
Di coming of ADC don mark di end of PDP?
Many Nigerians on social media don describe di joinbodi as a masterstroke move by di opposition, but some political sabi pipo say di ruling party still dey hold plenty aces for dis card game.
However, di kwesion wey some pipo dey ask be say, shey dis coalition go be di beginning of end for di Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)?
Bashir Ahmad, a former tok-tok pesin for former President Muhammadu Buhari, tok say PDP don dey buried as dis ADC movement happen.
Also, Deji Adeyanju wey be lawyer and activist make similar comments as e say "PDP don finally die".
Di PDP na bifor-bifor largest political party for Africa. Between 1999 and 2015 di party bin hold sway and one of dia former National Chairman - Vincent Ogbulafor -even boast in 2008 say dem go rule Nigeria for 60 years.
But only less dan 10 years afta dem comot for power, di party don drown by internal crisis, and pipo say dis joinbodi movement wit di African Democratic Congress na di last straw wey go break di camel back for PDP. But na true?
Kabiru Danladi, a lecturer for Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, tok say PDP don stop to function as a viable political party, wetin dey move around na im carcass.
"Today, wetin remain of di PDP na just patchwork of political actors wey dey retreat. Guvnors dey defect. Dia 2023 vice-presidential candidate (Ifeanyi Okowa) don walk away. State-level structures dey hollow. Internal leadership don fracture, and dem no get any unifying idea to rally around. Wetin all of dis dey tell us? Di PDP no dey for decline. E don dey defunct," oga Kabiru tok for im opinion piece in April.
'Institutions no dey die'
BBC Pidgin ask dis question to Kola Ologbondiyan wey be di bifor-bifor tok-tok pesin for di PDP and e ansa in one sentence say: "Di PDP na strong institution, and institutions no dey die."
Oga Olagbondiyan explain say di party fit dey wounded sake of di big big names wey don comot, but dem still get strong members wey fit hold di party strong if dem fix dia internal wahala.
True-true, of all di pipo wey join di coalition from di PDP, no sitting guvnor dey dia, and for Nigeria politics, guvnors get ogbonge power.
Di PDP guvnors forum bin don agree say dem no go join any coalition or merger, rada dem go welcome any party wey wan come join dem to wrestle power from APC.
But since dem make dat decision for April dis year, dem don lose two of dia members - di govnors of Delta and Akwa Ibom States - to di APC, and rumour dey fly say two more PDP guvnors dey for door dey wait to comot.
Also, ogbonge PDP oga for Lagos State, Bode George, tok for one TV interview say "di pipo wey think say PDP don die na dreamers".
According to oga George, di PDP be like Iroko tree wey be say even if di body fit look dry, "di root stil dey deep and intact".
Wetin need to happen na for di members of di party to "come back, close di door, speak some home truths, debate, and unite".
Lekan Ige, a political sabi pesin and journalist, agree wit wetin oga Bode George tok.
Ige tell BBC Pidgin say di PDP don dey too entrenched for di Nigeria political atmosphere to just die like dat.
"Dem still get guvnors, senators, House of Rep members for both di national and state assemblies for di platform, so di party still dey viable," e tok.
However, Ige say di PDP must to try to resolve dia inside wahala for dia coming convention.
Di tenure of di PDP Acting National Chairman Umar Damagum go expire by di end of di year and di party suppose hold convention to appoint new executives ahead of di election season in 2026/2027.
"Seventy-five percent of di internal problem wey di PDP dey face now go dey solved if dem hold di convention. So dem must try dia best to do di convention, elect new leaders, and from dia, I dey sure say dem go fit pick up di pieces of wetin remain for di party" Lekan Ige tok.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
42 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Trump responds to criticism after use of 'anti-Semitic term'
President Donald Trump pushed back at criticism for his use of an anti-Semitic term during his Iowa rally, saying he had 'never heard it that way.' He used the term while referencing unscrupulous bankers as he touted the impacts of his 'big, beautiful bill,' which Congress had approved hours earlier. 'No death tax. No estate tax. No going to the banks and borrowing from, in some cases, a fine banker — and in some cases, shylocks and bad people,' he said. He sparked outrage over his use of 'shylocks,' which refers to loan sharks and is considered offensive, playing on stereotypes of Jews and money. Trump said he had never heard it used that way. 'I've never heard it that way,' he told reporters at Joint Base Andrews after his rally. 'The meaning of Shylock is somebody that's a money lender at high rates. You view it differently. I've never heard that.' Shylock is a Jewish character in William Shakespeare's play 'The Merchant of Venice.' He is portrayed as a villain and demands a 'pound of flesh' from another character who is unable to repay a loan. Amy Spitalnick, the CEO of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, slammed Trump for using an 'anti-Semitic stereotype.' 'Shylock is among the most quintessential antisemitic stereotypes. This is not an accident. It follows years in which Trump has normalized antisemitic tropes and conspiracy theories — and it's deeply dangerous,' she wrote on social media. Trump has been accused of anti-Semitism but he is also close to the Jewish people. His daughter Ivanka converted to Jewish with her marriage to Jared Kushner. They are raising their children as Jewish. The president also has signed executive orders combating antisemitism and cracked down on universities that allowed pro-Palestinian protests on their campuses. Before his rally he met with Edan Alexander, an Israeli-American who was held hostage during the Gaza war. And, on Monday, he will host Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House to push for an end to the war in Gaza. Trump is not the only politician to have used the word. Then-Vice President Joe Biden used it in a 2014 speech while discussing his son's experience serving in Iraq and meeting members of the military who were in need of legal help because of problems back at home.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
What Americans think about Elon Musk's plan for a new political party
A new poll by Quantus Insights reveals that 40 percent of Americans would back a third political party launched by Elon Musk. The survey found 14 percent of voters were "very likely" and 26 percent "somewhat likely" to support a political body created by the Tesla boss. Musk proposed forming "the America Party" in response to Donald Trump 's "One Big, Beautiful Bill," which he publicly described as "insane." The poll indicated clear demographic divides, with male Republicans and independent men showing the most interest in supporting Musk's hypothetical party. Quantus Insights suggested that the openness to a new party reflects a broader desire among the electorate for an alternative to the existing political order, rather than being solely about Musk. Nearly 40 percent of Americans say they would back Musk's third party if he creates one, poll finds


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Therese Coffey: Civil servants told me to break the law
Baroness Coffey, the former deputy prime minister, has claimed she was advised by civil servants to knowingly break the law. Lady Coffey, who held several other cabinet positions, including work and pensions secretary, health secretary and environment secretary, became a Conservative peer earlier this year. She told the House of Lords on Friday: 'There were several occasions when I was advised by civil servants to knowingly break the law. 'Now, they may have only been minor infringements, but I challenge about how is that possible, under the Civil Service code, that in your advice and in your inaction, you are advising me to knowingly break the law? And I wasn't prepared to do it.' Lady Coffey recalled another situation when she felt the code was not adhered to. She said: 'I learned that my shadow secretary of state had written to me on Twitter, and I knew it because he also published my response to him on Twitter. 'I'd never seen the letter from the shadow secretary of state. I had never seen the letter written in my name, but there it was: my response and my signature. 'And these sorts of things, unfortunately, in the Civil Service code should be more serious than it was.' The Tory peer added: 'Sometimes people try and suggest it's just politicians trying to do this, that and the other. 'I'm not accusing the civil service, but their job is to try and manage and, ultimately, I could go on about another legal case where I was named as the defendant. 'I didn't know until a ruling had come against me, formally. These things, I'm afraid, do happen.' Her comments came as peers debated a report from the constitution select committee. So-called deep state sabotage Lady Coffey was the deputy prime minister in the Liz Truss administration in September and October of 2022. After her brief premiership, Ms Truss took swipes at the civil service and blamed the so-called deep state for 'sabotaging' her. Speaking at a conference in the US in 2024, the former prime minister said: 'I wanted to cut taxes, reduce the administrative state, take back control as people talked about in the Brexit referendum. 'What I did face was a huge establishment backlash and a lot of it actually came from the state itself. 'Now, people are joining the civil service who are essentially activists. 'They might be trans activists, they might be environmental extremists, but they are now having a voice within the civil service in a way I don't think was true 30 or 40 years ago.'