ABUJA — Nigeria’s main opposition party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has elected a new National Working Committee (NWC) through a consensus arrangement at a controversial national convention held in the capital, intensifying an already fraught leadership dispute that threatens its prospects ahead of the 2027 general elections.
At the convention, staged on Sunday at the Moshood Abiola Stadium in Abuja, Abdulrahman Mohammed was returned as national chairman alongside other key officials, all endorsed without contest under a consensus model. The gathering was organised by a faction aligned with Nyesom Wike, the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory and former governor of Rivers State, who has emerged as a central figure in the party’s internal power struggle.
More than 2,000 delegates participated in the convention, which organisers described as a turning point for party unity. Yet the process has been rejected by rival factions, underscoring the PDP’s fragmentation and raising questions about its coherence as a national political force.
Consensus leadership emerges
Among those re-elected were Samuel Anyanwu as national secretary, Aaron Chukwuemeka as deputy national chairman (South), and Yusuf Akirikwen as deputy national chairman (North). Kolawale Olabisi retained the role of deputy national secretary.
Other appointments included Opeyemi Oladiran as national treasurer and Lado Marke as his deputy, while Eyim Henry and Grema Kyari were named to oversee party finances.
In organisational roles, Umar Bature was elected national organising secretary, with Efere Augustine as his deputy. The party’s communications structure will be led by Jungudo Mohammed and Egwu Chidiebere.
Legal affairs will be overseen by Kamaldeen Ajibade, supported by Aloysius Uba, while audit responsibilities fall to Osuoha Donatus and Adaba Yatu.
The party also filled key demographic positions: Ogunshe Adedayo was elected national women leader, alongside Hauwa Shinge; Ibrahim Aboki became national youth leader, with Eugene Momoh-Dejih as deputy.
The newly constituted leadership is expected to steer the party for the next four years.
A convention shaped by factional power
The consensus arrangement followed a motion moved by Kingsley Chinda, minority leader of the House of Representatives, and seconded by Usman Ahmed. Earlier, Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, senator representing Kogi Central, had moved a motion dissolving the previous NWC and ratifying congresses conducted in several states.
The event drew prominent PDP figures, including former Senate president Bukola Saraki, former Kaduna governor Ahmed Makarfi, and former Jigawa governor Sule Lamido, signalling a degree of elite backing for the Wike-aligned faction.
Yet the legitimacy of the convention remains contested. A rival bloc within the party, associated with Tanimu Turaki and supported by Bauchi State governor Bala Mohammed, has rejected the process, insisting it does not reflect the party’s constitutional procedures.
Wike asserts control and future direction
Addressing delegates, Wike cast the convention as a decisive step toward stabilising the party after months of internal turmoil.
He declared that the PDP would field candidates in the 2027 elections, dismissing speculation that the party’s internal crisis could render it electorally irrelevant.
“We have seen the real convention,” Wike said, arguing that the gathering was duly monitored by Nigeria’s electoral authorities and therefore legitimate. His remarks were met with loud applause from delegates, many of whom have remained loyal to his faction through the dispute.
Wike also struck a conciliatory tone, calling for inclusiveness and unity while simultaneously criticising rival leaders whom he accused of betraying the party.
“The future of this party must be built on equal opportunity,” he said. “Together, we are committed to making Nigeria a truly prosperous country.”
Calls for unity amid deep divisions
In his acceptance remarks, Abdulrahman Mohammed echoed the theme of reconciliation, acknowledging the depth of the crisis that has engulfed the PDP.
“We choose inclusiveness over exclusion, unity over division,” he said, describing the convention as a moment of renewal rather than merely a leadership exercise.
“The PDP has not come here to mourn itself; it has come here to renew itself,” he added, referencing months of legal disputes and internal disagreements that have tested the party’s cohesion.
The chairman of the convention planning committee, Okezie Ikpeazu, said the party would continue to pursue reconciliation even after the convention, emphasising that its “door remains open” to aggrieved members.
Legal battles and competing conventions
The leadership dispute has its roots in a contentious convention held in Ibadan in November 2025, which triggered a cascade of legal challenges.
Earlier this month, Nigeria’s Court of Appeal in Abuja upheld a Federal High Court ruling restraining the PDP from proceeding with that earlier convention. In a judgment delivered by Uchechukwu Onyemenam, the court found that the party had violated constitutional provisions governing its internal processes.
The ruling effectively invalidated the Ibadan convention and deepened the split between factions. The Turaki-led group has since appealed to the Supreme Court, setting the stage for a protracted legal battle that could determine the party’s recognised leadership.
A party at a crossroads
Once Nigeria’s dominant political force, the PDP governed Africa’s most populous country from 1999 until 2015, when it lost power to the ruling All Progressives Congress. Since then, it has struggled to maintain internal cohesion, with recurring leadership crises undermining its electoral prospects.
The current dispute is widely seen as one of the most serious in the party’s history, involving not only ideological differences but also competing regional and personal power bases.
Analysts warn that unless resolved swiftly, the crisis could weaken the PDP’s ability to present a credible challenge in 2027, particularly as Nigeria grapples with economic pressures and governance concerns that might otherwise favour a strong opposition.
Uncertain road to 2027
For now, both factions appear entrenched. The Wike-aligned leadership insists it represents the legitimate authority of the party, while the Turaki faction continues to contest that claim through the courts.
The stakes are high. Control of the NWC determines candidate selection, party strategy and access to resources — all critical factors in Nigeria’s highly competitive electoral landscape.
Despite the uncertainty, Sunday’s convention demonstrated that a significant portion of the PDP’s structure remains functional and capable of mobilisation. The turnout of over 2,000 delegates suggests that, at least organisationally, the party retains a nationwide footprint.
Whether that translates into electoral viability, however, will depend on the outcome of ongoing legal proceedings and the willingness of rival factions to reconcile.
As Abdulrahman Mohammed put it, the convention was intended as a “moment of renewal”. Yet for many observers, it also highlighted the depth of the divisions that continue to define Nigeria’s leading opposition party.
With the 2027 elections approaching, the PDP faces a stark choice: resolve its internal conflicts and rebuild, or risk further fragmentation in a political environment that leaves little room for disunity.
Discussion about this post