logo
Nigeria's opposition leaders form alliance in effort to unseat the ruling party in 2027

Nigeria's opposition leaders form alliance in effort to unseat the ruling party in 2027

LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — Nigeria's key opposition leaders on Wednesday unveiled a new coalition which they say is aimed at unseating the ruling party in Africa's biggest democracy ahead of the 2027 presidential elections.
The Africa Democratic Congress coalition, challenging President Bola Tinubu's All Progressives Congress party, is led by Abubakar Atiku and Peter Obi, both runners-up in the last presidential vote. They are joined by other top figures, including former federal lawmakers and former governors from the ruling party.
'The coalition will stop Nigeria from becoming a one-party state,' said David Mark, a former Senate president and the interim chairman of the alliance, at the unveiling in the capital, Abuja.
Tinubu has been accused of plans to turn Nigeria to a one-party state by allegedly using state mechanisms to convince high-profile politicians to defect from opposition parties to the governing party.
Although the Nigerian leader has denied the allegations, some of his closest allies, including within ruling party leadership, appeared to be supporting it, triggering concerns in a region threatened with shrinking democratic space.
The battle for the country's top job has intensified, even two years ahead of the next elections, as several federal lawmakers and state governors have defected to the ruling party in recent months, and opposition politicians have coalesced to contest Tinubu's second term.
The new coalition is reminiscent of the alliance that defeated Nigeria's former ruling party, the Peoples Democratic Party, in 2015 after an uninterrupted 16-year rule.
As was the case in 2015, many see the current administration as not delivering on their key promises to improve the country's ailing security and economic sectors.
Tinubu's government has battled the fallout of unpopular economic reforms after removing decades-long subsidies and floating the country's currency. The reforms have sparked an inflation crisis as the country deals with a resurgence of attacks by armed groups across the country.
Cheta Nwanze, lead partner at SBM Intelligence, a geo-political consultancy, said only a united opposition bloc stands a chance of unseating Tinubu in 2027.
'You cannot remove a sitting government if the opposition is disunited,' Nwanze said.
____
AP's Africa coverage at: https://apnews.com/hub/africa
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Poilievre wants bill to stop 'longest ballot scam' introduced this fall
Poilievre wants bill to stop 'longest ballot scam' introduced this fall

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Poilievre wants bill to stop 'longest ballot scam' introduced this fall

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is calling on the Liberal government to introduce changes to Canada's election rules that would curb long ballot protests. Poilievre wrote a letter to government House leader Steven MacKinnon on Tuesday saying legislation should be brought before the House of Commons when MPs return to Ottawa in September. "This is not democracy in action. It is a deliberate attempt to manipulate the rules, confuse voters and undermine confidence in our elections," Poilievre wrote of the protests in his letter. A group of electoral reform advocates known as the Longest Ballot Committee is currently signing up more than 100 candidates to run in next month's byelection in Battle River-Crowfoot, where Poilievre is seeking to regain a seat in the House. As of Tuesday, 178 candidates had registered to run in the Alberta riding. Poilievre lost his longtime Ottawa-area riding of Carleton in April's general election, where there were 91 candidates running, most of whom were also associated with the Longest Ballot Committee. Poilievre posted his letter to MacKinnon on social media, referring to the protests as the "longest ballot scam." Although Poilievre only mentioned Battle River-Crowfoot and Carleton in his letter, the advocates have organized a number of long ballots in recent years — including in Liberal strongholds such as Toronto-St. Paul's and LaSalle-Émard-Verdun in 2024. Those elections have seen metre-long ballots that have resulted in delayed vote counts and have confounded some voters. The committee's organizers want to put a citizens' assembly in charge of electoral reform and say political parties are too reluctant to make government more representative of the electorate. In his letter, Poilievre says the government should change the number of signatures a candidate is required to have on a nomination form — from the current 100 to 0.5 per cent of a riding's population. He also said electors should only be allowed to sign one nomination form and that official agents should only represent one candidate. The Longest Ballot Committee has electors sign multiple nomination forms and uses the same official agent to represent all their candidates. In an email to CBC News, the organizers rebuked Poilievre's suggestions. "When it comes to election law, politicians just have too much skin in the game to be calling the shots. There is a clear and inappropriate conflict of interest," the statement said. Chief Electoral Officer Stéphane Perrault has called for some changes he said would help prevent long ballots. Speaking in front of a House committee last fall, Perrault argued that "certain penalties" should be imposed on individuals who sign — or encourage others to sign — multiple nomination papers in an effort to get as many candidates on a ballot as possible, though he didn't say what those penalties should be. Responding to a question about Poilievre's letter, MacKinnon's office suggested the government is open to making changes. "Our government shares the concerns about the longest ballot initiative and we are currently examining this issue," the statement said. WATCH | Candidate says Poilievre's win isn't guaranteed: Other Battle River-Crowfoot candidates have criticized the Long Ballot Committee for getting involved in the byelection. Bonnie Critchley — who is running as an Independent and pitching herself as an alternative to the Conservative leader, who she argues pushed Kurek out — said she's facing a "backlash" from voters who are worried that she is a "fake out" candidate. "I don't have a massive team, I don't have backing from millions of people. I have to go door to door within my community and explain to my neighbours that I have nothing to do with you," she wrote on her campaign website. Michael Harris, who is running for the Libertarian Party, called the protest a "mockery of the democratic process" that "actively hurts serious Independent and third-party candidates." Long ballot candidate pushes back Jayson Cowan, a Battle River-Crowfoot candidate affiliated with the Longest Ballot Committee, said the initiative isn't a gimmick. "It's not even completely a protest because everybody has their own reasons [for being on the ballot]," Cowan told CBC News. Cowan said election rules — specifically the requirement that a candidate have 100 signatures on their nomination form — favour organized political parties. A member of the Métis Nation of Alberta, Cowan previously tried to run as an Independent. But he said he struggled to gather enough signatures, in part due to mobility issues. He credits the Longest Ballot Committee for helping get his name on the ballot for the first time. "This is no protest for me. It's the real deal. And they're just offering a beautiful, fantastic democratic service," he said. Cowan said he wants to see more Indigenous representation and more politicians from the disabled community. Although he doesn't live in the riding, he is pitching himself as a better option than Poilievre. "Who wants an Ottawa politician [in Battle River-Crowfoot]?" Cowan said. "He just wants a free ride now.… If they vote me in, I will serve."

GOP lawmakers advocate for US condemnation of persecution against Christians in Muslim-majority nations
GOP lawmakers advocate for US condemnation of persecution against Christians in Muslim-majority nations

Fox News

time19 hours ago

  • Fox News

GOP lawmakers advocate for US condemnation of persecution against Christians in Muslim-majority nations

NEW You can now listen to Fox News articles! Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., is pushing a resolution that would indicate that the Senate denounces the persecution of Christians in Muslim-majority nations, while Rep. Riley Moore, R-W.V., and several other House Republicans are pushing a House version that would declare the lower chamber's condemnation of such persecution. The resolutions urge the president to prioritize the defense of persecuted Christians in America's foreign policy, including via "diplomatic engagement with Muslim-majority countries" as well as "efforts to stabilize the Middle East." The proposed resolutions also urge the president to leverage the diplomatic toolkit "to advance the protection of persecuted Christians worldwide and within Muslim-majority countries." AMERICANS LOOK AT THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY AND SEE A 'DUMPSTER FIRE': SEN. JOSH HAWLEY Fox News Digital reached out to the White House, which did not provide comment. "Our country was founded on religious liberty. We cannot sit on the sidelines as Christians around the world are being persecuted for declaring Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior. We must condemn these heinous crimes," Hawley said, according to press releases issued by the offices of Hawley and Moore. "Year after year, the number of Christians murdered by extremists in Nigeria has numbered in the thousands. Millions more have been displaced. We cannot allow this to continue. I urge my colleagues to join me in condemning the persecution of Christians around the world by supporting this resolution." CHRISTIANS INCREASINGLY PERSECUTED WORLDWIDE AS 'MODERN AND HISTORICAL FACTORS CONVERGE' Original cosponsors in the House included GOP Reps. Greg Steube of Florida, Michael Guest of Mississippi, Glenn Grothman of Wisconsin, Addison McDowell of North Carolina, Brandon Gill of Texas, Pat Harrigan of North Carolina, and Anna Paulina Luna of Florida. While not an original cosponsor, Rep. Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, is a cosponsor of the resolution in the House, according to FEARS REMAIN THIS EASTER THAT CHRISTIANS IN NIGERIA ARE BEING 'WIPED OUT' BY MUSLIM EXTREMISTS CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP "Around the world, our brothers and sisters in Christ face rampant persecution for simply acknowledging the name of Jesus. That is unacceptable. In Nigeria alone, more than 50,000 Christians have been martyred and more than 5 million have been displaced simply for professing their faith. During a Divine Liturgy in Damascus last month, an islamic jihadist opened fire on worshippers and detonated an explosive device — killing at least 30 and wounding dozens more. These examples illustrate the violence and death Christians face on a daily basis," Moore said, according to press releases. "Unfortunately, decades of U.S. foreign policy blunders have exacerbated this crisis, with ethno-religious cleansing accelerating in Iraq after our failure to stabilize the country following the 2003 invasion. We as lawmakers cannot continue to sit idly by. I urge my colleagues to join me in condemning the persecution of Christians across the globe."

Video of drug crackdown in Ghana misrepresented as xenophobic attack on Nigerian shops
Video of drug crackdown in Ghana misrepresented as xenophobic attack on Nigerian shops

Yahoo

time20 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Video of drug crackdown in Ghana misrepresented as xenophobic attack on Nigerian shops

A video shared on social media claims to show Ghanaians destroying shops allegedly owned by Nigerians of Igbo descent, fueling tensions surrounding the presence of Igbos in Ghana. However, the claim is false. AFP Fact Check found that local youths destroyed the stalls during a drug crackdown targeting shops allegedly involved in selling illicit drugs in Ghana's capital, Accra. 'Ghanaians destroying Igbo shops saying Igbo must leave their country,' reads the caption of a Facebook reel published on July 14, 2025 and shared in Nigeria. Screenshot showing the false post, taken July 21, 2025 The Igbo people are primarily from southeastern Nigeria (archived here). Shared more than 6,000 times, the video shows men pulling down stalls in a market. The post was published by an account called 'Efos Blog', which appears to share anti-Igbo content regularly. The video was also posted on X with a similar claim here. Igbos in Ghana In recent weeks, Igbo people in Ghana have come under public scrutiny following the activities of Eze Chukwudi Jude Ihenetu, a self-styled monarch. Ihenetu has referred to himself as the 'Igbo King' and reportedly claimed to have acquired land near the country's capital to build a cultural settlement — a development that triggered sharp backlash from youth groups and the traditional authorities in the West African country, particularly the Ga Traditional Council, which oversees the Greater Accra Region (archived here and here). In a response, the traditional leader of Ga state, King Tackie Teiko Tsuru II, said the council did not recognise any foreign royal claim within their domain and ordered Ihenetu and his appointed chiefs to stop presenting themselves as traditional rulers (archived here). While the incident drew widespread attention on social media, there were no reports of violence or targeted attacks on Nigerians of Igbo extraction or their properties as portrayed in the Facebook video reel. Anti-drug abuse campaign Using Google Lens to conduct reverse image searches on keyframes from the video, AFP Fact Check was led to a Facebook post dated April 20, 2025 (archived here). The post, with the caption 'Massive Destruction At Zongo Market', was published by an account in Ghana. Using the word combinations from the caption to conduct a Google search, AFP Fact Check found a news report by a local website Citi Newsroom, published on the same day as the Facebook video (archived here). In the piece, the media reported that a group called 'No Drugs in Zongo Movement' launched a major crackdown at the Zongo market in Accra, which resulted in the closure of over 20 shops suspected of selling illicit substances. The report also stated that the campaigners seized several sacks containing marijuana, codeine, Tramadol, and other illegal drugs. AFP Fact Check reached out to Manuel Ayamah, the Citi Newsroom journalist who reported the piece. He confirmed that the 'crackdown was not targeted at any Nigerian community'. 'It was a general exercise in the Zongo,' Ayamah added. The anti-drug abuse movement, in a statement sent to AFP on July 17, 2025, clarified that 'the structures being destroyed [in the video] were makeshift wooden stalls that had been illegally erected by individuals who used them to sell drugs. 'This exercise was conducted in collaboration with local authorities to sanitise the area and protect the well-being of the community.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store