Dumebi Kachikwu Wins ADC Presidential Ticket, Defeats Atiku Amid Crisis

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The latest development within the ADC highlights how fragile opposition party structures in Nigeria can become once presidential ambitions, leadership struggles and coalition politics begin to intensify ahead of a major election cycle.

The dissolution of the David Mark-led National Working Committee by a faction of the party immediately raises questions about legitimacy, control, and recognition. In Nigeria’s political environment, factional disputes within parties often become as consequential as the elections themselves because they can determine who controls party structures, candidacies, and ultimately ballot access.

By adopting Dumebi Kachikwu as its presidential candidate this early, the faction appears to be making a strong political statement that it intends to establish its own authority and prevent being overshadowed by broader coalition negotiations involving more dominant opposition figures. It also reflects a struggle over whether the ADC should remain an independent political platform or become part of a larger opposition alignment.

Kachikwu’s messaging about insecurity, economic hardship, and elite domination aligns with the language increasingly used by opposition actors seeking to tap into public frustration.

However, the bigger challenge for the ADC is not necessarily rhetoric but internal cohesion. A party battling leadership disputes and parallel structures may struggle to project stability to voters, especially at a time when coalition politics is already creating uncertainty across opposition ranks.

The emergence of a new set of executives further complicates matters because it could trigger prolonged legal and institutional battles over who INEC recognizes as the authentic leadership of the party. Nigerian political history shows that such disputes often consume time, weaken party organization, and distract from actual electoral mobilization.

This situation also reflects a broader pattern in Nigeria’s opposition politics where internal fragmentation repeatedly undermines attempts to build a united front against ruling parties. While opposition groups frequently speak about alliances and reform, leadership control and candidate selection remain major sources of division.

Ultimately, the ADC crisis is becoming a microcosm of the wider opposition dilemma ahead of 2027: the desire to unite against the ruling party exists, but managing competing ambitions, factional interests, and institutional control continues to be the harder political task.

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