Politics
Delta 2027: Oborevwori, Omo-Agege flex muscles
Senator Ovie Omo-Agege, the former Deputy Senate President (DSP), has been disquieted since Rt. Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori, the governor of Delta State, defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) and seized the leadership of the party in the state from him.
Obarisi Omo-Agege, the Delta APC 2023 gubernatorial candidate, has reason to be demurred. The Government House in Asaba, the state capital, which he wished to occupy in 2027, for which he had earlier served Oborevwori a quit notice, is becoming elusive by the day.
People say my son will start behaving like a female – Jessica Ossai, mother of 5-yr-old….0:00 / 0:00
As an experienced politician familiar with the way politics is played in Nigeria, he knows it is difficult to halt an incumbent governor in the same party from grabbing a re-election ticket.
Less than a month after Oborevwori joined the APC from the PDP on April 27, he was able to take control of nearly 70 percent of the party’s structure, with the state executive members of the party, selected by Omo-Agege, standing strongly by him.
Omo-Agege saw his men deserting him for the new sheriff in the party. But he was powerless to halt the tide to date. The governor planned to take over the remaining structure at the next Congress.
The party held a series of meetings at the state and local levels after the governor’s defection, which Omo-Agege did not attend. At one or two gatherings in his area, the party leaders validated President Bola Tinubu and Oborevwori for the 2027 polls.
The actions of party leaders and members previously loyal to him compelled the former DSP to reposition to Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), to re-strategize.
Omo-Agege’s anger—Loyalist
A source loyal to the erstwhile Delta APC leader told Saturday Vanguard that the governor had not done the needful, adding, “The way forward depends on the governor. He came into a house that had already been built by someone to contest the position against him.”
“He came to meet him (Omo-Agege) as the leader of the party. However, by the party’s constitution, the governor is the automatic leader of the party. It is, therefore, the responsibility of the governor to see how best they can meet and accommodate him and his supporters.
”They should discuss, and the governor can propose, for instance, that there is room for him (Omo-Agege) to go back to the Senate, and since the Senate presidency has been zoned to the South-South, they can work to project him to secure the position or another principal position in the Senate.
”If the governor is making all these moves and the man rejects them, all his moves will be known to the public. If he continues to be rigid, the people will not be happy with him, and they will ask if he expects the governor to leave the seat for him.”
”Sheriff Oborevwori is the governor; he presides over the state. The governor is supposed to meet with him to discuss the sharing of councillors, boards, the state executive council, and other appointive positions.
”We should not forget that it is not the entire PDP in the state that came with him to the APC. Some are still in PDP, and the people he should use to fill the ones that didn’t come with him are those that he met in the APC.”
Why Oborevwori is watchful – Party leader
An APC leader, who dismissed the contentions of the Omo-Agege camp, said, “I believe that before any governor in Nigeria will defect to a party, he must have been assured of total submission to him as the leader of the party. It is very clear that the governor was assured of the structure of the party before the defection.”
”After the defection, a series of meetings have been held at the state level to which Omo-Agege was invited but did not attend. The APC in Ughelli North, his local government, held a unity meeting, and he also kept away.
”He was also invited to the Delta Central unity meeting. He refused to attend and even instructed his supporters not to attend. He also did not participate in the South-South zonal meeting. From his body language, it is clear that he is nursing the ambition of running for the governorship seat in 2027.
”Now put yourself in the shoes of Governor Sheriff Oborevwori; the other person is looking for the same seat that he (the governor) is occupying and which, by the grace of God, Oborevwori will occupy till 2031. If you were the governor, would you unite with such a person? You cannot reconcile anything with your archrival.
”Let’s assume that they even want to come together; knowing that he wants to run for the governorship, he would ask for a lion’s share of the positions.
”The governor is the leader of the party by the APC constitution. Oborevwori is a serving governor; you don’t expect the governor to meet him at home. The founding leader of the APC in the state, Olorogun O’tega Emerhor, and the first governorship candidate of the APC visited the governor at the Government House in Asaba.
”So, if someone who founded and built the party before Omo-Agege came in and hijacked the party from him can visit the governor, why can’t he?
”Rather, what we are seeing are Omo-Agege’s supporters holding meetings where they have said they stand behind him for governorship. Recently, some of his supporters held a solidarity march in Ughelli to reiterate his interest in the governorship.
”Such a person who wants to go for governorship, do you call him to say, ‘Let us reconcile the state executive council positions and share political appointments?’
Politics
PDP boils: Bala, Makinde , Wike clash in Abuja power showdown
By Grace Edet
The leadership crisis rocking the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) erupted into a violent confrontation on Tuesday as governors Bala Mohammed of Bauchi and Seyi Makinde of Oyo led a factional takeover attempt at the party’s National Secretariat in Abuja, clashing with supporters of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Nyesom Wike.
The standoff, which lasted nearly six hours, saw police firing multiple rounds of tear gas, rival supporters engaging in physical fights, and senior PDP leaders accusing security agencies of aiding one faction against the other.
The conflict was triggered by a dual claim to the party’s leadership. The Bala–Makinde camp had on Monday elected former minister Tanimu Turaki as its National Chairman and requested police protection ahead of its first National Working Committee (NWC) meeting scheduled for Tuesday at Wadata Plaza.
But the rival Wike–Anyawu group simultaneously announced its own NEC and Board of Trustees meetings for the same time and venue, an action Turaki later described as “a deliberate attempt to cause confusion and breach the peace.”
Heavy Security, Hired Thugs and Tension Before Dawn
By 8:00 am, heavy police deployment had cordoned off the PDP headquarters and surrounding buildings, while dozens of suspected hired thugs, some armed with daggers and smoking hemp, lurked in strategic corners.
A small pro-Wike procession displayed banners reading “Turaki Must Go,” while another group chanted against the FCT Minister.
The tension escalated when police fired tear gas to disperse the rival supporters after clashes broke out around the entrance of the secretariat.
‘I Remain National Secretary Till December 8’ — Anyanwu
Speaking earlier, the embattled former National Secretary, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, dismissed the Ibadan convention of November 15 which expelled him, Wike, and ex-Governor Ayo Fayose.
He described the convention as illegitimate, saying due process was ignored.
“As the national secretary of the party in our constitution, it was very clear that for every convention, the national secretary will state the affairs of the party in the convention,” he said.
Anyanwu added that the individuals who announced his suspension “had no such powers,” insisting that “Damagum was already suspended and has no moral or legal standing to act.”
Governors Storm Secretariat, Confront Bouncers
At about 10:55 am, Bala Mohammed and Seyi Makinde arrived with their supporters, forcing their way through bouncers who attempted to block them.
The move sparked a second wave of tear-gassing as police attempted to disperse the surging crowd.
Members loyal to Turaki later overpowered the bouncers and pushed Wike’s supporters out of the NEC hall—only for Wike to arrive around 11:20 a.m., prompting a fresh cycle of confrontations.
‘We Were Tear-Gassed and Harassed’ — Turaki
Addressing journalists during the chaos, Turaki accused the police of siding with Wike and attacking his members.
“Our serving and former governors are here. Our members of the National Assembly are here. And you have seen how they are now granted access to the minister of the FCT, a person that has been declared a persona non grata in the PDP,” he said.
“They have tear-gassed us and tear-gassed even our governors. Some of our boys, some of our members who have come here to attend meetings have been shot by the police.”
Turaki made an unusual appeal, calling on U.S. President Donald Trump to “save democracy in Nigeria,” and declared that his faction was “ready to lay down their lives” to protect its mandate.
‘We Were Molested Despite Immunity’ — Bala Mohammed
Bauchi State Governor Bala Mohammed also accused security operatives of taking sides.
“We have been teargassed and molested in spite of our immunity and whatever we have as leaders. It is for the nation to gaze at the kind of democracy we have, the kind of leadership we have,” he said.
He insisted that the individuals backing Wike were “imposters who have been expelled by the convention.”
Wike in Standoff, Stayed in Car for Two Hours
Wike’s arrival triggered the biggest disruption of the day. He remained in his car for over two hours as rival leaders blocked entry to the NEC hall, with police firing more tear gas to clear a path for the minister’s convoy.
Despite multiple appeals, including Bala’s direct request to the police to remove Wike from the premises, the standoff continued until after 2:00 p.m., when police launched another round of tear gas to disperse those still protesting the minister’s presence.
A Crisis With No End in Sight
Today’s dramatic events underline the depth of the PDP’s internal breakdown, with two factions now laying claim to the same headquarters, same leadership, and same mandate—each accusing the other of hijacking the party.
With both sides refusing to back down, the crisis risks pushing the nation’s largest opposition party further into fragmentation ahead of critical national elections.
Politics
PDP Ibadan convention: More states, stakeholders disown process
The factional convention of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at the weekend has escalated the crisis in the party.
More chapters and stakeholders have continued to fault the procedure and rejected the expulsion of 11 stalwarts, including Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister Nyesom Wike, former Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose and National Secretary, Senator Samuel Anyanwu.
A party source said over the weekend that both factions are gearing up for the next phase of legal fireworks at the court.
The Umar Iliya Damagun-led faction had ignored the judgments of the Federal High Court that restrained the party from conducting the convention, leaning on the exparte order of the Ibadan High Court, which adjourned till December 8 for the resumption of hearing in the case instituted against the party by a chieftain, Folahan Malomo Adelabi.
Rejecting the outcome of the Ibadan convention, the Imo State chapter, in a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Lancelot Obiaku, described it as a “mere gathering of a lawless Committee of Friends,” which ignored court rulings, violated internal procedures, and paraded suspended and expelled members as delegates.
Obiaku said: “It was a tea party of lawless friends, a sham convention drenched in illegality.”
The party officer reaffirmed the loyalty of the chapter to Acting National Chairman Abdulrahman Mohammed and National Secretary Senator Samuel Anyanwu and Senator Samuel Anyanwu as National Secretary, stressing that the refusal of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to monitor the event underscored its lack of legitimacy.
Obiaku described the dissolution of Imo PDP executives as “wishful” thinking.
He said: “We completely disregard the news making the rounds that our structure has been dissolved, as such is only a wishful thought existing in the imaginations of its purveyors.”
Politics
Wike’s 26-year political rise: From LGA chairman at 32 to FCT Minister at 55
By Grace Edet
Nyesom Wike’s political journey dominated conversations on Sunday after data platform Statisense published a chronological breakdown of his 26-year rise across key positions in Nigeria’s political landscape.
The profile, shared on its X handle, highlighted how Wike moved from local government leadership to national prominence, holding some of the country’s most influential offices before age 55.
According to Statisense, Wike began his formal political career in 1999, becoming Chairman of Obio-Akpor Local Government Area at just 32 years old. He held that position for two consecutive terms until 2007, launching what would become one of the most visible political trajectories in the Fourth Republic.
By age 40, Wike had become Chief of Staff to the Rivers State Government, a role he occupied from 2007 to 2011. His ascent continued in 2011 when he was appointed Minister of State for Education, serving until 2015 — a position he assumed at age 44.
Wike returned to Rivers State politics in 2015, securing election as Governor, a position he held for eight years. Statisense noted that by the time he left office in 2023, he had become one of the state’s most powerful political figures.
Now 57, Wike serves as the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), making him one of the few politicians to transition from state governance to overseeing Nigeria’s capital city.
The Statisense profile has sparked discussions online about Wike’s resilience, political influence, and ability to maintain relevance across changing political climates — from the local level to the federal centre.
Statisense framed the post as a data-driven snapshot of his rise, noting the ages at which he assumed key roles:
32 — LGA Chairman
40 — Chief of Staff
44 — Minister of Education (State)
48 — Governor, Rivers State
55 — Minister of FCT
The post provides context for ongoing debates about Wike’s political influence, especially amid tensions in Rivers State and his continued visibility within the current administration.
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