For many Nigerians watching this development, the optics are as important as the process. A sitting governor emerging as the sole aspirant of a party inevitably raises questions about internal party democracy and the real meaning of “competition” within Nigeria’s political system.
To the average observer, this does not look like a contest of ideas or visions but more like a procedural endorsement already decided in advance. While this is not illegal, it reflects a deeper pattern in Nigerian politics where party primaries often serve to validate power, not challenge it.
Public reaction is likely to be mixed. Supporters will frame Adeleke’s clearance as proof of confidence in his leadership and a sign of political strength, while critics will see it as another example of how political parties have become vehicles for elite convenience rather than platforms for participatory democracy.
Many Nigerians have grown skeptical of electoral rituals that appear competitive on paper but are predictable in outcome. This moment, therefore, mirrors the broader public sentiment that Nigeria’s democracy is procedural but not yet fully substantive.
What Nigerians increasingly want is not just peaceful primaries, but transparent ones where more than one voice is heard and where political ambition is tested through ideas, not just endorsements.
For parties like the Accord Party, this is an opportunity to prove they can practice a different kind of politics, not merely imitate the dominant culture of coronations. The recommendation is simple but critical: if political parties truly want public trust, they must build internal processes that feel real, open, and fair, not just smooth.



