Ogheneganre Emmanuel onovughakpo
249 posts

Ogheneganre Emmanuel onovughakpo
@LaughtonJ5
From edjekota ogor ' ughelli north/ gbaregolor ughelli south


The NDC has a lot of issues but on one part I do understand Seriake Dickson. They provided a platform for Peter Obi and Kwankwaso in May, 10 days to the deadline. When Dr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed went to Arise TV, he revealed that the PRP couldn't give PO and Kwankwaso the number of structures they needed. The people already inside the NDC are humans too. OBIdients must learn to share and sacrifice. We got the President which is the most important thing. If Peter Obi does not win, 2031 is over for anyone in the NDC. So they know how important 2027 is. Be calm and be of good cheer.













Alhamdulillah! I am delighted to announce that His Excellency, Comrade Aminu Abdussalam Gwarzo has been selected as our Kano NDC Gubernatorial Candidate for the upcoming elections. Similarly, Dr. Nasiru Yusuf Gawuna will contest for the Kano Central Senatorial Seat. This decision was made in the spirit of equity, fairness, loyalty, and competence — values that remain central to our party and Kwankwasiyya’s progress and unity. As we proceed with today’s affirmation exercise, I pray for a seamless, peaceful, and successful process. May Almighty Allah grant us resounding victory in the forthcoming elections. Ameen. - RMK


ADC has once again shown Nigerians that a political party can conduct itself with order, maturity, and democratic discipline. The presidential primary process went smoothly nationwide, and that is not a small achievement in today’s Nigerian political environment. At a time when many parties are battling allegations of imposition, manipulation, inflated figures, internal bitterness, and avoidable crisis, ADC has chosen a different path: peace, participation, structure, and respect for members. This is the kind of politics Nigeria needs. A party that wants to govern Nigeria must first show that it can manage democracy within its own house. ADC has demonstrated that internal competition does not have to become internal war. Aspirants can contest, members can participate, leaders can coordinate, and the party can still remain united around the bigger mission. That mission is 2027. The smooth conduct of the ADC primary sends a message to Nigerians: ADC is not just talking about a new Nigeria. ADC is organizing for it. The party is building from the grassroots, strengthening its internal processes, and preparing to offer Nigerians a credible alternative to the old political order. Now the real work begins. After the primary, ADC must move quickly from internal contest to national mobilization. Every ward, LGA, state chapter, aspirant, candidate, leader, and supporter must align behind the party’s larger message: jobs, security, cost of living, education, healthcare, accountability, and a government that listens to ordinary Nigerians. The old parties may have money, noise, and machinery, but ADC has an opportunity to build something stronger: public trust. A smooth primary is not the final victory. It is the foundation. The party must now convert this peaceful process into national confidence, grassroots energy, and electoral momentum. ADC has passed an important democratic test. Now, Nigeria must see the movement.



ADC is suffering fresh chaos across multiple fronts. At the national level, Amaechi and Hayatu Deen are not happy with Atiku and they are always reminding Nigerians that Atiku is unelectable. At state levels, there are different factions springing up in the ADC. It is now obvious that Peter Obi was just the only factor holding the party together.

























