Opposition Coalition Fracture Deepens as PDP, ADC, Labour, Accord Factions Disown Ibadan Summit, Reject Joint 2027 Ticket

🔴 Opposition Coalition Fracture Deepens as PDP, ADC, Labour, Accord Factions Disown Ibadan Summit, Reject Joint 2027 Ticket

Factions Disown Ibadan Summit as Coalition Push Unravels

Opposition coalition fracture has deepened after key factions across multiple political parties rejected the Ibadan opposition summit, distancing themselves from its resolution to present a joint presidential candidate in 2027.

Factions within the Peoples Democratic Party, African Democratic Congress, Labour Party, and Accord Party said the gathering did not reflect their official positions, exposing internal divisions within the opposition.

🔴 Opposition Coalition Fracture Deepens as PDP, ADC, Labour, Accord Factions Disown Ibadan Summit, Reject Joint 2027 Ticket

🟨 PDP Faction Labels Organisers ‘Impostors’, Rejects Representation Claim

The Wike-aligned leadership of the PDP strongly criticised the summit, describing its organisers as lacking legitimacy.

“The individuals who attended in the PDP’s name are impostors, restricted by court order from acting as party leaders,” said National Publicity Secretary, Jungudo Mohammed.

The faction added that those present were misled and could not represent the party in any formal arrangement, reiterating that it intends to field its own presidential candidate.

PDP ADC alliance denial escalates into factional war as Wike bloc threatens legal action, targets Turaki and declares party crisis over

🟥 ADC Factions Split — Multiple Blocs Reject Summit Outcome

Divisions within the ADC became more pronounced as separate factions publicly rejected the summit and its resolutions.

A faction led by Kingsley Ogga said:

“Our group was not part of that opposition summit… everybody should be free to find and present their own candidate.”

Another bloc aligned with Nafiu Gombe also distanced itself:

“We are not in support of it… the ADC will pursue its independent electoral path.”

Officials from that camp further described the meeting as a gathering of disaffected political actors rather than a structured coalition.

🟨 Labour Party Distances Itself, Prioritises Internal Leadership Process

The Labour Party also indicated it was not part of the Ibadan meeting, signalling caution over coalition discussions.

“We are not part of those who went to the Ibadan Summit… we are focused on getting substantive leadership,” said interim chairman Nenadi Usman through her media aide.

The party noted that any future coalition decision would be formally communicated, emphasising its current focus on internal consolidation.

🟥 Accord Party Issues Legal Warning Over Alleged Misrepresentation

The Accord Party raised the strongest legal concern, alleging that its identity was used without authorisation at the summit.

“This is not an oversight; it is a misrepresentation… You cannot borrow legitimacy by force,” the party said.

The party warned it may pursue legal action if the matter is not clarified, including a 48-hour ultimatum to those involved to explain the use of its name and symbol.

🟨 Unity Narrative Faces Immediate Pushback from Within Opposition

The Ibadan summit had brought together prominent opposition figures including Atiku Abubakar, Peter Obi, Rabiu Kwankwaso and Seyi Makinde, with a communique announcing plans for a unified presidential ticket.

However, that position was quickly challenged by multiple factions, reflecting deeper disagreements over leadership authority and coalition structure.


🟥 APC Criticises Opposition as Divided, Questions Governance Readiness

The All Progressives Congress criticised the opposition’s internal divisions, arguing that the crisis raises concerns about its ability to govern effectively.

Opposition figures, however, argue that the ruling party is amplifying internal disagreements for political advantage while avoiding broader governance issues.


🟥 Legitimacy Dispute at the Core of Coalition Breakdown

The opposition coalition fracture reflects a deeper legitimacy dispute across parties, driven by:

  • internal leadership conflicts
  • pending court cases
  • competing presidential ambitions
  • disagreements over coalition structure

The Ibadan summit attempted to project unity without resolving these foundational issues, triggering immediate resistance from multiple factions.

🟥 Consequence Outlook — Fragmentation Threatens 2027 Opposition Strategy

If the current divisions persist:

  • opposition parties may field multiple candidates
  • coalition efforts could lose credibility
  • electoral strength may be diluted
  • ruling party advantage could be reinforced

The unfolding legitimacy dispute now shapes the opposition’s trajectory toward the 2027 elections.

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