Politics
Osun Guber, AMBO Team And Road Ahead -By Adetayo Olaotan
But let’s be frank: the road to the Government House in Oke-Fia is never a straight line. To win, all the Oyebamiji-compliant groups must work with pinpoint focus. They must break down the vision, translating big financial ideas into the language of the market woman and the local tapper. They must lock down the base, making sure every vote is not just cast, but protected through a network of integrity. This will require a smart web of volunteers who actually understand the current electoral laws.
Osun politics has never been a game for cowards; it’s a high-stakes arena where deep strategy must match the raw energy of the streets. Here, the ‘Omoluabi’ tag isn’t just a fancy logo for posters; it is the ultimate yardstick used to judge who has the integrity, the brains, and the “liver” to lead. As we approach August 15, 2026, the tension is already thick across the thirty local governments and the area office. It is that familiar political heat which signals a massive showdown is on the horizon.
The way the AMBO Campaign Team was recently unveiled didn’t just cause a stir; it completely moved the goalposts for the next governorship race. In Asiwaju Munirudeen Bola Oyebamiji (aka AMBO), the current powers-that-be aren’t just facing an opponent; they are looking at a total overhaul of the Osun vision. This move goes beyond just opposing the current government; it’s a historical wake-up call for a state that has always served as the intellectual heart of the Southwest.
When talking about Bola Oyebamiji, we see a man whose life story defines discipline. Let’s be honest: Osun thrives when a “bridge builder” is in charge – someone comfortable in a corporate boardroom but humble enough to sit on a mat in the village square to hear out a local farmer. Oyebamiji’s credentials aren’t built on dry theories found in school books; his is a practical approach sharpened by decades in the private sector and the high-pressure environment of public office.
He peaked in banking before serving two terms as Commissioner for Finance and then leading the National Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA). That mix of technical skill and political savvy is rare. He knows you cannot give what you don’t have. During his time managing the state’s purse, he refused to let the economy drown just for cheap applause, choosing the hard road of keeping Osun’s head above water. He represents a return to real order – the firm belief that government is a sacred trust, not a personal ATM or a stage for social media performances.
The unveiling of the AMBO Campaign Team clearly rattled the incumbent’s camp, for good reason. In Nigerian elections, the “Director-General” is the engine room, the strategist, and the enforcer. By recruiting Busayo Oluwole Oke, the Oyebamiji camp landed a political general who knows the terrain completely. Oke is a veteran of the legislative trenches whose influence cuts through the state like a hot knife through butter. His presence shows this isn’t just an All Progressives Congress (APC) affair; it’s a mission for everyone tired of the current stagnation and the way our institutions are being handled.
Similarly, picking the three Deputy Directors-General is a masterstroke for regional balance. Adebayo Adeleke (Banik) for Osun Central Senatorial District is a grassroots operator who knows how to wake up silent voters. Omooba Dotun Babayemi for Osun West brings royal prestige and deep intellect to a region that often feels sidelined. Thomas Olaleye Ogungbangbe for Osun East provides the business and industrial weight needed in our economic heartland. This isn’t just a list of names; it’s a ready team showing that Oyebamiji is prepared to work from day one. These are men who know that winning is about handling people as much as it is about counting votes.
Without being disrespectful, the current government in Osun is suffering from a massive reality gap. There’s a huge distance between the noise on social media and what is actually happening on the ground. The current governor seems to be heading for a fall, not because he wants to fail, but because he fundamentally ignores what governance requires. As we know, leading a state isn’t a four-year campaign; it’s the quiet, thankless work of building systems.
While the current team chases “stomach infrastructure” and photo-op projects, the real pillars – education, healthcare, and civil service morale – are slowly rotting away. As if the gods are angry, there is also a clear sense of decay where the state machinery is used for show instead of impact. But take it or leave it, Osun voters are some of the smartest in Nigeria; they know the difference between a cheap coat of paint on a crumbling wall and a solid new building. The incumbent is betting on people having a short memory, but the average Osun voter will pick real substance over populist gimmicks every single time.
The signs pointing to an Oyebamiji victory on August 15, 2026, aren’t just hype; they are based on facts. First, there’s a real hunger for a “CEO” type who can fix the economy. People are tired of the same old tunes. Second, the Omoluabi factor is working. Oyebamiji’s calm and respectful style matches our traditional values of dignity over noise. Third, the cracks in the incumbent’s camp are widening, just as the AMBO team is presenting a solid, unified front.
But let’s be frank: the road to the Government House in Oke-Fia is never a straight line. To win, all the Oyebamiji-compliant groups must work with pinpoint focus. They must break down the vision, translating big financial ideas into the language of the market woman and the local tapper. They must lock down the base, making sure every vote is not just cast, but protected through a network of integrity. This will require a smart web of volunteers who actually understand the current electoral laws.
Finally, the AMBO Team must stay grounded. Even with all these heavyweights, the campaign must remain a “People’s Movement.” The hard truth about Osun politics is that it favours the leader who stays humble and accessible. Simply put, Oyebamiji must keep walking the streets to show he is a servant-leader, not some distant professional. Osun 2026 is more than an election; it’s a referendum on our future. Will we keep playing with populist experiments, or will we return to the steady, visionary leadership that built this state?
The arrival of Candidate Bola Oyebamiji and his team shows that the state is ready for a real realignment. With Oke’s strategy, Banik’s energy, Babayemi’s standing, and Ogungbangbe’s industrial drive, the “Road Ahead” is looking more like a path to victory. And as we head toward August 15, 2026, the task is simple: get the policies right, move the grassroots and don’t play with the Omoluabi spirit. The “State of the Living Spring” is ready to rise again, and in Asiwaju Munirudeen Bola Oyebamiji, it has found the steady hand to guide it into a future of order and prosperity.
The countdown is on, and the call for change is becoming impossible to ignore!
● Olaotan wrote from Iwo, Osun State.
