
Politics
Wike is biggest investor in PDP, he’ll have a fair deal – Fintiri
Governor Ahmadu Fintiri of Adamawa State has been appointed to lead former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar’s reconciliation team as part of ongoing efforts to resolve the lingering feud between Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers State and the Peoples Democratic Party’s presidential candidate.
Fintiri, who arrived at the Yola International Airport on Saturday via Max Air, told journalists about his new assignment while answering questions on whether the PDP’s internal crisis was not capable of hurting the party’s electoral chances in 2023.
The governor said he had been made the chairman of the reconciliation committee set up by Atiku to resolve his feud with Wike.
Fintiri, who stated that he was the right man for the assignment, said with God’s help he could broker a truce between Atiku and the Rivers governor, who came second in the PDP’s presidential primary. This was after he had joked that with his romance with Wike and Atiku, he was in a good stead to help resolve the rift between the two politicians, saying, “I am an embodiment of both men.”
He gave an assurance that the crisis rocking the party would be resolved amicably before the general elections next year.
While acknowledging the enormity of the task at hand, he stated that there were encouraging signs that the committee would succeed in brokering a peace deal following his first meeting with Wike.

Fintiri explained that his Rivers State counterpart had made substantial investment in the party to let it all go to waste if he refuses to back Atiku for the poll.
He said, “Who are his friends in the APC? Are you telling me that those who are now romancing Wike love him? I can assure you that with God, the party will put its house in order before the 2023 elections. Even Wike knows that he has been by far the biggest investor in the party; can he now walk away from all of his investment? We recognise that he loves his people and I can assure you that he will have a fair deal if it comes to that; we just need to put the crisis behind us.”
The PDP has been in crisis since Atiku settled for Delta State Governor, Dr Ifeanyi Okowa, as his running mate.
The preference of Okowa irked Wike, who vowed to seek a fair deal for his people, and since that pronouncement, all has not been well with the party with many insinuating that the Rivers governor’s actions showing that of a man on his way out of the PDP.
But Fintiri is optimistic of the party’s flag bearer clinching the presidency in 2023, adding that with interactions and understanding, the impasse would soon be resolved and the party re-united.
Meanwhile, a chieftain of the PDP, Prof. Jerry Gana, said Wike was not challenging the outcome of the party’s presidential primary.
Gana, who is also a member of the Board of Trustees of the party, said this in a statement he issued to newsmen in Abuja.
“Our attention has been drawn to some fake news, making it necessary to issue this firm statement.
“News in the media that Wike has commenced legal proceedings challenging the outcome of the 2022 PDP presidential primary is totally false.
“We unequivocally state that Wike has not and will not challenge the outcome of the just concluded PDP Presidential Primaries in court,” he said.

Politics
APC govs back consensus primary for Tinubu
All 31 governors of the ruling All Progressives Congress APC have thrown their weight behind a consensus arrangement for President Bola Tinubu’s return as the party’s presidential candidate in 2027.
Chairman of the Progressive Governors’ Forum PGF and Imo State governor, Senator Hope Uzodimma, made the declaration on their behalf on Thursday in Abuja at the submission of Tinubu’s nomination and expression of interest forms.
According to him, the 31 APC-controlled states are united behind the president and committed to marketing his administration’s record to secure re-election.
Uzodimma told party leaders, members of the National Assembly and the Federal Executive Council FEC that the governors’ endorsement of a second term for the president was not a new position but a fulfilment of a resolution made at the APC Political Summit last year, where governors elected on the platform of the party unanimously encouraged Tinubu to seek re-election.
“In furtherance of that resolution and in making sure it is implemented, we are here today with Mr President to submit his expression of interest form, showing that we are united and have reached a consensus in supporting Mr President to continue the good work he is doing,” Uzodimma said.
He said governors from all 31 APC-controlled states were firmly behind the consensus option for the presidential primary, effectively closing the door on a contested process at the party level.

Only one party chieftain, Stanley Osifo, has obtained forms to challenge Tinubu.
“On behalf of the governors elected on the platform of our Progressive Congress, from the 31 APC-controlled states out of the 36 states in Nigeria, we believe it is going to be a consensus,” he said.
Uzodimma pledged that the governors would work actively to campaign for the president’s re-election, saying they intended to ride on the policies and achievements of the administration to secure the public mandate required for a second term.
“We firmly commit ourselves to work assiduously to market the policies and successes recorded by this administration,” he said.

Politics
All Obi wanted was presidential ticket; didn’t know anything about our policies, manifesto – ADC
National Publicity Secretary of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, has criticized former presidential aspirant of the party, Peter Obi, alleging that he showed little interest in the party’s manifesto during his brief stay in the coalition plotting to unseat President Bola Tinubu.
On Sunday, May 3, 2026, Mr. Peter Obi, former Anambra State governor and Labour Party Presidential candidate in the 2023 general elections, alongside former Governor of Kano State, Senator, Minister and Presidential candidate of the New Nigeria Peoples Party, NNPP in the 2023 general elections, Dr Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, dumped the ADC for the Nigeria Democratic Progress, NDC.
The duo cited the leadership crisis in the ADC as reason for their defection.
But speaking during Prime Time interview on ARISE Television, Mallam Abdullahi questioned Obi’s familiarity with the party’s positions on key national issues, noting that the ADC had invested considerable time in developing its policy direction.
“We set up a manifesto committee that worked for about two to three months to develop a document that clearly outlined what we will do differently,” Abdullahi said.
“You may invite His Excellency Peter Obi here and ask him, what is the ADC position on fuel subsidy? What is the ADC’s framework on security? He doesn’t know, because he’s never been interested.”

Abdullahi further alleged that some politicians were more focused on securing party tickets than engaging with ideological frameworks.
“They are just waiting for the tickets to be handed to them. If you say you want to contest election, and you believe in changing the country, you should know what your party stands for,” he added.
Abdullahi described the ADC as a party with clear ideology and structure capable of offering Nigerians credible alternatives, but according to him, some political actors were more interested in using the party as a mere “special purpose vehicle” for their personal ambition.
“Everything that the government has thrown at the ADC, we have resisted. We have fought back and remained committed to our goal of rescuing Nigerians from the failure of this government,” Abdullahi said.
“We have been fighting for democracy within a party that has given us the best chance to serve the Nigerian people. Even Peter Obi once said at a coalition meeting that if we present two candidates against Bola Ahmed Tinubu, we would be handing him victory in 2027. So, what has changed?”
Dismissing claims that legal challenges influenced the defection, Abdullahi said the ADC currently faces only “three flimsy cases in court,” insisting that such concerns could not justify the exit.
He further stated that Obi received significant concessions within the party, including the opportunity to nominate the National Organising Secretary, a position widely regarded as the operational backbone of the party.
“None of the aspirants or leaders was given as much consideration as Peter Obi. The office of the National Organising Secretary is the engine room of the party. It handles congresses, elections, and core operations. That office is occupied by his nominee,” he said.
Addressing claims by some of Obi’s supporters that the party was skewed in favour of a particular candidate, Abdullahi said such assertions were unfounded.
“We met with Peter Obi consistently. He attended coalition meetings regularly. He made it clear he would only join if the ticket was zoned. He took nearly a year to join the ADC and never raised concerns about bias within the party, because there was none,” he added.
Using a metaphor to illustrate his point, Abdullahi said: “When a woman wants to leave a marriage, she gives all kinds of reasons, including being suffocated by too much love. That is what we are seeing now.”
He emphasised that while individuals are free to associate with any political platform, those who choose to leave should avoid offering what he described as “flimsy excuses.”
Abdullahi also revealed that Obi’s defection appeared to have been in motion for some time, citing a meeting held two months ago in Kano involving Obi, Kwankwaso, and former Bayelsa State Governor, Seriake Dickson.
“After that meeting in Kano, I reached out to Governor Dickson and asked what had transpired. Kwankwaso had been considering joining the ADC, and suddenly, things changed. It raised questions about whether there were efforts to divide the opposition and create an advantage for the incumbent,” he said.
According to Abdullahi, Dickson indicated that the NDC remained an alternative platform open to interested politicians.
“What this suggests is that the defection of Peter Obi and Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso was pre-planned. It even raises the question of whether Kwankwaso’s involvement in the ADC was a trojan horse at the onset,” he added.

Politics
Obi, Kwankwaso supporters hold Abuja Unity Summit
Supporters of former Anambra State Governor, Peter Obi, and former Kano State Governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso, are set to hold a unity summit in Abuja today.
The summit, themed, “One Voice, One Vision: In Unity We Win,” is being organised by the OK Movement.
The group is pushing support for a possible Obi-Kwankwaso joint political arrangement ahead of the 2027 general elections.
A flyer posted on 𝕏 by the OK Movement on Friday showed that eight speakers would address the conference.
Those listed include a chieftain of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), Buba Galadima; activist Aisha Yesufu; and Isaac Fayose, brother of former Ekiti State governor, Ayodele Fayose.
Others are Moses Paul, a former chairmanship candidate of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), and Adebayo Adefolaseye, the South-West coordinator of the OK Movement.

As of the time of filing this report, about 428 Nigerians had registered to attend the summit.
The development comes amid growing speculation that Obi and Kwankwaso may leave the ADC for the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC).
On Friday night, the spokesperson of the Kwankwasiyya movement, Habibu Mohammed, said the two ADC chieftains were expected to finalise the move next week.
Mohammed said the decision followed a unanimous endorsement by stakeholders.
He added that discussions with the NDC had reached “about 90 per cent,” with only minor issues left to be resolved.
According to him, Kwankwaso and Obi, the 2023 presidential candidate of the Labour Party, may move to the NDC on Monday or Tuesday.
“I believe him, Peter Obi, and some others will be joining the NDC,” Mohammed said.
The lingering ADC leadership crisis is said to be central to the planned move.
On Thursday, the Supreme Court set aside the controversial status quo ante bellum order in the ADC leadership dispute and returned the matter to the Federal High Court for determination.
The decision effectively reset the contest without resolving the substantive leadership dispute.
In April, supporters of Obi and Kwankwaso launched the OK Movement to mobilise support for a joint ticket in the 2027 elections

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