15/05/2026
🇳🇬NDC Leadership Crisis Deepens as Obi-Kwankwaso Alliance Faces Control Battle Ahead of 2027
Fresh tensions are emerging within the Nigeria Democratic Congress following the high-profile defection of Peter Obi and Rabiu Kwankwaso, as pressure mounts on party founder Henry Seriake Dickson to surrender full control of the party structure before the 2027 elections.
The dispute has intensified after the NDC released its official timetable and nomination fees for the 2027 primaries, with the presidential expression of interest and nomination forms fixed at a combined ₦60 million. Governorship aspirants will pay ₦30 million, while Senate hopefuls face ₦8 million, House of Representatives candidates ₦6 million, and State Assembly aspirants ₦2.5 million.
Under the schedule released by the party, expression of interest forms will be sold between May 13 and May 18, screening exercises will hold from May 19 to 21, while nomination forms will be available from May 21 to 23. The presidential primary has been fixed for May 29 in Abuja.
Although the NDC announced discounts for female aspirants and persons living with disabilities, critics argue the bigger issue is not the cost of forms but who ultimately controls the party machinery that will determine ticket allocation.
Political observers warn that unless Dickson formally transfers authority to Obi, the opposition coalition risks being trapped by the growing narrative that Obi remains dependent on political godfathers despite his nationwide popularity.
The controversy has already spilled into Kano State, where the powerful Kwankwasiyya movement reportedly clashed with existing NDC officials over control of the state chapter. Pioneer Kano NDC chairman Hussaini Mai Riga resisted attempts by Kwankwaso loyalists to dominate the structure, forcing Dickson to personally intervene and broker peace talks in Abuja.
For many within the Kwankwasiyya movement, the incident reinforced fears that both Obi and Kwankwaso may have entered a platform where real authority still lies elsewhere.
Supporters of the alliance argue that unifying the Obidient and Kwankwasiyya movements under one banner remains the opposition’s strongest chance of confronting the ruling APC in 2027. However, critics warn that unresolved internal hierarchy battles, combined with expensive nomination processes and lingering distrust over party ownership, could fracture the coalition long before voters head to the polls.