🟥 Supreme Court Set for Showdown Over ADC Leadership Battle
The leadership crisis within the African Democratic Congress is set to reach a decisive legal stage as the Supreme Court of Nigeria prepares to hear an appeal filed by former Senate President David Mark against party chieftain Nafiu Bala.
The appeal centres on control of the party’s national leadership structure, with both sides laying claim to legitimacy amid escalating internal divisions.

🟨 What Triggered the Appeal — From Lower Courts to Apex Battle
The dispute stems from a series of legal confrontations beginning with a September 4, 2025 ruling by Justice Emeka Nwite of the Federal High Court in Abuja, following an ex parte application filed by Bala.
Mark is now asking the Supreme Court to stay the execution of a subsequent Court of Appeal ruling delivered on March 12, pending the determination of his appeal.
Through his counsel, Realwan Okpanachi, Mark is seeking orders to halt enforcement of the appellate judgment and freeze the legal and administrative consequences arising from it.
🟥 Mark Moves to Block INEC, Preserve Leadership Structure
Central to Mark’s appeal is a request for the court to restrain the Independent National Electoral Commission from altering the party’s leadership structure as currently constituted under his leadership.
He is also asking the court to halt further proceedings in a related case before Justice Emeka Nwite of the Federal High Court, Abuja.
This follows a controversial move by INEC, which reportedly delisted Mark as the party’s national chairman in its official records, deepening the leadership crisis.

🟨 Rival Camps Mobilise — Protests and Counter-Protests Emerge
The dispute has spilled beyond the courts into political mobilisation.
The Mark-led faction staged a protest attended by high-profile opposition figures, including Atiku Abubakar, Rauf Aregbesola, Peter Obi, and Rotimi Amaechi.
In response, the Bala-aligned National Working Committee organised a counter-protest, demanding recognition by INEC and asserting its own claim to party leadership.
🟥 Two Leadership Structures, One Party — The Core Crisis
The ADC now faces a dual leadership reality, with competing National Working Committees issuing parallel claims and directives.
This has created administrative uncertainty over:
- who controls the party’s national structure
- which decisions carry legal weight
- how future congresses and conventions will be conducted
Why This Crisis Matters Now
The ADC leadership crisis reflects a broader pattern in Nigerian politics, where internal disputes escalate into legal battles that ultimately determine control of party machinery.
Such rulings influence not just leadership, but access to electoral structures, alliance negotiations, and political positioning within the opposition space.
Control, Legitimacy, or Collapse
The Supreme Court’s decision will determine whether the ADC consolidates under a recognised leadership or descends further into factional fragmentation.
At stake is not only the party’s internal stability, but its ability to function as a credible force within Nigeria’s evolving opposition landscape.
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