Rufai Oseni’s comments tap into a growing narrative around Peter Obi’s electoral weight, but they also risk oversimplifying what is a far more complex political landscape.
There’s no doubt Obi remains one of the most visible opposition figures today, with a loyal support base and a reputation that still resonates, particularly among urban and younger voters. That alone makes him a serious contender in any open race.
But framing him as the only viable challenger understates the fluid nature of Nigerian politics, where alliances, regional calculations, and party structures often matter as much as individual popularity.
The claim that there are coordinated efforts to keep him off the ballot is a serious one, but it sits more in the realm of political suspicion than verifiable fact, at least for now. What is more tangible, however, is the pattern of internal crises and legal disputes that tend to follow rapidly formed coalitions.
If the NDC is not structurally sound, it could indeed become vulnerable to litigation, and that in itself, regardless of intent, can weaken any candidate emerging from it, including Obi.
More broadly, this speaks to a recurring issue in Nigeria’s opposition politics: over-reliance on personalities rather than institutions. Even if Obi is a strong candidate, no individual can compensate for a fragmented party, weak grassroots coordination, or unresolved internal disputes. Elections are not won on perception alone; they require machinery.
A more grounded approach for Obi and his allies would be to focus less on narratives of exclusion and more on building a legally and organizationally resilient platform.
Securing the party structure, resolving internal ambiguities early, and expanding appeal beyond core supporters will be far more decisive than any perceived external opposition.
For observers and commentators, there’s also a need for caution. Elevating one figure as the singular alternative can inadvertently narrow democratic space and discourage the kind of coalition-building that is actually required to mount a credible challenge in a system like Nigeria’s.
In the end, the real question is not who looks strongest today, but who can build the most stable, broad-based political coalition by the time the ballots are cast.



