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Believe It Or Not, ADC Is Like The Proverbial Chick That Is Destined To Crow As It Makes Bold Entry Into The 2027 Political Battlefield -By Isaac Asabor

The 2027 election will not be a coronation for any party. It will be a contest of ideas, character, and willpower. And believe it or not, the ADC is beginning to look like a serious contender, not just a participant.

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ADC PARTY

There is an old African proverb that says, “A chick that will grow into a cock is known the very day it hatches.” That piece of indigenous wisdom aptly mirrors the current rebirth and repositioning of the African Democratic Congress (ADC). Long regarded as a political lightweight, the party has started to flex surprising strength and maturity, raising eyebrows and expectations ahead of Nigeria’s 2027 general elections.

Truth be told, what the ADC is currently doing is not business as usual. It is not merely playing opposition politics for attention or trying to snag a few seats in the National Assembly. No. The party is making a deliberate, calculated, and well-timed move to disrupt the dominance of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and redefine the nature of political competition in Nigeria. And just like that proverbial chick, the ADC is already showing signs that it is destined to crow.

Without a doubt, the ADC’s strategic reinvention is not just rebranding but repositioning. This is as the recent announcement of Senator David Mark, a respected former Senate President, as the party’s interim National Chairman has sent shockwaves across Nigeria’s political landscape. It is a declaration that the ADC is no longer playing small. With the appointment of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, former governor and experienced grassroots mobilizer, as interim Secretary, and Bolaji Abdullahi, a former minister and accomplished communicator, as interim National Publicity Secretary, the ADC has assembled what looks like a tactical war cabinet.

This is no random coalition of disgruntled politicians. These are seasoned players who know the terrain, who understand strategy, and who have faced political storms and survived. That is not luck, it is competence and experience. And the message is clear: the ADC is not merely trying to make noise, it is preparing for war. The 2027 political battlefield will not be for neophytes, and the ADC seems to know this too well.

Given the somewhat new blood that the party is at the moment infused with, not a few political observers and enthusiasts alike are asking whether ADC’s coalition can withstand APC’s counterstrategies. A fair and honest question, no doubt. The APC is not a pushover. It has money, machinery, and the weight of incumbency. But the ADC is coming with something equally potent, and which can ignobly be called “public dissatisfaction”. From economic hardship to insecurity, from unemployment to the soaring cost of living, the Nigerian populace is groaning under the weight of poor governance. There is a hunger in the land, not just for food but for leadership, integrity, and change. That hunger, if well-organized and mobilized, as histories have shown, is the very thing that topples empires.

The ADC is counting on this public mood and carefully building a coalition that is defined by competence rather than ego. Unlike previous opposition formations that collapsed under the weight of internal squabbles and conflicting ambitions, this emerging ADC structure is already showing signs of cohesion and clarity of purpose. And most importantly, it is not waiting for the election year to activate. It is starting now, early enough to mount a serious national campaign.

With David Mark’s legislative leadership experience, Aregbesola’s deep grassroots influence, and Abdullahi’s strong communication skills, the party is not just forming a coalition, it is constructing a political engine with fuel, tyres, and a roadmap. That is a dangerous combination for any ruling party to ignore.

However, the fact that one of the most destructive forces in Nigerian party politics is internal crisis should not be forgotten or neglected by affiliates of the ADC. In fact, many coalitions and so-called third forces have crumbled not because of external pressure but due to internal ego battles, ethnic interests, and lack of consensus. But ADC seems to have learned this bitter lesson and is charting a different path.

Take Senator David Mark, for example. His time as Senate President was marked by stability, even during some of Nigeria’s most turbulent political moments. He is calm, methodical, and strategic, a perfect leader to guide a party through potentially turbulent pre-election waters. Ogbeni Aregbesola, known for his fiery political persona, has also matured with time and has shown willingness to serve where the national interest is at stake. Bolaji Abdullahi, with a reputation for diplomacy and bridge-building, adds an intellectual and reconciliatory dimension to the mix.

What is more, the ADC is reportedly building formal mechanisms for conflict resolution: zonal dispute panels, stakeholder consultations, and even a conflict management charter that members must subscribe to. That level of planning indicates foresight. It suggests the ADC is not looking to repeat the same mistakes of the PDP, the LP, or even the APC at its inception. This is a new playbook.

Even more telling is the dignified exit of former National Chairman, Ralph Nwosu, who voluntarily stepped aside to give room for the new coalition. That move alone speaks volumes. In a political climate where people cling to power, Nwosu’s gesture points to a culture of sacrifice and collective vision, something that has long been missing in Nigerian politics.

Without any iota of exaggeration, the ADC’s strongest weapon is unarguably its public mood and strategic timing. Perhaps the biggest advantage the ADC has right now is its timing. Unlike opposition parties that only wake up a year before elections, ADC has begun its groundwork early, organizing, building alliances, and engaging Nigerians. With less than two years into President Bola Tinubu’s administration, the ADC is already presenting itself as a credible alternative.

And they are not wasting time chasing shadows. Instead of focusing on the failures of other opposition parties like the PDP, Labour Party, or NNPP, who are currently locked in internal power struggles, the ADC is positioning itself as the home for all disillusioned Nigerians seeking real change. In a country where timing is often the difference between success and irrelevance, the ADC appears to be right on time.

Let us not forget the mood of the electorate. Nigerians are tired. They are tired of recycled manifestos, empty rhetoric, rising food prices, fuel queues, insecurity, and unemployment. They are tired of watching politicians enrich themselves while the rest of the nation starves. If the ADC can capture this frustration and channel it into a solid campaign of hope and realistic governance, they could pull off what seemed impossible just a few years ago.

Again, let us return to that African proverb: “A chick that will become a cock is known the day it hatches.” From all indications, the ADC has hatched, and it is not stumbling. It is walking tall, gathering feathers, and preparing to crow at dawn.

Will it succeed? That depends on many things, continued unity, smart messaging, grassroots mobilization, and a genuine connection with the Nigerian people. But one thing is certain: the ADC is no longer the forgotten party lingering on the sidelines. It has entered the political battlefield, bold and unafraid.

The 2027 election will not be a coronation for any party. It will be a contest of ideas, character, and willpower. And believe it or not, the ADC is beginning to look like a serious contender, not just a participant.

Nigerians must stay vigilant. The political winds are changing. The chick has hatched. And the cock may soon crow at dawn, loud enough to wake the nation from its long slumber.

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