Overview
Nigeria’s opposition landscape has undergone a dramatic shift. Peter Obi and Rabiu Kwankwaso, who finished third and fourth respectively in the 2023 presidential race, have announced their departure from the African Democratic Congress and formally joined the Nigeria Democratic Congress, a move widely seen as a step toward forming a united front for next year’s presidential election.
Details
On Sunday, the 64-year-old Obi and 69-year-old Kwankwaso were formally received at the NDC’s national headquarters in Abuja by the party’s national leader, Senator Seriake Dickson. Both are former governors with substantial grassroots support — Obi commands immense popularity among young voters in the south, while Kwankwaso wields considerable influence in the north.
The defection comes just nine months after Obi, Kwankwaso, and former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar formed an alliance within the ADC. That coalition quickly became mired in legal battles over party leadership. Obi publicly blamed government interference, accusing state agents of creating the same kind of internal crises that previously drove him away from the Labour Party.
Impact
Reaction within the opposition coalition has been mixed. Some allies have privately expressed a sense of betrayal, raising fresh doubts about whether Nigeria’s fragmented opposition can mount a coordinated challenge against 74-year-old President Tinubu.
The Nigerian presidency downplayed the significance of the defections in a statement, characterizing them as normal democratic fluidity rather than any fundamental political shift. Following the ceremony, Obi and Kwankwaso called for national unity, expanded opportunities for young people, and an end to the internal feuds that have plagued opposition forces.
Source: BBC News