- Anambra South Senatorial District is holding a by-election due to the death of the sitting senetor (Late Ifeanyi Ubah) who died on July 2024 vacated the seat, prompting by-election. This is confirmed by INEC
- Date of poll: Saturday, 16 August 2025
- Field overview (who’s on the ballot)
From public statements and party communications, the clearest, repeatedly confirmed candidates are:

1 APC — Sir Azuka Okwuosa
Former Anambra Commissioner for Works & Transport; ex-Chairman, Nnewi North LGA. Emerged APC nominee in late July.
Age: 65 (born Nov 3, 1959). Profession: Engineer, politician.
Career: Ex-Commissioner for Works & Transport (1999–2001); ex-Chairman, Nnewi North LGA; long-time APC figure and past governorship aspirant.
Education: Engineering background (per public bios).
Political base: Nnewi bloc; APC structures across industrial towns; Ojukwu family connections frequently referenced in his brand.
Platform themes: “Effective representation,” infrastructure and roads; leveraging federal ties as APC candidate.
Strengths: Deep name recognition; administrative experience; longstanding networks in Nnewi North. Risks: APC vote share in Anambra can be uneven; depends on turnout in Nnewi axis and splitting of anti-APC votes.

2 APGA — Chief Emmanuel Chibuzor Nwachukwu
Accountant; APGA flagbearer (primary held July 24). Age: Public sources often place his birth year in the early 1960s; APGA materials profile him as a career accountant and community leader.
Career: Private-sector finance and trade associations; APGA mobiliser in Anambra South.
Education: Accounting (details not fully standardized in open sources).
Political base: Strongest in Nnewi South/Ukpor and trader associations; rides APGA’s incumbency synergy with Gov. Soludo’s network.
Platform themes: Security/economic revival of markets, MSME financing, alignment with Soludo’s “Solution” agenda.
Strengths: APGA’s field machinery and brand equity in Anambra; endorsement currents from state actors. Risks: Must consolidate across the seven LGAs, not just APGA-leaning wards; business-first message competes with reformist narratives from smaller parties.

3 ADC — Barr. Donald Chidi Amamgbo
Lawyer; widely billed by party/media as ADC’s candidate.
Age: Not consistently published; mid-50s/early-60s cohort by career timeline.
Career: Lawyer with Nigerian call and US practice experience; diaspora/legal networks; active civic philanthropy.
Education: University of Maiduguri (LL.B. per public profiles); McGeorge School of Law (U.S.). California State Bar roll confirms licensure.
Political base: Ihiala/adjacent communities; reform-minded youth and professional circles; ADC faithful.
Platform themes: Anti-corruption & annual “open accounting” to constituents; security and jobs.
Strengths: Clean-governance pitch with specific accountability pledge; diaspora credibility. Risks: ADC’s lighter grassroots may limit LGA-wide GOTV unless he over-indexes among undecided professionals and youth.

4 NNPP — Barr. Peter Onyedika Ekwueme
Lawyer; has actively campaigned as NNPP’s standard-bearer.
Age: Early-40s per multiple interviews; lawyer/entrepreneur.
Career: Legal practice; youth outreach; frequent media avails in Awka.
Education: Law
Political base: Aguata/Orumba corridor; youth and transparency advocates; NNPP aficionados.
Platform themes: Transparency (pledge of yearly constituency accounts), youth empowerment, SME funding.
Strengths: Clear, repeated transparency message; energetic ground game in media.

Labour Party (Abure faction) announced Nzeribe and issued him a certificate; however, there are credible reports that INEC excluded Abure-faction LP candidates from by-elections in Anambra amid intra-party litigation. Treat LP participation/ballot status as uncertain pending INEC’s final posting at the RA/PU level.
Labour Party (LP) .
Veteran politician; former House of Reps member.
Career: Longstanding political actor; LP communication claims strong support from Peter Obi and George Moghalu; factional dispute clouds ballot status.
Political base: Urban Obosi/Onitsha-adjacent networks and LP faithful; reform-oriented voters.
Platform themes: Security architecture overhaul for the zone; anti-criminality drive.
Strengths: LP’s energized base; Obi coattails if on ballot. Risks: Legal/ballot access uncertainty; voter confusion.
INEC has said 12 parties will participate overall; the commission and multiple outlets confirmed logistics distribution for Saturday’s vote. (INEC’s site hasn’t published a consolidated candidate list page for this specific by-election.)
- Comparative map: who needs what to win?
Turnout math & geography: The seven LGAs rarely move in lockstep. Nnewi North/South turnout and elite consensus can swing margins; Ihiala is a vote trove if mobilized; Orumba North/South often decide close races when Nnewi is split.
- APC (Okwuosa): Path runs through consolidating Nnewi blocs + respectable shares in Ihiala/Ekwusigo; benefits if APGA/LP/NNPP split the “change” vote.
- APGA (Nwachukwu): Leans on incumbency network (Soludo-era structures) and market associations; best case is cross-LGA floor of votes + second-place finishes everywhere.
- ADC (Amamgbo) & NNPP (Ekwueme): Viable spoiler/kingmaker lanes if they dominate one LGA cluster and hold 10–15% elsewhere; both push transparency and anti-corruption narratives that resonate with youth/urban wards.
- LP (Nzeribe): If on ballot, LP’s ceiling hinges on consolidating Obi-leaning urban voters; if off-ballot, those votes scatter, likely boosting APGA or NNPP depending on local influencers.
- What each is selling (manifesto)
- Okwuosa (APC): Experience + federal access = faster roads/infrastructure and “effective representation.”
- Nwachukwu (APGA): Pro-business accountant aligned with state agenda; secure markets and MSME growth.
- Amamgbo (ADC): Annual open accounting, clean governance, diaspora-grade project delivery.
- Ekwueme (NNPP): Youth empowerment and transparency as a measurable pledge
- Nzeribe (LP): Security-first message + LP brand (subject to ballot status).
Labour Party (LP)



