Friday, May 9, 2025 - Senator Shehu Sani, a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), has projected a landslide victory for President Bola Tinubu in the 2027 general elections if the opposition fails to unite under a coalition. Speaking to journalists in Abuja on Thursday, May 8, Sani attributed his prediction to the current internal divisions plaguing the opposition parties and the wave of defections to the ruling APC.
“There is no way you can evict a ruling party without a
coalition. It’s only on that basis that the opposition political parties can
sacrifice their own individual and narrow political interests and ambition for
the general good of democracy in the country,” said Sani, a former senator who
represented Kaduna Central in the 9th Senate and a known civil society
activist.
Sani noted that key opposition parties, including the Social
Democratic Party (SDP), Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Labour Party, and the
New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), have so far shown no willingness to
collaborate.
“So far, the SDP said they are not interested in coalition.
The PDP said they are not interested in coalition, and the Labor Party seems to
be flying alone, and the NNPP says they are not interested in coalition. And if
the opposition parties will go to the battle without an alliance, merger or any
form of coalition, there is no doubt about it, that APC will have a landslide
victory in the 2027 election,” he stated.
He emphasized that a unified opposition could change the
dynamics of the election significantly. “But if they come together, they will
win many seats and will make a very strong impact in the political realm. They
lost the 2023 election because of lack of unity, and they are likely to lose
this election if they refuse to come together. If the opposition parties refuse
to come together and form an alliance or coalition, it is a done deal for us
(APC).”
Sani further highlighted the ideological vacuum in Nigeria’s
political party system, which he said has made defections commonplace and
consequence-free.
“Parties are simply vehicles for people to realize their own
political ambitions. If you look at all the manifestos of the party, they all
look alike. So, anybody can move from any party to another party without losing
anything. And the only thing is that the party differs from each other by their
names and not by their own ideology or philosophy,” he said.
He argued that it is not the responsibility of the ruling
party to prevent defections from opposition parties, adding that it is the
opposition's job to maintain internal stability and loyalty. “If a party is
shut down against you, there’s no way you can continue to function in that
party. So, it is not the problem of Asiwaju to protect opposition party and to
make sure that people don’t migrate away from them, it is the opposition party
themselves that need to convince and protect their members from moving to other
political parties.”
Senator Sani predicted more defections to the APC due to
unresolved crises within the opposition, especially the PDP. “A one-party state
is a state where you have a law that prescribes one party, but this is a multi
party democracy, and most of the reasons why people are living in the
opposition party, is not pull back factors, but push factors. They have been
pushed away because of internal crisis, the internal crisis in the PDP, and
their inability to resolve it led to the situation where we are today, because
this is a party that has about two national secretaries,” he explained.
He pointed to the ambiguous Supreme Court ruling on the
PDP’s leadership tussle as a deterrent to political confidence. “The Supreme
Court gave judgment, but that judgment was neither here nor there. So if you
have a party that has a leadership problem. The danger of you staying there is
that the time for primary elections will come and you will have two factions
laying claim to it. So from which of the factions are you going to collect form
and fill?”
He concluded that the uncertainty will likely drive more politicians away
from the PDP. “So there is a likelihood of more defections away from the PDP,
because a first time governor in the PDP will not be sure whether he will be
given a ticket, a senator in PDP will not also be sure whether he will get the
ticket. So these are the factors that we have now, and I don’t think it’s going
to change in the foreseeable future.”
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