badluck Jonathan. The last name was actually compressed to Jonah to lay a better context as to why, even as the captain, Jonathan, needed to be cast overboard to save the sinking Nigerian ship.

    His traducers said there was so much between him and Prophet Jonah, who, against the clear directive of God, had followed a sea route that did not lead to Nineveh or salvation. Jonathan, too, was alleged to have followed a path that did not lead to national development. He was therefore good for nothing and needed to be thrown into the raging sea like Prophet Jonah to calm the national turbulence.

    No room was left for long debates. The campaign messaging was clinically effective. It was done to affirm and not to interrogate the charges against Jonathan. He was denied fair hearing,  so to say. The mantra was just anything and any person, but Goodluck Jonathan, was good to come as President. Reasons took flight as emotions surged.

    And so, when a Muhammadu Buhari was resuscitated from sustained electoral injuries and repackaged as the most resourceful Nigerian that had ever lived, the focus was not on the pretentious challenger. Rather, the intensive gaze was on President Jonathan, who  was recreated into a negative benchmark against whom Buhari shone like a million stars.

    Hard facts on Buhari’s deficits that adequately sign-posted what was to come upon Nigeria and Nigerians were ignored because Goodluck had become badluck and people were desperate to try their luck with someone else.

    Amid that flow of extreme emotionality and illogicality, evidence of Buhari’s unfitness conveniently dissolved into the stream of providence that gratuitously propelled him into power.

    His ill health and narrow-mindedness, which manifested in an unacceptable level of ethno-religious bigotry, did not count against him or counted for Jonathan. Even his lack of resourcefulness that made him the poorest among his class of retired army general and former military heads of state of Nigeria was recorded for him as an advantage.

    The story was that Buhari was poor because he was not corrupt. He was poor because he did not steal money to become rich like others. It was not because he couldn’t combine the necessary factors to create value. With him, poverty got a new definition. It was elevated to a virtue.

    Meanwhile, the entire process followed as schemed and orchestrated. On May 29, 2015, while Goodluck Jonathan was leaving Aso Rock Villa Abuja crestfallen for his village, Otueke, in Bayelsa State, having lost the 2015 presidential election, Mohammadu Buhari, the winner, was leaving Daura in absolute triumphalism to become a democratically elected president of Nigeria, 30 years after he was overthrown as a military head of state.

    In all of this, one man was solidly in the background, directing and coordinating. He advanced all the alternate viewpoints to design a new reality through which Buhari became revalidated as a messiah, nationalist, high performer and rescuer of the Nigerian state ship. His name was Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    That name has not changed. It has only gained more strength with a change of the title. He is now President Bola Ahmed Tinubu (PBAT). He remains the Jagaban Borgu also. Tinubu relishes his Jagaban title. The name is heavier in sound than it is in substance. It makes BAT feel like a conqueror. For instance, BAT was not President, but just _Jagabgan_ , when he crowned the serial electoral failures of Muhammadu Buhari with the presidency.

    Jagaban is an onomatopoeia that sums up the Tinubu’s essence. The man is at his best when the paths are jagged and the rules are perfect freedom. He is stronger when nothing appears straightforward. He has the capacity to ride rough waives. The name was given to him by the late Emir of Borgu, Alhaji Haliru Dantoro III. It means leader of warriors.

    Today is July 11, 2025. The next presidential election is less than two years away. The elements have recreated themselves, albeit in a reverse order. The hunter is now the hunted. The one being hunted in the current hunt does not want the guidelines applied previously to apply in 2027.

    I am out today to say that why the plots in 2015 and 2027 may have the same material trappings, the central characters are different. Very different, that is. Tinubu is not Jonathan. They are different individuals defined by different value systems. While the strength of one lies in defying rules and conventions to reach results, the other gladly yields to circumscription and even sees failure in some instances as a triumph.

    For instance, under an unfair bombardment by enemies in 2015, Jonathan refused to reach for a weapon of mass destruction (WMD) to liquidate his attackers and re-establish a life-line for himself. This he could have done without causing heavens to fall. But he didn’t. Instead, he maintained this lame line that his ambition to remain the President of Nigeria was not worth the blood of the least Nigerian. He didn’t want to break eggs to prepare omelette. But nobody does without breaking eggs.

    The man from Otueke did not talk like a typical Nigerian President. He had talked like an underdog in a contest where he was the champion. Jonathan sounded like any other good man in the street who believes in live and let live. He loved telling true life stories to explain why he detested vaulting ambition. He went to school without sandals.

    While growing up, nothing in his circumstances betrayed great promises. He was the son of a fisherman. During the civil war, he had thought every truck was a military truck loaded with armed soldiers, looking for people to shoot. When he saw one approaching on one occasion, he quickly escaped into the surrounding mangrove vegetation with  his elder sister to avoid being killed. If being President was going to take blood in addition to cash to erase his essence, he was ready to let go.

    In truth, Jonathan might have calculated to teach and retire before the twist that saw him soaring. He had started as a Deputy Governor in Bayelsa State and later moved to become Governor. He was Vice President and then the very ultimate, President and Commander-In-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria for a whole six years.

    This is the same position that Buhari fought tooth and nail, including going into forced alliances to achieve. Alhaji Atiku Abubakar who will be 80 years in November next year, has been fighting to become president since 1993 when he was only 47 years old. He is still in the trenches fighting.

    Evidently, Goodluck Jonathan meant to stop at the mountain top, but providence took him to the moon. He was wise enough to understand that maiming and killing to shoot higher would amount to over-reaching himself and challenging God in God’s own game. He backed down, and that singular act has made him a refreshing reference point in good conduct in national politics.

    So much on Goodluck Jonathan. Tinubu, the Jagagban, operates differently. He yields to an existentialist interpretation that assigns no role to any outsider in the determination of the great issues of life. To him, victory is always won and not awarded. Success or failure is a consequence of effort. He believes the gods do not help as such in the many battles of life.

    The gods may come in to align with victors or vanquished after the battle has been won and lost. He relies on his ingenuity to create all the advantages. And every move is war where all is fine and fair. He preaches that in situations where victory is not certain in the perennial struggles against opposing forces, the rules of engagement should be breached to reverse the tide. That is, when it is not willingly or easily yielded, one is permitted, under the Jagagban school of power, to “grab it and run away with it.”

    Unlike Jonathan, Tinubu does not have any true or original story to tell. He creates his own stories to fit all purposes. If the narration, for instance, fits Ibadan Grammar School, fine. If it fits Government College, Surulere, Lagos, all fine and good too.

    He is most deliberate in approach. He takes action and moves on, leaving others to bother about the reactions or consequences. He is focused on the end, not the means. Once motivated, he lacks the temperament to wait for a turnaround. Instead, he turns things around himself. He does not fear a superior force. When he declared _Emilokon_ , he was not taken too seriously. As it turned out, it truly became his turn to be president of Nigeria. He talks as if he controls tomorrow.

    On the whole, while Jonathan followed a path, Tinubu created one. That is the difference. Jonathan had power thrust upon him. Tinubu had been working and is still working for power.

    He is not like Jonathan who looked everywhere for power to save himself while power was in his hands. Tinubu projected so much power even when he didn’t have enough of it. Now that he has power and so much of it and also understands how to convert power to brute force to serve his purpose, he is close in description to a drunken king cobra. This is why I fear for the coalition.

    In 2015, the coalition against Jonathan operated on propaganda and won. This time, the coalition against Tinubu is different. It is running largely on facts. But facts may be secondary or even prove inconsequential in the current calculation. The reality today is harsh.

    It is as harsh as taking a battle to a lion in his den. I advise therefore that in addition to facts of the campaign against Tinubu, the coalition should stretch a little more to invent ways to kill a lion in his den. This is also saying that the coalition should be prepared to match Tinubu in all departments of the game. Power for power.

    Cash for cash. And propaganda for propaganda. When a stolen property is re-stoleno or a thief steals from another thief, the town crier is left out of the equation. He is not contacted to announce the stolen property. It is also good to add that the currency of war business is blood.

    If blood is required in the proposed venture, the coalition would be justified by the new ethics to spill some. You act like a monkey to catch a monkey.

  • No intention to push State chairmen away – ADC leadership

    No intention to push State chairmen away – ADC leadership

    Leadership of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) on Thursday said it had no intention to push away the party’s state chairmen.

    The Interim National Publicity Secretary of ADC, Bolaji Abdullahi, stated this while addressing newsmen after the party’s leadership, under the interim National Chairman, Sen. David Mark, had met with state chairmen on Wednesday in Abuja.

    Abdullahi assured the state chairmen of the party’s readiness to work with them to build a stronger party.

    “We have invited all the state chairmen to this meeting to reassure them that we don’t have any intention to push them away. 37 state chairmen, including FCT, were present here.

    “The purpose of the meeting is to dispel all kinds of falsehood and rumours that have been going around the country that we have come to take over this party from them and to push them away.

    “We don’t have any intention to shove them off. We are here to work with them as partners to build a stronger political party.

    “They are assured, and they are going to leave Abuja today more confident than they were yesterday, that they are partners in the building of this coalition,” he said.

    Reacting to comments by the 2023 presidential candidate of the party, Dumebi Kachikwu, that the process of the coalition and the taking over of the party were flawed, Abdullahi said that no provision of the party had been violated.

    According to him, the presidential candidate of a political party is not an officer of the party.

    “A presidential candidate is just someone, a member of the party. We are on a solid legal ground.

    “If anyone has any evidence to show that we have violated our own constitution, we are open to be challenged. No member of ADC has disagreed with the process so far,” he said.

    Abdullahi said that if there were ADC members still aggrieved, the party leadership was ready to engage with such members.

    “Perhaps they don’t have enough information or they are afraid of losing whatever position they are holding,” he said.

    The Chairman, ADC State Chairmen Forum, Kingsley Ogga, dispelled the allegation that they were not carried along in the coalition process.

    He said that the state chairmen were all carried along in the discussion and the process of taking over the party’s leadership.

    “We were all carried along and we were part of it (the proces). We’re also in support of what is coming up now,” Ogga said.

    In her remarks, the senator representing the Federal Capital Territory, Sen. Ireti Kingibe, stated that everyone in the meeting agreed to work together for the party.

    Asked if she was still in the Labour Party or now in ADC, Kingibe said she was committed to ADC.

    “Please read the constitution. There are two clear factions of LP. The perfect definition that constitution gives for somebody to decamp without penalty.

    “So you say I should stay in Labour Party. Which faction of LP do you want me to stay in?” the senator asked.

    The Lagos State Chairman of ADC, George Ashiru, also said that all the state chairmen agreed that ADC should go into the coalition.

    “The 37 state chairmen are here. We are not worried about the idea that we are being replaced because we know the constitution.

    “But we just want to make sure that the public understands the way we operate.

    “This is a solidarity visit to our new leaders. It is also a communal visit to each other to prepare for the next steps and that’s why we’re here,” he said.

    Ashiru said that the party was making more influence in the state, welcoming new members from the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and Peoples Democratic Party.