Forgotten Dairies

Obi, Kwankwaso, and the Igbo Political Odyssey -By SKC Ogbonnia

By shattering the suffocating ADC trap and forging a monumental, patriotic alliance with Peter Obi into the NDC, Rabiu Kwankwaso has solidified his legacy as a selfless political titan. He sees tomorrow. He sees the suffering in the land. He chose to join hands in rescuing Nigeria over selfish interest, for which history will absolutely vindicate him.

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The dramatic exit of Peter Obi and Rabiu Kwankwaso from the African Democratic Congress (ADC) to the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) is a game changer. This is a dream alliance for Nigerian unity and progress. For the first time in the annals of Nigerian presidential politics, we are set to witness a popular southern Christian with an organic following and a powerful northern Muslim with a mass movement on the same presidential ballot. This represents a landmark maturation of Nigerian democracy. It prioritizes a unified, competence-driven approach to national revival over transactional politics. Further, this alliance perfectly shattered the familiar ethnic trap set within the ADC. It has already lifted the knee on the neck of the Igbo that dates back to time immemorial.

Let me now explain.

Consider that every political zone in the Nigerian federation has tasted the honey of democratic power with the unfortunate exception of the Southeast, a predominantly Igbo zone. We have seen where the nation rose and rooted for a Yoruba presidency. We have seen where we united to appease the Southern minorities by ensuring that they occupied Aso Rock. We have witnessed Nigeria revolt for power return to the North. Then imagine that we witnessed in a broad day light where a candidate boldly declared “Emi lo kan” (It is my turn) and rode that sentiment straight into Aso Rock. You get the picture?

Yet, a curious and toxic phenomenon thunders whenever the prospect of a president of Igbo extraction arises. The moment an Igbo intellectual or a patriot points out this glaring inequity, they are instantly branded a “tribalist,” effectively gaslighting an entire ethnic group into silence while their political rights are systematically dismantled. Yes, but SAD!

The Peter Obi experience within the ADC is not just a story of a popular candidate; it is the latest chapter in a long, shameful history of marginalization where the goalposts are shifted the moment an Igbo man gets close to the ball. This institutionalized sabotage in presidential politics traces its roots back to 1999. Dr. Alex Ekwueme, the man who risked everything to confront Abacha’s tyranny and played a significant role in birthing the PDP, was the natural frontrunner. But the “powers that be,” who were said to be uncomfortable with an Igbo intellectual at the helm, engineered a shift. The rules were rewritten in smoke-filled rooms to favor a “safer” alternative. This quickly set a precedent that merit and service in the South-East would always be secondary to ethnic gatekeeping.

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Fast forward to 2023, and the betrayal became even more brazen. For years, the PDP maintained a zoning principle to ensure equity. But the moment Peter Obi’s momentum became undeniable, the party suddenly reneged on its own constitution. On the APC side, given that both the Southwest and South-South zones had of recent produced presidents and vice-presidents, the conventional wisdom then was that the presidency should be rotated to the Southeast after Buhari’s second term. But that was not to be. Somehow it became Tinubu’s turn.

The rotational principle was tossed into the bin just to ensure that Obi would not emerge as the flag bearer in PDP. And, of course, the Southeast was not even an afterthought in the APC calculation. It was a cold, calculated message: the Igbo are good enough to vote, but never good enough to lead. The prejudice has become so loud that even some faint-hearted Igbo leaders not only began to buy the bunkum that the Igbo can never be president, they also queued up to work against any serious Igbo candidate. The paradox became so palpable that any thought of a popular Northern politician joining an Igbo presidential candidate on a ticket appeared impossible.

The irony reached a fever pitch with the 2026 ADC coalition. While critics argue Obi should have stayed in the Labour Party or formed his own party, they ignore the shadow of the ruling APC, whose meddling had turned virtually all the opposition parties into a legal minefield. Moreover, didn’t Buhari move from APP to ANPP to CPC before settling into the APC coalition? Didn’t Tinubu move from AD to AC and then to ACN before the coalition under APC?

In short, a coalition of opposition, not the Labour Party, was the only logical path to a formidable front. However, history repeated itself. The ADC coalition failed to do the needful. It failed to acknowledge that for the sake of national healing, the Igbo deserves a fair shake, especially where a son from that region is a generational figure—popular, competent, and capable. Instead of a solidified front, Obi was met with a gigantic trap—the same old hesitation,  tactical delays, and deceit, leading to his eventual and inevitable exit. But he didn’t leave alone. He left with notable patriots who have conscience.

One of such patriots is no other than Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, a widely celebrated transformative leader, visionary educationist, and a populist icon whose dedication to grassroots empowerment has reshaped Northern Nigerian politics. Known as the supreme leader of the Kwankwasiyya movement, he is revered for his progressive brand of politics, which prioritizes human capital development, infrastructure, and the welfare of the masses.

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By shattering the suffocating ADC trap and forging a monumental, patriotic alliance with Peter Obi into the NDC, Rabiu Kwankwaso has solidified his legacy as a selfless political titan. He sees tomorrow. He sees the suffering in the land. He chose to join hands in rescuing Nigeria over selfish interest, for which history will absolutely vindicate him.

Best of all, a joint ticket combining Obi’s massive youth-driven Obidient movement with Kwankwaso’s deep-rooted northern Kwankwasiyya machine has the enormous potential to dethrone President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s evil regime and set Nigeria free.

Dr. SKC Ogbonnia writes from Ugbo, Awgu, Enugu State

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