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APC Reps fight back after ticket losses during Primaries

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The House of Representatives primaries of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) ahead of the 2027 general elections have ignited one of the most intense internal political crises in recent years, with at least 26 serving lawmakers losing return tickets.

Several other aspirants were disqualified, and multiple withdrawals were recorded amid allegations of manipulation, imposition, and consensus engineering.

From Rivers, Edo, Imo, Lagos, Kwara, Benue, Ekiti, Plateau, to Cross Rivers, the primaries exposed widening fractures within the ruling party, as governors, power blocs, and political godfathers wrestled for control of candidacies, sidelining several sitting legislators.

The fallout has already triggered threats of litigation, with aggrieved lawmakers insisting the primaries fell short of democratic standards.

The APC National Publicity Secretary, Felix Morka, confirmed that 14 aspirants were disqualified during screening, stating that they “failed to scale the party’s screening exercise conducted in line with established procedures and guidelines.”

However, he did not provide specific reasons.

Among those affected were four serving lawmakers, Iduma Igariwey (Ebonyi), Awaji-Inombek Abiante (Rivers), Anderson Allison (Rivers) and Boma Goodhead (Rivers).

Other affected aspirants are Adefisoye Tajudeen, Olusegun Ategbole, Seun Ajongbolo, Arowole Ayodeji, Morufu Ibrahim, Oseni Oyeniyi, Olaleye Adedipe, Bashir Bello, Sanni Ogembe and retired Air Commodore John Opara.

The disqualification of Rivers lawmakers further intensified tensions in the state’s APC structure, already divided between camps loyal to Governor Siminalayi Fubara and those aligned with FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike.

The party qualified four aspirants, including former Deputy Governor, Dr Ipalibo Harry-Banigo.

Harry-Banigo, who served as deputy governor under former governor and current FCT Minister, Wike, is the serving senator representing Rivers West Senatorial District.

Also disqualified were former presidential aspirant, Tein Jackrich; Director of Energy Security in the Office of the National Security Adviser, Ojukaye Flag-Amachree; and former Secretary to the State Government, Dr Tammy Danagogo.

Danagogo is widely regarded as an ally of Governor Fubara and had served in the governor’s administration before the political crisis in Rivers escalated.

Party insiders linked the disqualifications to the ongoing political struggle between camps loyal to Wike and those supporting Fubara ahead of the 2027 elections.

The APC, however, cleared figures widely viewed as allies of Wike, including former PDP state chairman, Felix Obuah, and Senator Allwell Onyesoh.

The Rivers APC Publicity Secretary, Chibike Ikenga, said the list had been approved by the party’s national secretariat and advised members “to take note and comply accordingly.”

But party loyalists in Rivers accused the leadership of weaponising the screening process.

One party source alleged, “The screening process is being used to settle political scores ahead of 2027. It is no longer about competence or popularity.”

One of the biggest upsets came in Edo State, where House Leader Prof. Julius Ihonvbere lost his Owan Federal Constituency ticket to former Commissioner for Mining, Andrew Ijegbai.

Ihonvbere rejected the result outright, declaring, “I did not lose the election. They did not even come to the field. They wrote some meaningless results and abused the returning officer to make an announcement.”

He added firmly, “I’m a party man. So, I will go to appeal.”

Another Edo lawmaker, Esosa Iyawe, also lost the Oredo ticket to former Commissioner for Education, Dr Paddy Iyamu. He alleged widespread irregularities, stating, “The process fell far short of the democratic standards and directives laid down by President Bola Tinubu.

“Some of my supporters were assaulted and prevented from participating freely.”

Party loyalists in the state accused the APC leadership of weaponising the screening process to settle political scores ahead of the 2027 elections.

Iyawe, who defected from the Labour Party to the APC in 2024, rejected the result and alleged widespread irregularities and violence.

According to him, the adoption of consensus arrangements in most wards disenfranchised party members and violated provisions of the Electoral Act.

Henry Okojie emerged unopposed as the party’s candidate for Esan North East/Esan South East Federal Constituency.

Tension in Kwara

Tension erupted in Kwara State after Tijani Kayode reportedly scored zero votes, prompting him to question the credibility of the exercise.

The member representing Ifelodun/Offa/Oyun Federal Constituency lost to Rafiu Ajakaye, believed to enjoy the backing of allies of Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq.

Questioning the legitimacy of the process, the lawmaker hinted at possible litigation.

“Did they conduct an election in the first place? Did the person they announced as the winner participate in the primaries? They announced him as the winner, but this may end up in litigation,” Kayode said.

Also, a major stakeholders’ group openly opposed what it described as attempts to secure a third Senate term for the Deputy Senate Leader, Senator Lola Ashiru.

Addressing journalists in Ilorin on Sunday, the Kwara South APC Opinion Leaders, through former council chairman,  Uthman Alabi, warned against any move capable of undermining internal democracy ahead of Monday’s senatorial primary.

“Today, we speak as a committed APC group in Kwara South. We are united by one common objective to ensure that the ongoing primary elections in our state are conducted in a free, fair, transparent, credible, and democratic manner,” Alabi stated.

The stakeholders declared support for former Federal Character Commission chairman, Dr Muheebat Dankaka, describing her as the preferred candidate of the district.

In Ogun State, four members of the House of Representatives, including the Deputy Chief Whip, Isiaka Ibrahim, representing Ifo/Ewekoro Federal Constituency, who was attempting his fourth term bid, lost to the consensus arrangement of the party.

Isiaka lost the ticket to the immediate past Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development, Motunrayo Adeleye.

Isiaka had been anllegedly under pressure to step down for Adeleye, a two-time member of the state House of Assembly.

The lawmaker accused Governor Dapo Abiodun of orchestrating an “affirmation” process in favour of a preferred aspirant.

“There was no primary election in my federal constituency, because my governor didn’t allow it. He only gave a directive for an affirmation of his anointed candidate,” Isiaka alleged.

“I did not lose my primary election because none existed.”

The lawmaker circulated videos purportedly showing irregular counting procedures and alleged multiple voting during the exercise.

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“Despite being the sole candidate for the governor, see the counting on the line… 1, 12, 40, 100… No membership cards,” he lamented.

“At Isheri Ojodu, once you’re counted in the front, you go back to line up again,” he added.

Other incumbents who failed include Abiodun Akinlade, representing Ipokia/Yewa South, who wanted a fifth term, Tunji Akinosi representing Ado-Odo/Ota,  Femi Ogunbanwo representing Odogbolu/Ijebu Ode/Ijebu North East and Mrs Adesola Elegbeji, representing Remo federal constituency.

The winners include Joseph Adegbesan, the incumbent representing Ijebu North/Ijebu East/Ogun Waterside; Daddah for Ijebu Ode/Ijebu North East/Odogbolu Federal Constituency, Mrs Funmi Efuwape for Ikenne/Remo North/ Sagamu, Adijat Adeleye for Ifo/Ewekoro and Dr Toyin Taiwo for Ipokia/Yewa South

Others are Afolabi Afuape, the incumbent representing Abeokuta South; Olumide Osoba, who won his fourth term bid to represent Abeokuta North/Odeda/Obafemi-Owode. Gboyega  Isiaka also won his bid to represent Imeko-Afon/Yewa North for the second term and Ayobami Bashorun for Ado-Odo/Ota constituency.

The loyalists of former Governor of Ogun State and Senator representing Ogun East, Otunba Gbenga Daniel, in a statement on Sunday, cited alleged plans by some agents of the state government to unleash violence on the supporters of the former governor, hence their decision not to participate in the primary.

The APC stakeholders said they have also urged Daniel to stay away from the scheduled Senate primary.

However, Steve Oloyide, Communications Consultant to Daniel said the senator won’t boycott the primaries as widely rumoured.

He said, “OGD did not boycott the primaries. But the BATOGD Movement believes it cannot puts its members in harm’s way and allow people to be killed before making noise, following the atmosphere under which the primaries are being conducted.

“The state machinery and thugs have hijacked the process. Under a free contest, he (Daniel) is still ready to contest.”

In Imo State, four serving lawmakers lost their return tickets during primaries conducted using the Option A4 voting system.

The affected lawmakers were Matthew Nwogu, Miriam Onuoha, Harrison Nwadike and Emeka Chinese.

New candidates who emerged include Ngozi Pat-Ekeji, Chukwudi Anyanwuocha, Sandra Inyama, Canice Omeogo, Jonas Okeke, Uchenna Agasu, Dibiagwu Eugene, Cosmos Maduba, Akarachi Amadi and Tochi Okere.

Before the exercise, Governor Hope Uzodimma had assured stakeholders that the primaries would respect zoning and equity arrangements.

According to him, the APC adopted the Option A4 system because it would “guarantee transparency, credibility and wider participation of party members.”

The governor also urged aspirants to embrace sportsmanship, noting that elections naturally produce winners and losers.

Despite losing her return ticket, Onuoha accepted the outcome and pledged loyalty to the party leadership.

“I am a loyal party woman, and I’m loyal to Governor Hope Uzodimma of Imo State. The party is supreme,” she said.

“I do not intend to challenge the outcome except the system decides to have a rethink.”

The story was the same in Lagos, as a powerful party bloc again shaped the outcome of the primaries.

Obasa for Reps

Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Mudashiru Obasa, displaced incumbent Hameed Adewale in Agege Federal Constituency, while Kafilat Ogbara reportedly lost the Kosofe ticket to Kosofe council chairman Moyosore Oshinowo.

An aspirant, Remi Oluwalogbon-Odunsi, rejected the results, arguing that the figures and declarations being circulated did not reflect any voting process conducted in Kosofe.

“I reject the purported results being circulated and announced in respect of the primary election held yesterday,” she said.

In Ekiti State, three serving members of the House of Representatives lost their bids to secure APC tickets for the January 2027 National Assembly elections.

Announcing the results in Ado Ekiti on Sunday, the Chairman of the APC House of Representatives Primary Election Committee for Ekiti State, Wasiu Adedoyin, confirmed that Niyi Ojuawo lost the Ekiti South I ticket to Toyin Okoro, while Akinlayo Kolawole was defeated by former lawmaker Ibrahim Olarewaju for Ekiti North II Federal Constituency.

Similarly, Biodun Omoleye lost his return ticket to the Ekiti State Commissioner, Dapo Karounwi.

However, Olusola Fatoba and Femi Bamisile secured return tickets for Ekiti Central I and Ekiti South II, respectively.

The contest involving House spokesperson, Akin Rotimi, and former federal lawmaker, Bimbo Daramola, for Ekiti North I was declared inconclusive following violence and irregularities.

Adedoyin said, “For Ekiti North Federal Constituency I, it is the National Working Committee of the party that will determine the result. The exercise was marred by violence and other irregularities, so it was not concluded.”

The outcome immediately triggered outrage among aspirants and party stakeholders.

Kolawole rejected the result of the Ekiti North II primary, describing the exercise as “a disgrace to democracy.”

“The election was in shambles. It was a disgrace to democracy. In fact, there was no election. Figures were written in most areas, people queued, no voting, the results announced were fabricated,” he said.

Another aspirant, Victor Kolade, who contested the Ekiti Central II ticket, also condemned the process.

“The conduct of Saturday’s APC primary election in my constituency was filthy and disappointing,” he said.

Ekiti State lawmaker, Teju Okuyiga, who contested for Ekiti South II, equally rejected the result, alleging deliberate exclusion and manipulation.

“The exercise was a sham and fell far short of the minimum standards for a free, fair and credible party primary,” she said.

Okuyiga accused party leaders of undermining gender representation and internal democracy.

“When party leaders actively work against inclusion and gender representation, it weakens our party’s credibility and alienates the very people we seek to represent,” she added.

The crisis in Ekiti further escalated after former Senate Minority Leader, Senator Biodun Olujimi, and former House member, Bamidele Faparusi, jointly expressed concern over the conduct of the APC primaries.

In a statement issued on Sunday, both politicians listed several alleged irregularities, including “absence of proper voter accreditation, intimidation of voters, coercion of party officials to support preferred aspirants, lack of official result sheets at ward level and exclusion of aspirants’ agents from collation centres.”

Death in Plateau

In Plateau State, the APC primary election turned deadly after a resident identified as Sani Abdullahi was killed during violence at the venue of the House of Representatives primary in Mangu Local Government Area.

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Eyewitnesses told journalists that the crisis erupted after frustrated party members protested delays caused by the absence of electoral officers.

A resident, Ibrahim Sale, explained, “The exercise was supposed to take place on Saturday morning, but it did not take place due to the absence of returning officers. So, the youths started protesting, alleging that the delay was deliberate.”

According to him, security operatives later attempted to disperse the protesters after some youths blocked government officials from leaving the venue.

“As soon as the security personnel arrived, the youths started throwing stones at them. The security personnel then started shooting, and a stray bullet hit the victim, killing him,” he said.

Outspoken lawmaker Yusuf Gagdi, who contested for the position of Speaker of the House in 2023, lost his bid for renomination to Dr John Tongshinen.

Alia vs Akume

Meanwhile, one of the fiercest internal battles within the APC played out in Benue State, where the political camp of Governor Hyacinth Alia recorded sweeping victories over allies of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Senator George Akume.

Results announced on Sunday by the Chairman of the National Assembly Primary Election Committee in Benue, Alhaji Sabiu Mahuta, showed that most victorious candidates were aligned with Governor Alia.

Among them were serving lawmaker Ojotu Ojema for Apa/Agatu Federal Constituency, Terfa Ikper for Makurdi/Guma, Gideon Inyom for Buruku, Terhemba Nongo for Gwer East/Gwer West and Professor Kohol Iormem for Kwande/Ushongo.

Other winners include Solomon Wombo, Livinus Tsar, Peter Egbodo and Anthony Agom, all reportedly loyal to the governor.

The outcome represented a major setback for Senator Akume’s camp, with several of his allies losing the primaries.

Among those defeated were Dzua Yortyom, Dickson Tarkighir, Austin Achado and Sesoo Ikpacher.

Two serving House of Representatives members, Terseer Ugbor and David Ogewo, also lost their return tickets during the exercise.

However, the wife of the SGF, Mrs Regina Akume, who represents Gboko/Tarka Federal Constituency, secured victory in her constituency.

Similarly, Blessing Onuh, daughter of former Senate President and current ADC National Chairman, David Mark, also won the APC primary for Otukpo/Ohimini Federal Constituency.

The Benue primaries further deepened controversy over alleged automatic ticket arrangements within the party.

Senator Akume had earlier claimed during a reconciliation meeting in Makurdi that President Tinubu directed that serving lawmakers and governors should be granted automatic tickets.

But Governor Alia publicly rejected the claim, insisting that neither the President nor the APC National Chairman supported automatic tickets.

“The issue of automatic ticket is beyond me and the SGF,” the governor had said, adding that the national leadership insisted there would be “no automatic ticket for any aspirant.”

In Katsina, Kebbi, Kano, and Kogi, consensus arrangements largely determined outcomes, sidelining several incumbents.

In Katsina, the home state of late former President Muhammadu Buhari, backlash trailed the APC’s consensus strategy.

Serving lawmakers, including Sani Danlami, Abubakar Kusada, Aminu Jamo and Dalhatu Tafoki, reportedly lost out during negotiations that produced preferred candidates.

In Kebbi State, consensus arrangements forced out several incumbents.

Mansur Musa Jega lost his return ticket after former Comptroller-General of the Nigerian Correctional Service, Ja’afar Jega, emerged as the consensus candidate for Jega/Gwandu/Aleiro Federal Constituency.

Another incumbent, Ibrahim Bello, stepped down during negotiations that produced Bello Rilisco as a candidate for Birnin Kebbi/Kalgo/Bunza Federal Constituency.

Similarly, four lawmakers lost return tickets in Jigawa State. They include Muktar Muhammad, Ibrahim Auyo, Sa’adu Taura and Yusif Miga.

In Kano, Nasiru Bala Ja’oji emerged unopposed through consensus arrangements described as aimed at “ensuring unity and peaceful coexistence.”

The chairman of the consensus committee, Prof. Halilu Bello Rogo, said the process followed party guidelines aimed at ensuring “unity and peaceful coexistence.”

In Gombe State, APC aspirant Alfred-John Attajiri rejected the outcome of the Balanga/Billiri Federal Constituency primary, alleging that results were announced despite no election taking place.

“The announcement of results for an election that was never held is a direct assault on democracy,” he said, claiming there was evidence showing that no valid electoral process occurred across the constituency.

In the list released by the APC leadership in Kogi State,  former governor Yahaya Bello, whose eligibility had generated speculation in recent days, was among those cleared.

Bello was cleared for the Kogi Central Senatorial District contest, where he is expected to battle Momoh Obaro and Ibrahim Adoke.

In Kogi West, incumbent Senator Sunday Karimi emerged as the consensus candidate following a stakeholders’ meeting chaired by Governor Usman Ododo.

Although former Senator Smart Adeyemi and several others were cleared to contest, political observers believe the consensus arrangement significantly strengthened Karimi’s position ahead of the primary.

In Ebonyi, former Minister of State for Health, Joseph Ekumankama, emerged as the party’s candidate after defeating other contenders in the exercise conducted across wards in Afikpo and Edda local government areas.

Declaring the result, Chairman of the Electoral Committee, Kennedy Ekong, said Ekumankama scored the highest number of votes cast.

Speaking after his victory, Ekumankama praised party members for what he described as a transparent and credible process.

“The Afikpo/Edda Federal Constituency stands to witness effective, people-oriented and impactful representation if elected during the forthcoming 2027 general elections,” he said.

Former Kaduna Central Senatorial aspirant, Yerima Shettima, formally withdrew from the race and pledged loyalty to the APC leadership ahead of the general elections.

Announcing his decision during a press conference on Sunday, Shettima said his withdrawal followed “wide consultations and deep reflection.”

“After wide consultations and deep reflection, I have decided to respect the decision of our great party regarding the senatorial contest,” he stated.

In contrast, the campaign organisation for Sani Dakaci rejected the outcome of the Igabi Federal Constituency primary won by incumbent Hussaini Jallo.

Dakaci’s camp alleged widespread irregularities and manipulation.

“Our representatives… have been on the ground since 6:00 am. Regrettably, no party officials are present to supervise or distribute these materials,” campaign spokesman Ibrahim Danfulani said.

Alfred-John Attajiri rejected the outcome of the Balanga/Billiri primary in Gombe, insisting that “results were announced for an election that was never held.”

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“The announcement of results for an election that was never held is a direct assault on democracy,” he stated.

Most candidates in Borno emerged through consensus or affirmation arrangements.

APC electoral committee chairman Jones Ode Erue said two aspirants emerged unopposed, five through consensus, two through direct primaries, while the Askira-Uba/Hawul primary remained inconclusive.

He described the exercise as “peaceful and orderly.”

Deputy Speaker Benjamin Kalu secured a third-term ticket in Abia State.

“I am happy that my people found me worthy to go back to the House of Representatives,” Kalu said. ‘’They massively came out to endorse me for my third term.”

He added, “We are coming back to support the policies of this administration. We know more reforms and innovations will come.”

Other lawmakers who secured tickets included Nkeiru Onyejeocha, Chris Nkwonta, Uzor Azubuike and several others in Abia.

In Delta, Ndudi Elumelu defeated Ngozi Okolie in a contentious primary that opponents claimed was altered after venue changes.

The National Assembly Primaries Appeal Committee in Delta State urged dissatisfied aspirants to formally submit complaints.

Committee chairman Chukwuemeka Ujam said the party remained committed to “a transparent and credible process free from interference.”

In Cross River, at least five sitting lawmakers lost their tickets, underscoring the scale of incumbency losses nationwide.

In Oyo State, the APC released the names of candidates that emerged from Saturday’s House of Representatives primaries across the 14 federal constituencies.

Among those returned were Akinola Alabi for Egbeda/Ona-Ara, Tolulope Akande-Sadipe for Oluyole, and Akeem Adeyemi for Afijio/Atiba/Oyo East/Oyo West.

Chairman of the House of Representatives Primaries Elections Committee, Mojeed Alabi, described the exercise as peaceful and transparent.

However, no fewer than seven senatorial aspirants were disqualified out of the 12 who purchased the party forms ahead of today’s primaries.

Alabi confirmed that only five aspirants were cleared by the party.

Findings indicate those disqualified include Afeez Bolaju; Ademola Alli; Wasiu Ajimobi; Kolapo Kola-Daisi; Faozey Oladotun; Akinremi Alade and Hussain Yusuff.

Those cleared for the primary are Remi Oseni (Oyo South); Yunus Akintunde (Oyo Central); Prof Adeolu Akande (Oyo North); Hannah Ogunesan (Oyo North) and Adegbola (Oyo North).

In Adamawa State, controversy trailed the APC House of Representatives primaries after party loyalists aligned with Governor Ahmadu Fintiri reportedly secured tickets in all eight federal constituencies.

Former APC North-East Vice Chairman, Umar Duhu, defended the outcome, saying party supremacy must prevail and urging aggrieved aspirants to remain loyal to the party.

However, some aspirants alleged that no primaries took place in parts of the state.

Vrati Nzonzo claimed protests erupted in Demsa, Numan and Lamurde over alleged fabrication of results.

“Some people came and started writing results of primaries that did not take place,” he alleged.

Two sitting members of the Federal House of Representatives lost their bids for return tickets in Nasarawa State.

Mohammed Ari, representing Nasarawa/Toto federal constituency and Jeremiah Umaru, representing Akwanga/Nasarawa Eggon/Wamba federal constituency failed to secure their party’s approval for re-election.

The winners are Mohammed Al-bashir for Nasarawa/Toto Federal Constituency, Daniel Ogazi for Keffi/Kokona/Karu Federal Constituency, Tony Shammah for Akwanga/Nasarawa Eggon/Wamba Federal Constituency, and Mohammed Al-Makura, who won for Lafia/Obi Federal Constituency through a consensus mode after his rival, Isaac Kigbu, withdrew from the race on Saturday.

Declaring the results in Lafia, the Nasarawa State capital, on Sunday, Chairman of the National Assembly Primary Elections committee of the APC, Musa Guri, disclosed that results for the Awe/Doma/Keana federal constituency were still being collated and will be announced in due time.

However, the party in Ikom/Boki Federal Constituency in across River State on Saturday overcame internal disagreements over a proposed consensus arrangement and successfully conducted direct primaries to produce Victor Abang, the member representing the constituency in the House of Representatives, as its candidate for the 2027 general elections.

Abang emerged the winner of the exercise after polling 10,850 votes, defeating four other aspirants in a contest party stakeholders described as peaceful, transparent and reflective of internal democracy.

The primary followed days of political consultations and intense negotiations aimed at producing a consensus candidate, a move that eventually failed to secure unanimous acceptance among aspirants and stakeholders.

Among those who contested the ticket were former Secretary to the Cross River State Government, Tina Banku; Chief Whip of the Cross River State House of Assembly and member representing Boki II State Constituency, Hilary Bisong; former lawmaker, Cletus Obun; Joseph Enu; and former Commissioner for Works, Dan Asu.

Declaring the results at the APC constituency headquarters in Ikom, the returning officer, Eka Williams, said the party adopted direct primaries after efforts to sustain a consensus arrangement collapsed.

He said, “The process was conducted in line with the provisions of the Electoral Act and the APC constitution.

“Party members across the constituency were allowed to decide who should fly the APC flag in 2027 freely.”

Reacting to his victory, Abang thanked party members for what he described as “an overwhelming vote of confidence” and appealed to other aspirants to support his re-election bid.

“This victory belongs to the APC family in Ikom/Boki. We may have had different interests before the primaries, but now is the time to unite and move forward together,” he said.

Former aspirant, Banku, also congratulated Abang and praised the peaceful conduct of the exercise.

“The most important thing is that the party remained peaceful and members were allowed to participate freely in the process,” she stated.

Similarly, Bisong accepted the outcome and urged his supporters to remain calm and loyal to the APC.

“The party’s decision should be respected in the interest of unity and progress,” he said.

Stakeholders at the exercise said the successful conduct of the primaries had helped calm tensions within the constituency and strengthened the APC ahead of the 2027 general elections.

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Politics

Peter Obi demands N5bn, apology from Okonkwo over defamation allegation; read details

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The presidential candidate of the Nigeria Democratic Congress, Peter Obi, has demanded N5 billion in damages and a public apology from actor-turned-politician Kenneth Okonkwo over alleged defamatory statements made during a television interview.

The former Anambra State governor also threatened legal action against Okonkwo and indicated that he could seek higher damages if the demands are not met.

In a letter dated June 9, 2026, Obi’s lawyers, led by Alex Ejesieme (SAN), accused Okonkwo of making false, malicious and defamatory allegations against their client during an appearance on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily programme on Monday, June 8.

The legal team said the remarks were subsequently published and circulated by several media organisations and online platforms.

According to the letter, Okonkwo allegedly claimed that “Obi, together with the leaders of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) in the South-East, informed the party’s aspirants that any person seeking to contest as a member of the House of Representatives must, after paying the prescribed expression of interest fee, pay a bribe of Ten Million Naira (N10,000,000.00) to the NDC and to the Caucus leaders.”

The lawyers also alleged that Okonkwo claimed there was documentary evidence of the payments, that Obi personally compiled the party’s list of candidates from a hotel room, warned aspirants that Obi would “scam” them, collected money from people abroad and was involved in criminal activities alongside other party leaders.

The letter stated that the allegations portrayed Obi as a person engaged in bribery, extortion, fraud, financial dishonesty and criminal conduct.

“The above statements, in their natural and ordinary meaning, and by necessary implication, falsely and maliciously represent our Client as a person who demands, solicits, organises and collects bribes; who extorts, defrauds and swindles political aspirants of their money; who is a fraudster, a scammer and a dishonest political actor; and who, in concert with others, is engaged in criminal conspiracy and is actively perpetuating criminality,” the letter read.

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Obi’s legal team described the allegations as “false, baseless, malicious, reckless, defamatory and wholly unsupported by any fact.”

They argued that the statements went beyond political commentary and amounted to a direct attack on Obi’s integrity and public reputation.

The lawyers demanded that Okonkwo, within seven days of receiving the letter, withdraw the statements, publish an “unequivocal and unreserved” apology, and ensure the apology receives the same or greater prominence as the original publication.

The demand added: “Pay to our Client, through our Chambers, the sum of Five Billion Naira (N5,000,000,000.00) only, as general, aggravated and exemplary damages for the grave injury occasioned to his hard-earned reputation, character and public standing by the said false, malicious and defamatory statements; and

“Deliver to us a written undertaking that you shall cease and desist from making, publishing, circulating or causing to be published any further false, malicious or defamatory statement concerning our Client.”

The letter warned that failure to comply with the demands within the stipulated period would leave Obi with no option but to seek legal redress, including claims for damages, injunctive reliefs, public retraction and legal costs.

 

 

“Take notice that should you fail, refuse or neglect to comply with the above demands within the stipulated period, our Client shall be left with no option but to seek legal redress against you without further recourse to you,” the letter stated.

Responding in a statement posted on his X handle on Tuesday, Okonkwo dismissed the demand and said he had yet to read the letter.

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Kenneth Okonkwo. Photo: Channels Television / X

“It has been brought to my notice that there is a letter circulating online from the hypocrite, Peter Obi, and his lawyers that I should pay him N5bn. Hahaha! If Peter Obi is looking for money to campaign, he should privately ask me for assistance, not come from extortion, and I will help him,” he wrote.

Okonkwo said he would respond formally after reviewing the letter.

“I will reply to the letter whenever I have the time to read it later in the day. Please send it here if you have it. It will be a shame to Peter Obi and his lawyers if they do not take this case to court. I don’t have time or patience for scammers,” he stated.

The former spokesperson also warned that any legal action could lead to the disclosure of information he acquired while serving in that role.

“Anyone who decides to sue his former spokesperson for defamation is indeed very unwise,” he added.

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Bamidele pushes six-year single term for presidents, govs

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Senate Leader, Opeyemi Bamidele, has disclosed plans to sponsor a bill seeking to introduce a single six-year tenure for presidents and governors, a move he said would allow elected leaders to focus more on governance and less on re-election politics.

Bamidele revealed the proposal during an interview with journalists in his office on Tuesday, saying the legislation would be among the first bills he intends to introduce in the next Senate after the 2027 general elections.

Nigeria currently operates a two-term system under which presidents and governors can serve a maximum of two four-year terms.

However, the Senate leader argued that the arrangement often compels elected officials to begin strategising for a second term barely midway into their first tenure, thereby diverting attention from governance.

“One of the first set of bills that I look forward to moving, by God’s grace, when we come back for the 11th Senate, God willing, is for a bill that will only make it possible for anyone who wants to be president of this country, or governor in any part of this country, to spend only one term of six years,” he said.

According to him, a single six-year tenure would remove the pressure and distractions associated with seeking re-election.

“So that you don’t even have to worry about wasting almost one and a half years of your first term thinking and struggling and looking forward to how you’ll be re-elected.

“If you know you are there for six years, only one tenure, you put in your best from day one. You know this is the only chance that you have,” Bamidele said.

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The lawmaker acknowledged that the proposal may generate debate and may not attract unanimous support, but insisted that lawmakers must continue to pursue reforms aimed at improving governance.

“That’s my opinion. It doesn’t mean everybody will agree with me. But it also does not mean that I am prevented from doing that because that has not been the law,” he said.

Bamidele further noted that laws are not static and should evolve to meet changing national realities.

“The essence of law, the essence of parliament, is that laws are like human beings; they grow,” he added.

The proposal is expected to reignite a long-running constitutional debate over the tenure of elected executives in Nigeria.

Similar suggestions for a single tenure have surfaced at different times since the return to democratic rule in 1999, with supporters arguing that it would curb the distractions of re-election campaigns and encourage long-term policy implementation.

In recent constitutional review proposals sent to the National Assembly, former Vice President and presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress, Atiku Abubakar, advocated for a six-year single term for president and governors, with the presidency constitutionally rotated among the country’s six geopolitical zones.

He stated that he would make the constitutional amendment his top priority if elected.

Critics, however, have contended that a second-term option gives voters the opportunity to reward performance or reject underperforming leaders at the polls.

If formally introduced and passed by the National Assembly, the bill would require far-reaching amendments to the 1999 Constitution and approval by at least two-thirds of the state Houses of Assembly before it can become law.

See also  Opposition knocks FG over alleged $9m US lobbying deal

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Post-primary chaos worsens as INEC fixes candidates’ submission deadline

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Political parties are racing to resolve post-primary disputes, finalise candidate lists and conclude consultations on running mates after the Independent National Electoral Commission fixed June 26 for the release of access codes to its nomination portal and July 11 as the deadline for the submission of candidates’ particulars for the 2027 general elections.

As appeals, grievances and leadership tussles continue to trail the conclusion of party primaries, INEC has warned that unresolved internal conflicts and ongoing court challenges to its electoral timetable could complicate preparations for the polls, even as major parties intensify efforts to beat the nomination deadline and complete their presidential tickets.

The African Democratic Congress, the Young Progressives Party and the All Progressives Grand Alliance have expressed readiness to submit the names of their candidates to the Independent National Electoral Commission following the conclusion of their primary elections.

The electoral umpire announced that the  access codes would allow political parties to begin uploading candidates’ details for the 2027 general elections to its portal.

The INEC Chairman, Prof Joash Amupitan, disclosed this in Abuja on Tuesday, during the Second Quarterly Consultative Meeting with leaders of registered political parties, noting that the step follows the completion of party primaries on May 30, 2026.

According to the commission’s schedule, political parties will gain access to the dedicated nomination portal from June 27, while the deadline for submission of candidates’ details is July 11, 2026.

The portal is a critical component of the nomination process, as only candidates whose particulars are submitted within the stipulated period are eligible to contest elections under the platform of their parties.

According to Amupitan, access codes will be issued to authorised national officers of each political party, who will be responsible for uploading nominees’ biodata and other required information into the system.

He cautioned that the process must be taken seriously, urging parties to ensure their ICT personnel are fully prepared ahead of the exercise, as deadlines would be strictly enforced.

“On Friday, 26th June, 2026, the commission will issue official access codes to all political parties for the purpose of accessing the Candidate Nomination Portal.

“These access codes will enable designated national officers of political parties to upload the names, personal particulars and other required information relating to nominated candidates.

“I urge political parties to ensure that their ICT personnel and relevant officers are adequately prepared and that all submissions are completed well before the stipulated deadlines. The portal is fully automated and will close automatically at the expiration of the prescribed period,” he stated.

He also expressed concern about unresolved court cases relating to internal party leadership, describing them as unnecessary distractions that could affect electoral preparations.

He urged political actors to resolve such disputes quickly to keep the electoral timetable on track.

Reiterating the commission’s independence, Amupitan assured stakeholders that INEC would continue to discharge its duties impartially and in line with constitutional provisions.

The INEC boss further encouraged parties to intensify voter education efforts and mobilise citizens to participate in the Continuous Voter Registration exercise to obtain their Permanent Voter Cards ahead of the elections.

“The success of the 2027 general election will depend not only on the preparedness of the commission but also on the commitment of political parties to uphold democratic principles, respect the rule of law, conduct transparent primaries, discourage violence, hate speech, and vote buying, and promote issue-based campaigns,” he said.

Amupitan noted that the commission would ensure equal treatment for all parties while strictly following the Constitution, the Electoral Act, and all relevant guidelines.

Despite pending appeals against two Federal High Court judgments affecting parts of INEC’s timetable, he affirmed that preparations for the 2027 elections would continue as scheduled under lawful court directives.

The commission disclosed it has filed appeals against two recent Federal High Court rulings that questioned key components of its timetable for the 2027 general elections, warning that any attempt to dismantle parts of the schedule could disrupt the entire electoral process.

Amupitan said the commission had reviewed the two judgments and decided to approach appellate courts for clearer interpretations of its legal and constitutional mandate in organising election activities.

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The first ruling, delivered on May 20, 2026, in a case filed by the Youth Party against the electoral body, challenged certain timelines set out in INEC’s election schedule.

The second judgment, issued on May 26, 2026, in a suit instituted by the Social Democratic Party, affirmed the commission’s authority to issue an electoral timetable but struck out some timelines relating to candidate nomination and substitution procedures.

INEC maintained that the disputed timetable is built on interconnected processes that cannot be separated without affecting the integrity of the entire election planning structure.

Citing portions of the court’s own observation in the SDP ruling, Amupitan noted that “an election timetable, without a date for submission of parties’ membership register, timeframe for primaries, etc., is inchoate. Without this timetable, there would be chaos in our electoral system.”

He added that while the commission respects the judiciary and will continue to comply with lawful decisions, the cases raise fundamental questions about the scope of its powers in regulating elections.

“While the commission remains fully respectful of the decisions of the courts and of the judicial process generally, these judgments raise important legal questions concerning the extent of the commission’s constitutional and statutory powers in coordinating and regulating electoral activities,” the INEC chairman said.

According to him, the electoral timetable is not merely a list of dates but a coordinated framework that guides multiple administrative and logistical processes required for credible elections.

He stressed that although the Electoral Act provides timelines for certain activities, several critical steps in election preparation are not expressly covered by statute but must still be accommodated within the overall schedule.

Key activities listed by Amupitan include submitting and verifying political parties’ membership registers, monitoring primaries nationwide, and pre-uploading primary results on INEC’s portal. He also mentioned nomination processes, printing ballot papers and result sheets, ensuring quality control, and deploying election materials.

Additional activities are training personnel, voter education, procuring sensitive materials, and configuring the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System. Legal requirements, such as allowing parties to inspect electoral materials per Section 42 of the Electoral Act, 2026, were also noted.

Amupitan argued that these processes are interdependent and must be harmonised to ensure efficiency, transparency and fairness in the conduct of elections. He warned that isolating parts of the timetable could undermine administrative order and create uncertainty among political actors.

“The commission therefore considers it imperative that all electoral activities be harmonised within a coherent and workable framework that promotes certainty, transparency, administrative efficiency and equal treatment of all political parties,” he said.

He assured political parties and Nigerians that the legal challenge would not distract the commission from its preparations for the 2027 polls.

According to him, INEC remains committed to conducting credible elections in line with the Constitution, the Electoral Act, and binding judicial pronouncements.

Speaking with The PUNCH, the National Publicity Secretary of the ADC, Bolaji Abdullahi, said the party was taking time to conclude the resolution of disputes arising from its primary elections before forwarding the names of successful candidates to the electoral commission.

“The ADC is currently dealing with the issues arising from appeals by those who felt aggrieved at the primaries. We have time, and we will do the needful once this process is over,” he said.

His remarks indicate that the party is prioritising internal dispute resolution in order to avoid legal complications that could arise from unresolved grievances by aspirants who participated in the primaries.

Political parties often face post-primary challenges as aspirants dissatisfied with the conduct or outcome of elections seek redress through party appeal panels or the courts. Such disputes have, in previous election cycles, led to prolonged litigation and, in some cases, the disqualification of candidates.

On its part, the Young Progressives Party said it was fully prepared to comply with INEC’s guidelines once the nomination portal becomes operational.

The party’s National Publicity Secretary, Wale Egbeola-Martins, said the YPP would begin uploading the names of its candidates immediately the commission opens the portal.

“We have not submitted yet. We will commence uploading the names of our candidates as soon as the INEC portal for the upload of candidates is open,” he said.

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Also, the National Publicity Secretary of APGA, Ejimofor Opara, said the party is done with compiling the list of its candidates for the various elective offices in 2027, saying, “We will upload when the portal is open.”

Similarly, the Social Democratic Party revealed it is currently compiling the list of its candidates ahead of the July 11 deadline stipulated by INEC.

National Publicity Secretary of the party, Rufus Aiyenigba, explained that the party was processing all relevant documentation required for the submission of candidates.

“The SDP is currently working on all the relevant documents in relation to the uploading of all our candidates for all elective positions from all our primaries conducted—presidential, governorship, Senate, House of Representatives, and Houses of Assembly,” he said.

National Publicity Secretary of the Nigerian Democratic Congress, Osa Director, stated that the party had completed its primaries and was ready to upload the names of successful candidates to the INEC portal.

On whether the party would publish the names of successful candidates, the Director maintained that such publication was not a legal requirement.

“It is not compulsory for you to publish a list of candidates. What the constitution expects you to do by the guidelines of the Electoral Act is to send your list to INEC. And we have done so.

“Those who were victorious were also contacted and given nomination forms to fill. That’s all. Did you see the APC publish the names of their candidates in any major newspaper? The key thing is to send it to INEC, and candidates will be contacted, which we are already doing,” he added.

National Publicity Secretary of the Labour Party, Ken Asogwa, said the party was on course to meet the deadline, noting that its National Executive Committee would meet later this week to ratify the nomination list.

“It will be done this week. Although I need to reconfirm with the National Organising Secretary, I am certain it will be concluded this week.

“It is already ongoing. I am sure we will beat the deadline. We have an NEC meeting on Thursday where the whole nomination list will be approved by the National Executive Committee. So, once the approval is given on Thursday, the next stage will be to forward the list to INEC,” Asogwa said.

Meanwhile, the LP and SDP have said consultations are still ongoing regarding the selection of their vice-presidential candidates for the 2027 general election.

While LP presented Dr Chibuzo Okereke as its presidential candidate, the SDP stuck to its 2023 candidate, Prince Adewole Adebayo.

Speaking in an interview with The PUNCH, the party’s spokesman,Asogwa, said discussions were still underway and that the issue would be resolved shortly.

“On the issue of running mate, there are still some consultations ongoing. We are confident that it will be sorted in a few hours from now,” Asogwa said.

Asogwa’s counterpart in SDP, Aiyenigba, confirmed that Adebayo was consulting widely within the party before announcing his choice of running mate.

According to him, the process is aimed at ensuring broad acceptance of the eventual nominee across the party’s structures.

“Our SDP presidential candidate, Prince Adewole Adebayo, is currently undergoing wide consultation within the party’s national structure, with regard to his running mate for the 2027 presidential election.

“He will soon unveil his choice and will certainly be a most popular and acceptable choice to all, and most value-adding,” Aiyenigba said.

So far, only the Nigerian Democratic Congress has announced a vice-presidential candidate.

The NDC presidential candidate, Peter Obi, named former Kano State Governor Musa Kwankwaso as his running mate shortly after he was officially confirmed as the party’s presidential candidate.

The announcement followed the party’s presidential primary, where Obi secured the NDC ticket for the 2027 election.

Obi and Kwankwaso recently defected from the African Democratic Congress to the Nigerian Democratic Congress, citing internal divisions and prolonged legal disputes within their former party.

Atiku intensifies consultations

Former Vice President and presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress in the 2027 election, Atiku Abubakar, is intensifying consultations within his political base to pick a running mate in the coming weeks.

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The PUNCH reports that on Monday, Atiku hosted former Rivers State governor, Rotimi Amaechi, who ran against him in the ADC presidential primaries a few weeks ago. Amaechi had expressed strong reservations about the conduct of the exercise, which saw Atiku poll 1,846,370 votes to clinch the ticket.

Atiku had visited Amaechi a fortnight ago at his Abuja residence, in what his media team tagged a meeting between two opposition figures working together to rescue Nigeria from the pangs of poor governance by the President Bola Tinubu-led government.

Our correspondent gathered that Monday’s visit by Amaechi is not unconnected with Atiku’s earlier decision to run with either Obi or the former Rivers State governor long before Amaechi picked the  nomination form to vie for the ADC presidential ticket.

A highly-placed source told The PUNCH that Atiku rates Amaechi “very highly,” noting that the ex-Vice President would only look elsewhere if the former Transportation Minister declined to run on a joint ticket with him.

The source, who declined to be named citing a lack of authorisation, said Amaechi’s impressive outing in the primaries, especially in the South-South geo-political zone, makes him the natural pick as running mate to Atiku.

He said, “These people will never come out to tell you what they discussed behind closed doors, but Atiku has identified Amaechi as a politician with the required visibility and popularity to prosecute the 2027 presidential election. The reason for this is not far-fetched. In the recently concluded ADC primaries, Atiku won in Rivers, Bayelsa, Akwa Ibom, Ebonyi and Delta States. A joint ticket featuring Atiku and Amaechi will give Tinubu sleepless nights.”

He added that a group loyal to Atiku have also identified journalist-turned politician, Mr Dele Momodu, as a potential running mate to the Wazirin Adamawa. According to him, this group sees Momodu as a man of unquestionable loyalty who is unlikely to rock the boat in the event of Atiku’s victory at the polls.

“This may come as a bit of a surprise to many, but this group sees Amaechi as a strong-headed person capable of causing problems in the future. In Momodu, they believe Atiku will have a reliable, loyal and committed ally whose job will be to work for the nation and his principal. This group does not see Momodu as a core politician but as a man who will stop at nothing to work in the furtherance of the agenda of his principal and of the country at large,” he added.

Although the Ovation publisher has yet to confirm this development, a statement posted on his Facebook wall on Monday has gotten many Nigerians talking.

He wrote, “The 2027 presidential election is expected to be a major fight between President Bola Tinubu and his biggest challenger, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar. It promises to be the battle of the titans. A third force, hopefully, may show up, as it did in 2023, but not with enough firepower and tenacity to upstage and obliterate the two elder statesmen.

“This is why it has become pertinent and urgent for our dear party ADC to change the traditional way of playing politics by becoming a link between the old and modern, conservative and cosmopolitan tendencies, veteran politicians and technocrats in government. There’s no better combination than this duo, assuring a colourful blend. The North and the South will reunite in a game of ethnic and religious rivalries,” the statement read in part.

Meanwhile, the Senior Special Assistant to Atiku on Public Communications, Mr Phrank Shaibu, has described the meeting between the two ADC chieftains as part of ongoing consultations in building a virile and prosperous Nigeria.

In an interview with The PUNCH, Shaibu said, “His Excellency, Atiku Abubakar, regularly engages with political leaders, stakeholders, and eminent Nigerians on issues concerning the future of our country. As you are aware, Rt Hon Rotimi Amaechi remains a respected political figure and a key stakeholder in the national conversation.

“The meeting forms part of the ongoing consultations among patriotic Nigerians committed to rescuing the country from its current challenges and building a stronger democratic alternative ahead of 2027.”

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