Politics
ADC leadership: Why 3 rival blocs are locked in do-or-die battle

By Clifford Ndujihe, Luminous Jannamike & Olayinka Ajayi
LAGOS — The leadership crisis rocking the African Democratic Congress, ADC, has snowballed into a full-blown political war, with three rival camps laying claim to the soul of the party in what insiders describe as a fierce “winner-takes-all” struggle ahead of the 2027 general elections.
At the heart of the conflict are factions loyal to David Mark, Nafiu Gombe, and former presidential candidate, Dumebi Kachikwu, alongside his ally, Kingsley Temitope Ogga, each accusing the other of illegality, impunity and hijack of party structures.
Leaders of the Senator Mark-led leadership have pointed accusing fingers at the presidency and the All Progressives Congress, APC, over the stance of the Nafiu Gombe and Kachikwu camps, which they alleged was to pave way for President Bola Tinubu’s re-election.
“How can somebody who took part in all the process that led to the emergence of Senator Mark as national chairman suddenly wake up to disown the process, claiming he didn’t resign and accusing our leaders of hijacking ADC? Nafiu Gombe attended all the meetings. It is obvious some of them are working for the APC.”
Countering this position, Gombe insisted he didn’t resign as deputy national chairman and now remained acting chairman after the resignation of Chief Ralph Okey Nwosu.
The APC and the presidency also lashed the Mark-led team for not putting their house in order and should not blame the government and APC.
“After selling the ADC, the sellers failed to carry all top stakeholders along. Now they are blaming the presidency,” a presidency source told Vanguard weekend.
Old allies’ fight hard
The crisis, which has pitched old allies against one another, escalated following a court order barring congresses and conventions — an order one of the factions is accused of violating.
Court order ignites fresh storm
On April 14, 2026, a Federal High Court in Abuja directed all parties in the dispute to maintain the status quo, halting any congresses or conventions pending the determination of suits bordering on the party’s leadership.
The order came the same day the Mark-led camp was holding a National Convention, a move that has further fractured the party and triggered a volley of accusations.
Kachikwu, who leads one of the contending blocs, described the exercise as “a show of political gangsterism” allegedly aimed at provoking chaos.
“They have one agenda, if we can’t have it, no one else can,” he said, warning that such actions could destabilise not just the party but the polity.
He accused further members of the rival bloc of “playing politics with the blood of innocent Nigerians,” insisting that Nigeria “can no longer afford institutional sabotage by old political class.”
Mark camp: We followed due process
However, the Mark-led leadership has dismissed the criticisms, insisting that its emergence and actions were firmly rooted in the party’s constitution.
The camp maintained that the July 29, 2025, formation of its Caretaker/Interim National Working Committee, NWC, followed due process and was duly ratified by the National Executive Committee, NEC, in line with the party’s governing provisions.
According to the faction, NEC possesses the constitutional authority to administer the party, implement convention decisions and establish interim structures where necessary.
It further argued that any eligibility requirements, including the controversial two-year membership rule for national offices, were lawfully waived through NEC resolutions earlier in 2025 to accommodate coalition arrangements.
On the contentious convention, the Mark group insists it acted within its rights, stressing that dissenting members violated party discipline by heading to court without exhausting internal dispute mechanisms — an offence it says warranted their expulsion.
The camp also points to what it described as earlier recognition by the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, as well as successful grassroots congresses as validation of its legitimacy.
Process flawed, leadership illegal — Gombe camp
In sharp contrast, the Gombe-led faction has rejected the entire process, describing it as unconstitutional and void.
The group insists that neither Mark nor his allies met the basic eligibility requirements for national office, particularly the mandatory two-year membership rule and ward-level registration.
It further accused former National Chairman, Ralph Nwosu, of lacking the powers to unilaterally hand over party leadership, a move it said violated clear constitutional provisions on succession and vacancy filling.
According to the camp, no valid amendment or waiver of the party’s constitution took place.
It argued further that such changes could only be effected at a properly convened National Convention with due notice and requisite majority.
Gombe’s loyalists maintain that, as Deputy National Chairman, he automatically assumed leadership, following the vacuum, insisting that all actions taken by the Mark faction remained null and void.
They are relying on ongoing litigation, including a suit before the Federal High Court and a Court of Appeal order directing parties to maintain the status quo ante bellum, to assert their claim.
Kachikwu/Temitope bloc: Both sides are illegitimate
Complicating matters further is the third camp led by Kachikwu and backed by a coalition of state chairmen, which has rejected both the Mark and Gombe factions.
The group argues that neither camp emerged through a constitutionally recognised process, accusing both of violating key provisions relating to membership eligibility and party administration.
According to the bloc, the alleged caretaker arrangements and congresses were never ratified by a properly constituted NEC, which, by the party’s rules, must include all state chairmen.
It also faulted what it described as an attempted “transfer” of party structures without due authorisation, insisting that only a valid NEC or Convention could take such decisions.
Positioning itself as a “rescue mission,” the faction says it is working to restore internal democracy, uphold the rule of law and prepare the party for credible participation in the 2027 elections.
The group has thrown its weight behind INEC’s de-recognition of disputed structures and court rulings restraining further actions.
3 ADCs, one constitution
With each camp brandishing different interpretations of the same constitution, the ADC now effectively operates as three parallel parties, each with its own leadership, structures and narrative of legitimacy.
Political observers say the crisis reflects deeper fault lines over control, ideology and the party’s role in emerging opposition coalitions.
For Kachikwu, the stakes go beyond internal supremacy.
“Men with abysmal records in public service now claim to be on a rescue mission. But it is a mission to rescue their personal economies,” he said.
Uncertain road to 2027
As the legal tussle drags on and internal reconciliation efforts falter, concerns are mounting over the party’s viability as a credible opposition platform, ahead of the next general polls.
With court orders hanging, expulsions flying and conventions disputed, the ADC’s battle appears far from over — a high-stakes contest where, as one insider puts it, “everyone wants the party, but no one wants to lose.”
That is the main reason all eyes are on the Supreme Court, which will look at the leadership tussle on Wednesday.
The post ADC leadership: Why 3 rival blocs are locked in do-or-die battle appeared first on Vanguard News.
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Politics
BREAKING: Peter Obi sues kinsman, Kenneth Okonkwo
Peter Obi, presidential candidate of the Nigerian Democratic Congress and former governor of Anambra State, has dragged his former loyalist and kinsman, Kenneth Okonkwo, to court.
A suit made by Peter Obi’s legal counsel dated June 9, 2026, and signed by Chief Alex Ejesieme, SAN, of Alex Ejesieme (SAN) & Co. (Madiba Chambers) described Okonkwo’s allegations as fabricated and damaging.
Recall that the Nollywood actor-turned-lawyer-and-politician, Okonkwo had alleged that Peter Obi and others had collected a bribe of N10 million from House of Representatives aspirants.
However, Peter’s legal team said the claim is false.
According to the legal document, Okonkwo stated in substance and effect:
“(a) That our client, Mr. Peter 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 document further outlines additional claims made by Okonkwo during the broadcast, noting his assertions:
“(b) that the said unlawful demand was accompanied by documentary proof; the person who relayed the information to you having sent the said information together with the receipt evidencing the payment;
(c) that our Client personally wrote and compiled the list of the party’s candidates from his hotel room at the Johnwood Hotel;
(d) that you warned the said aspirants that our Client is going to scam them;
(e) that our Client travels abroad to collect money from people; and
(f) that our Client and the leaders of the NDC in the South-East are perpetuating criminality.”
Rejecting the assertions, Obi’s legal team emphasized that the remarks directly target their client’s character, integrity, and public standing.
The chambers stated:
“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, organizes, 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. These are extremely grave, damaging, and reckless imputations of bribery, extortion, fraud, financial dishonesty, and criminality directed at the character, integrity, reputation, and public standing of our Client.”
The letter goes on to describe the public nature of the statements as particularly troubling due to their rapid amplification across digital channels.
“For the avoidance of doubt, our Client states categorically that the said allegations are false, baseless, malicious, reckless, defamatory, and wholly unsupported by any fact. They were made with the clear intent and purpose of lowering our client in the estimation of right-thinking members of society, exposing him to hatred, contempt, and ridicule, and injuring his hard-earned reputation as a man of unquestionable integrity, a statesman, and a political leader. It is particularly disturbing that the said statements were made by you on live television and were thereafter republished, broadcast, and widely circulated through online and social media platforms, including video-sharing platforms, where such falsehoods spread rapidly and assume a life of their own. Your words were not mere political commentary. They crossed the permissible bounds of fair comment and constituted a direct assault on our Client’s person, integrity, image, and reputation.”
The law firm said that the right to freedom of expression does not permit the reckless destruction of another person’s reputation.
The firm’s listed demands require Okonkwo to immediately withdraw the defamatory statements in their entirety and publish a clear, unequivocal, and unreserved public apology to Peter Obi.
“This withdrawal and apology must be given equal prominence to the original broadcast and shared across all his social media platforms, including X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube.
Additionally, the legal team demanded a written undertaking that he will cease making or publishing further defamatory statements against their client, alongside a financial compensation package,” his legal team stated.
Recall that in the past days Okonkwo had launched accusations at Peter Obi after dumping the African Democratic Congress.
Okonkwo has not hidden his support for the presidential aspiration of Atiku Abubakar, former vice president, who emerged as the flagbearer of ADC ahead of the the 2027 general election.
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Politics
Ogidi seeks suspension of FCT election tribunal judgement
The African Democratic Congress, ADC, candidate in the last FCT council election, Dr. Paul Moses Ogidi, has called for the immediate suspension of the proposed judgment in Petition No. FCT/ACET/EP/01/2026, citing what he described as unresolved jurisdictional issues surrounding the composition of the Area Council Election Petition Tribunal.
In a statement issued on Tuesday, Ogidi said the tribunal was allegedly constituted in violation of Section 135(3) of the Electoral Act, 2026, which, according to him, requires the inclusion of a High Court judge in the tribunal’s composition.
The petitioner argued that the alleged defect raises fundamental questions about the tribunal’s competence to hear and determine the matter.
According to him, his legal team had on April 10, 2026, petitioned the Chief Judge of the Federal Capital Territory, requesting the reconstitution of the tribunal in line with the provisions of the Electoral Act.
He stated that after receiving no response, a further petition was submitted to the Chief Justice of Nigeria on May 21, 2026, seeking urgent intervention on the matter.
Ogidi said the concerns raised in both petitions remain unresolved despite the tribunal’s reported plans to deliver judgment in the case.
He also disclosed that communications on the issue had been sent to several national and international institutions, including the United Nations, the European Union, the United States Embassy and the British High Commission.
“It is trite law that jurisdiction is the foundation of every judicial proceeding. A court or tribunal that lacks jurisdiction cannot confer validity upon its proceedings by the mere passage of time,” he said.
The petitioner warned that proceeding with judgment while questions over the tribunal’s composition remain unresolved could raise legal and constitutional concerns and potentially affect the validity of any decision reached.
He therefore called for the suspension of the judgment, urgent intervention by the Chief Justice of Nigeria and the reconstitution of the tribunal in compliance with the Electoral Act.
Ogidi maintained that the issue extends beyond his petition and touches on the integrity of Nigeria’s electoral justice system, urging the relevant authorities to ensure that all jurisdictional concerns are addressed before any final judgment is delivered.
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Politics
Peter Obi brought prominence to Labour Party – Julius Abure confesses
Former factional National Chairman of the Labour Party, Julius Abure, has acknowledged that the party’s 2023 presidential candidate, Mr. Peter Obi, brought significant prominence to the party ahead of the 2023 general election.
Speaking on Channels Television’s Politics Today programme on Tuesday, Abure said Obi’s entry into the Labour Party boosted its national profile, although he maintained that the party had already established itself as a viable political force before the former Anambra State governor joined.
According to Abure, the Labour Party and Obi contributed equally to the party’s success during the 2023 elections, describing the relationship as a “50-50 contribution.”
He said Nigerians were already searching for an alternative political platform, while the Labour Party provided a credible structure that attracted Obi and other politicians.
Abure noted that the party was not without achievements before Obi’s arrival, recalling that it had previously produced a governor and elected public office holders.
He also stated that several prominent politicians, including Pat Utomi and Alex Otti, had joined the party before Obi, adding that the Labour Party was already emerging as a third-force movement in Nigeria’s political landscape.
Abure said: “There’s no gainsaying the fact that Mr. Peter Obi brought prominence to the Labour Party.
“But to say very clearly, it is a ’50-50 contribution’. Nigerians were determined to have an alternative political platform to the other platforms. I want to believe that we created and made the platform available. We created that opportunity, and we brought our own credibility and platform to the party.
“I’m sure that that was what Peter Obi saw that attracted him to the party. The party wasn’t completely empty.
“You recall that the party had once had a governor before. We have had elected office holders before.
“And let me say this very clearly: even before Peter Obi came, a lot of prominent Nigerians had already joined the party. So, it was very clear that the party was already becoming the third-force political party in Nigeria before Peter Obi came.
“Don’t forget that politicians like Pat Utomi, Alex Otti and some other political heavyweights had already joined the party before Peter Obi joined.
“But I want to agree completely that he brought prominence, and we also complemented that. And that was what resulted in what we had in the 2023 general election.”
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