Politics
2027: Kwankwaso backs NDC’s southern presidency
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Former Kano State Governor, Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, has endorsed the zoning of the presidential ticket of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) to the South, describing the move as a pathway to national healing, fairness and unity.
Kwankwaso, who spoke at the party’s National Convention in Abuja, said the decision reflected the need to uphold equity and federal character in Nigeria’s political process.
Addressing party members, stakeholders and supporters, the former presidential candidate said the NDC had rapidly evolved into a formidable political movement capable of driving national renewal and restoring confidence in governance.
He said: “It is therefore with great sense of unity and solidarity, that as a loyal party member, I support the decision to zone the presidential ticket of the NDC to the South, so that it allows the region to complete its turn in producing national leadership.
“This represents a true opportunity for true national healing. We shall work in abidance with the party’s agreement to ensure fairness and federal character in all ramifications.”
Kwankwaso also drew parallels with historical political alliances that shaped Nigeria’s development, citing the 1954 alliance between the Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU) and the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC), as well as the coalition between the NCNC and the Northern People’s Congress (NPC) that ushered in independence in 1960.
He further referenced the partnership between former President Shehu Shagari and former Vice President Alex Ekwueme under the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) during the Second Republic, describing such alliances as examples of national unity in difficult periods.
The former governor pledged that the NDC would promote leadership devoid of ethnic and religious bias and would work toward restoring Nigeria’s dignity both locally and internationally.
“This party shall also ensure to change the way things are done today by prioritising leadership without ethnic jingoism and religious favouritism,” he said.
Politics
NDC mandates all candidates to sign affidavits against defection
The National Democratic Congress (NDC) has introduced a compulsory affidavit for all its candidates seeking elective offices, requiring them to forfeit their seats if they defect from the party after winning elections.
The national chairman of the party, Moses Cleopas, announced the policy during an indemnity signing meeting at the party’s national secretariat in Abuja on Tuesday.
He stressed that candidates, including gubernatorial and presidential candidates, must depose to the affidavit.
Cleopas explained that the development was not a witch-hunt but aimed at protecting the sanctity of electoral mandates and curbing what he described as “post-election political migration.”
He said the party would not tolerate situations where elected officials abandon the platform that brought them to office but seek to retain the mandate.
“The mandate belongs to the party and the people who voted through that platform. If you leave the party after winning, you cannot continue to hold the seat,” he said.
The National Chairman explained that the policy was intended to ensure candidates clearly accept the condition before contesting elections under the NDC, saying: “We are putting this in black and white. Once you take the ticket, you are bound by it. If you leave, you leave with the seat.”
Referencing political realignments across parties, including the Labour Party, he said such cases underscore the need for stricter internal safeguards.
“In the Labour Party, we have seen situations where people won elections on the platform and later moved elsewhere. That is the kind of thing we are trying to stop,” he said.
On the legal basis of the policy, Cleopas cited provisions of both international and domestic legal frameworks, arguing that while freedom of association is guaranteed, it does not automatically extend to retaining elective office after defection.
He specifically referenced Section 14 and Article 11 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, which he said guarantee political participation and freedom of association, including the right to join or leave political parties.
He also pointed to provisions of Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution (as amended), arguing that democratic rights under the Constitution must be balanced with party-based electoral mandates.
According to him, elected officeholders are products of party nomination systems and therefore cannot separate their mandate from the platform that sponsored their election.
Explaining further, the party’s National Legal Adviser, Barrister Reuben Egwuaba, expanded on the constitutional argument, saying the NDC constitution itself contains enforceable clauses on defection.
He cited Articles 1, 2 and 3 of the NDC Constitution, which, according to him, establish that elected officials remain bound by the party platform through which they were elected.
“These provisions make it clear that once you are elected under the NDC, your mandate is tied to the party. If you resign from the party, you cannot retain the office,” he said.
Egwuaba added that the affidavit requirement would serve as an enforceable legal undertaking binding candidates before they are cleared to contest.
“Without this affidavit, your name will not even be uploaded to the INEC portal. It is a strict requirement,” he said.
The legal adviser explained that the measure was intended to close what he described as “legal loopholes that allow post-election defections without consequence.”
He further said the policy aligns with the party’s internal disciplinary framework, which empowers it to demand resignation from members who abandon the platform mid-tenure.
The NDC maintained that the new rule was necessary to strengthen party discipline, preserve voter intent and reduce what it called the “distortion of electoral mandates through opportunistic defections.”
Some gubernatorial and National Assembly candidates present at the meeting signed the affidavits before the end of the event. However, the presidential candidate, Peter Obi, and his running mate, Rabiu Kwankwaso, had not come in for the signing, which was still ongoing as at press time.
Politics
PDP Sweeps Adamawa LG Elections, Wins All 21 Councils, 226 Wards
The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has recorded a sweeping victory in the Adamawa State Local Government Elections, winning all 21 local government chairmanship seats and the 226 councillorship positions across the state.
The results were announced by the Chairman of the Adamawa State Independent Electoral Commission (ADSIEC), Mohammed Umar, at the commission’s headquarters in Yola, following the completion of the collation process.
The declaration was made in the presence of security personnel, election observers, representatives of political parties and ADSIEC commissioners.
According to Umar, the elections were conducted across all 226 wards in the state, with the PDP emerging victorious in every chairmanship and councillorship contest.
However, the ADSIEC chairman did not disclose the total number of votes cast during the exercise.
He commended the people of Adamawa State for their peaceful conduct and support throughout the electoral process, describing their cooperation as instrumental to the successful conduct of the polls.
Umar also expressed appreciation to security agencies and other stakeholders for their contributions in ensuring that the elections were conducted peacefully and successfully across the state.
Politics
Hours after Abuja Court ruling, another Court in Owerri rules against deregistration of party
Confusion over the legal status of the Action People’s Party (APP) deepened on Monday after a Federal High Court in Owerri, Imo State, ruled that the party was never deregistered by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), despite an earlier judgment by a Federal High Court in Abuja ordering its deregistration.
In the Owerri judgment, Justice I.N. Oweibo dismissed a suit seeking the removal of APP from INEC’s register of political parties, holding that the party remained a duly recognized political organization under Nigerian law.
The ruling came hours after another Federal High Court sitting in Abuja reportedly directed INEC to deregister APP and four other political parties for allegedly failing to meet constitutional requirements, creating what observers may view as conflicting judicial pronouncements on the party’s status.
While the Abuja court’s decision focused on compliance with constitutional provisions governing political parties, the Owerri court examined claims that APP had already been deregistered during INEC’s February 2020 exercise and found no evidence that such deregistration ever took effect.
Justice Oweibo held that APP had secured a valid court order from the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory in 2020 restraining INEC from taking any action affecting the party’s status pending the determination of judicial review proceedings.
The court ruled that the plaintiff failed to establish that APP was ever lawfully deregistered and consequently dismissed all reliefs sought against both INEC and the party.
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