This admonition resonates with Nigerians. The steady migration of powerful politicians into the ruling party feels less like political realignment and more like a survival tactic, a rush to be close to power rather than a commitment to ideology.
To the average citizen, these defections seem to confirm a long-held suspicion: that political parties in Nigeria are often vehicles of convenience, not platforms of conviction. The growing fear is not just about numbers but about silence, fewer dissenting voices, weaker opposition, and less accountability.
This moment mirrors what many people quietly worry about: a democracy that exists in form but is slowly thinning out in substance. When major opposition figures abandon their platforms en masse, it sends a message that competition is optional and that power no longer needs to be contested vigorously.
Even if Nigeria does not formally become a one-party state, the danger citizens sense is psychological: a political culture where alternative voices are discouraged, negotiation happens behind closed doors, and voters are offered fewer real choices.
What Nigerians increasingly want is not just the survival of multiple parties, but the survival of real opposition. The recommendation is simple but urgent: electoral laws and political culture must be strengthened to protect ideological competition, not just party registration.
Civil society, the media, and voters themselves must resist normalizing political homogeneity. At the end of the day, democracy does not die only when parties are banned; it also quietly fades when competition is discouraged and pluralism is treated as an inconvenience rather than a necessity.



