Forgotten Dairies
ANALYSIS: Many Daunting Hurdles for ADC Ahead of 2027 -By Abubakar Musa Idris
The ADC has gained members but it has not yet gained cohesion. It has displaced the PDP as the main opposition, but whether it can become a true contender for power will depend on what happens in the coming weeks and on whether figures like Tambuwal can translate their influence into a unified, electorally viable project.
The defection of Philip Aduda on March 17 represents another devastating blow to a party already reeling from multiple directions.
The former Senate Minority Leader and three-term senator representing the FCT resigned from the PDP today, citing its persistent crisis.
Aduda was the face of the PDP in the Federal Capital Territory for over a decade. As a key ally of FCT Minister Nyesom Wike, his exit signals a significant realignment within the federal capital’s political landscape.
Unlike the wave of legislators moving to the ADC, Aduda’s destination is the ruling APC. His move underscores that the PDP is not merely shrinking, it is bleeding in multiple directions simultaneously.
But Aduda’s departure is just the latest tremor in a political earthquake that has fundamentally reshaped Nigeria’s opposition landscape in a single week.
The numbers tell the clearest story. Before March 12, the PDP dominated the opposition in the Senate with 15 senators, while the ADC held just two. Today, following a relentless wave of defections, the ADC commands nine senators.
The PDP has been reduced to six. The Labour Party, which entered the 10th Senate with significant representation after the 2023 Obi presidential wave, now has zero senators. The arithmetic is stark, the ADC has officially displaced the PDP as the dominant opposition party in the upper chamber.
The House of Representatives tells a similar story, with five lawmakers abandoning the Labour Party and Young Progressives Party for the ADC. At the state level, prominent figures like former PDP governorship aspirants in Cross River and Adamu Atiku, son of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, have also made the move toward the ADC.
For many Nigerians, the scale of this shift is surreal. There was a time when the PDP seemed as permanent as the Nigerian state itself. It governed for 16 uninterrupted years, at its height controlling 31 of 36 states. In April 2008, its then-national chairman boasted that the PDP would rule for 60 years. It turns out he was speaking from the edge of a cliff.
As columnist Farooq A. Kperogi recently wrote, “the PDP that proclaimed itself Africa’s largest political party is a shell of its former self. The previously expansive PDP umbrella now effectively shelters only two governors and a sprinkling of legislators who are plotting exit strategies from it.”
Nothing captures the PDP’s institutional collapse more vividly than the fate of its own former leaders. At least four former national chairmen have ended up in the APC: Barnabas Gemade, Audu Ogbeh, Ali Modu Sheriff, and Adamu Mu’azu. Men who led the PDP at the highest level later abandoned it for its main rival.
The identities of those currently abandoning the PDP matter enormously. Aminu Tambuwal’s defection, while long expected, remains the most significant catch among those moving to the ADC.
Its significance lies not in surprise, but in scale: the former Speaker and Governor did not arrive alone. He brought substantial legislative defectors with him, influencing multiple lawmakers from his network to make the move. This is a political force constructing a new platform. His departure is a devastating blow to a party already fractured by internal wars.
The Anambra bloc, led by Senators Victor Umeh and Tony Nwoye, represents the transfer of the Peter Obi political ecosystem into the ADC. The Cross River heavyweights and Ireti Kingibe, the FCT senator, add to the coalition. These are not fringe figures.
They are political heavyweights with national profiles and, in Tambuwal’s case, demonstrated capacity to move others. Their collective arrival transforms the ADC from a platform into a movement.
The defectors have been consistent in their reasons: persistent internal crisis, leadership disagreements, litigations, and divisions. The PDP did not die suddenly. Its collapse has been a long, drawn-out process of self-sabotage.
The first decisive blow came in 2015 when it lost the presidency. Many Nigerian politicians join because of proximity to power. Once that power vanished, the coalition that sustained the PDP began to unravel.
What remained after 2015 was a wounded party that still had a chance to recover if it had managed its internal conflicts. Instead, it chose fratricide. During the 2023 election cycle, the so-called G-5 governors effectively turned their backs on their own presidential candidate and openly fraternized with Bola Tinubu.
It was an extraordinary act of partisan self-immolation. The PDP never summoned the courage to discipline the rebellion.
But beyond the political drama, there is a more immediate, technical imperative driving the timing of these moves: the Electoral Act 2026. The newly signed law mandates every political party to maintain a comprehensive digital register of its members and submit it to INEC 21 days before party primaries.
Any party that fails to submit this register shall not be eligible to field a candidate. Any politician who defects after their new party has submitted its register will be ineligible to contest.
This explains the urgency. According to INEC’s timetable, the digital membership register must be submitted by April 2, 2026 just weeks away. Politicians eyeing the 2027 elections must plant themselves in their new parties now. Waiting until the eve of primaries would leave them legally invisible to INEC.
This legal reality also explains why the ADC’s upcoming National Convention, scheduled for April 14, has taken on outsized significance. For the newly defected heavyweights, the convention represents their first major test. Can they integrate into the party’s existing structures, or will they seek to reshape them?
The ADC itself has been vocal in its criticism, alleging the new requirements were designed with insider advantage, claiming the ruling party began its digital registration a year ago. Yet despite its objections, the ADC is pressing forward with compliance. It is a pragmatic calculation, non-compliance would be electoral suicide.
The defections are also not one-sided. On the same day that five lawmakers joined the ADC, six others defected from the PDP to the APC. Philip Aduda’s move to the APC today reinforces this trend. The ruling party, which already controls 31 states and holds a supermajority in the National Assembly, continues to consolidate.
The opposition realignment is happening alongside APC consolidation, and this matters for 2027. A fragmented opposition cannot easily translate legislative presence into presidential victory without coherence and unity.
For Tambuwal, the ADC offers a platform to build on his presidential ambitions with a bloc of loyalists behind him. For the Anambra lawmakers, it offers continuity for the Obi political project. For Atiku’s camp, it offers an exit route from a dying PDP.
For Aduda, the APC offers proximity to his ally Wike. Each defector has calculated that their chances in 2027 are better outside the PDP. That collective calculation is what has transformed the political landscape overnight.
For months, there have been talks of a coalition of the willing to challenge the APC in 2027. The ADC is now emerging as the natural home for such a coalition, offering a national structure untainted by the internal wars consuming the PDP and Labour Party. But legislative numbers do not win presidential elections.
The ADC has gained members but it has not yet gained cohesion. It has displaced the PDP as the main opposition, but whether it can become a true contender for power will depend on what happens in the coming weeks and on whether figures like Tambuwal can translate their influence into a unified, electorally viable project.
The APC, with 31 governors and a supermajority in parliament, remains the formidable incumbent. The opposition’s window for unity is narrow. The April 14 ADC convention will reveal whether this is the beginning of a genuine challenge or it is just a false dawn for the opposition.
