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Beyond the Optics: Reading the Real Politics of Benue Ahead of 2027 -By Prof. Leonard Karshima Shilgba

None of these suggests that Governor Alia is politically invulnerable. No incumbent should underestimate the volatility of Nigerian politics. Yet, the current anti-Alia positioning appears strategically uncertain and structurally fragmented.

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Leonard Karshima Shilgba

A few weeks ago, I analyzed the electoral prospects of some prominent Benue gubernatorial hopefuls—among them Sebastian Hon, Herman Hembe, Terhemba Shija, Mathias Byuan, and Mike Aondoakaa—against the incumbent governor, Hyacinth Alia. With the exception of Hembe, these figures are widely perceived as political associates or loyalists of George Akume.

Recent political developments have only reinforced the central argument I advanced then: that the path to 2027 in Benue State will ultimately be determined less by dramatic declarations and more by political reality on the ground.

At the now-famous Makurdi “reconciliation meeting,” Senator Akume reportedly declared that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu had directed that Governor Alia “must be returned” in 2027. Many interpreted the statement as a major political endorsement. Yet, in politics, what is not said is often as important as what is said openly.

Careful observers immediately noticed a subtle but significant distinction: the declaration was framed as President Tinubu’s directive—not necessarily as the settled political resolve of Akume himself or of the political actors around him.

Politics is not interpreted merely through speeches. It is interpreted through conduct, alignments, silences, and movement. Actions speak louder than carefully worded reconciliatory rhetoric.

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And what have the actions shown?

We have witnessed a steady stream of defections by political actors long associated with Senator Akume from the APC into other political parties, many of them openly nursing gubernatorial ambitions. More importantly, these movements have occurred without any visible or forceful public dissent from the SGF himself.

The discerning should not ignore this.

At the same time, these defections expose a deeper contradiction within the emerging anti-Alia calculations. A fragmented political front is rarely a sign of strategic strength. The idea that multiple aspirants scattered across different political parties can suddenly form an effective “alliance” close to the elections is politically overstated.

Nigeria’s current democratic structure does not meaningfully support pre-election alliances in the romanticized sense in which they are often discussed. Political parties remain on the ballot individually. Ambitions remain individualized. Structures remain fragmented. Egos remain intact. And votes do not magically merge simply because elite actors share a temporary grievance against an incumbent.

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In truth, what is often described as “alliance” in Nigerian politics is frequently a temporary media construct—a chimera sustained more by speculation than by institutional reality.

This is especially true in Benue State, where politics remains deeply personality-driven and grassroots-sensitive. Multiple opposition figures operating from different political platforms cannot easily consolidate electoral strength merely through informal understandings among elites.

Indeed, one of the strongest advantages presently enjoyed by Governor Alia is precisely the absence of a coherent, unified, and electorally persuasive alternative around which opposition energy can crystallize such as the Steve Ugbah phenomenon in the 2011 Benue gubernatorial election.

This reality becomes even more significant when placed beside the governor’s growing public goodwill. Across the state, there remains a widespread perception that the administration is delivering measurable governance outcomes: regular payment of salaries and pensions, infrastructure renewal, educational revitalization, support for agriculture, revival of the Benue industrial or entrepreneurial base (integrating agricultural value chain and skills acquisition), and a restoration of administrative order.

These achievements matter politically because governance is ultimately experienced economically by ordinary citizens. When salaries are paid consistently, local economies breathe. Rent obligations are met. Schools function more effectively because parents can pay fees. Markets remain active. Small businesses survive. Economic dignity returns gradually to homes.

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Conversely, irregular salaries destroy more than household budgets—they weaken entire local economies, deepen poverty, reduce commercial activity, and indirectly fuel insecurity (an endemic problem from years of economic neglect which both the Tinubu and Alia administrations have been battling).

This is why performance still matters despite the noise of elite political maneuvering.

None of these suggests that Governor Alia is politically invulnerable. No incumbent should underestimate the volatility of Nigerian politics. Yet, the current anti-Alia positioning appears strategically uncertain and structurally fragmented.

There is, as yet, no clearly articulated alternative governing vision emerging from the splintered opposition tendencies. Beyond generalized criticisms and recurring insinuations, the public is still waiting to hear a compelling and practical argument for political change.

Benue people are politically experienced. They know the difference between constructive opposition and elite restlessness disguised as public concern.

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Ultimately, the road to 2027 will not be determined merely by backstage calculations among political gladiators. It will be determined by three enduring factors: performance, party structure, and public trust.

On all three fronts, Governor Alia presently appears considerably better positioned than many of his critics are willing to admit publicly.

For now, therefore, the political atmosphere in Benue reflects not the emergence of a formidable alternative coalition, but rather the uneasy search for one.

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