Tag: Labour Party

  • INEC Formally Recognizes Nenadi Usman as Labour Party Leader

    INEC Formally Recognizes Nenadi Usman as Labour Party Leader

    According to Vanguard, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has officially uploaded the particulars of Senator Nenadi Usman and Darlington Nwochocha as the legitimate Chairman and Secretary of the Labour Party (LP). This move follows a protracted leadership tussle that saw the party split into factions. By recognizing the Usman-led interim leadership on its website, INEC has complied with a Federal High Court judgment that invalidated the tenure of the previous executive led by Julius Abure.
    The interim leadership expressed its relief, stating that the move allows the party to focus on repositioning itself as a credible opposition ahead of future elections. The development is seen as a major win for the “Abia faction” of the party, supported by Governor Alex Otti, who has been vocal about the need for constitutional order within the LP. However, the opposing faction is yet to fully concede, leading to fears of further litigation.
    The recognition was also reported by Channels TV and Tribune. Channels TV noted that “the update on the INEC portal has effectively settled the administrative dispute,” while Tribune stated that “Labour Party members are being urged to unite under the newly recognized leadership.”
    Echotitbits take:
    Nenadi Usman’s recognition is a stabilizing force for the Labour Party, but the wounds from the leadership battle are deep. Watch for whether Peter Obi fully aligns with this new structure or if a third force emerges from the remnants of the Abure faction.

    Source: Channel TV – https://www.channelstv.com/2026/01/30/inec-recognises-nenadi-usman-led-lp-after-court-order/, January 31, 2026

    Photo credit: Channel TV

  • Judicial Ruling Ousts Abure, Recognizes Nenadi Usman as Labour Party Leader

    Judicial Ruling Ousts Abure, Recognizes Nenadi Usman as Labour Party Leader

    Judicial Ruling Ousts Abure, Recognizes Nenadi Usman as Labour Party Leader

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has ruled Julius Abure’s tenure expired and ordered INEC to recognize the Nenadi Usman-led Labour Party caretaker committee.

    Further reporting across multiple outlets indicates the development is drawing heightened attention, with stakeholders watching for next steps from relevant authorities and institutions.

    Echotitbits take: This judgment aligns with the Peter Obi-led faction’s efforts to stabilize the party ahead of the 2027 cycle. Watch for potential realignments as the Nenadi Usman committee prepares for a national convention to elect permanent executives.

    Source: The Punch — https://punchng.com/lp-crisis-abure-to-appeal-courts-recognition-of-otti-faction/ (2026-01-21)

    Photo credit: The Punch

    2026-01-21 10:00:00

  • Court orders INEC to grant Labour Party access code for FCT area council candidates

    Court orders INEC to grant Labour Party access code for FCT area council candidates

    2026-01-01 07:15:00
    In an update published by Punch, an FCT High Court ordered INEC to provide the Labour Party an access code to upload candidate details for the February 2026 FCT area council elections.

    The interim orders also directed INEC to upload and publish the party’s candidates’ particulars across the six area councils within a short window, pending the hearing of the substantive motion.

    The dispute reflects wider tensions around party factions, candidate recognition and administrative access to INEC’s nomination portal.

    The Nation similarly reported INEC was ordered to “grant access code” for uploading candidates’ particulars.

    TheCable also reported the Abure-led Labour Party faction requested INEC portal access to upload candidates for the council polls.

    Echotitbits take:

    This is a reminder that election credibility can be undermined by back-end administrative fights. Watch for INEC’s compliance response and whether other parties pursue similar court pathways to compel portal access.

    Source: The Punch — December 19, 2025 (https://punchng.com/fct-council-poll-court-orders-inec-to-recognise-lp-candidates/)

    The Punch 2025-12-19

    Photo Credit: The Nation

  • Court warns INEC chair against ignoring Labour Party-related FCT poll orders

    Court warns INEC chair against ignoring Labour Party-related FCT poll orders

    2026-01-01 07:20:00
    A report carried by The Nation says an FCT High Court warned INEC leadership against disregarding its earlier directives tied to Labour Party candidate processing for the FCT area council elections.

    The warning follows interim orders on portal access and candidate publication timelines, signalling possible contempt consequences if compliance is not met.

    At the core is a procedural dispute over whether INEC must grant the party digital credentials to submit candidates and publish their details as ordered.

    The Nigerian Observer also reported the court warned INEC against disregard of the order on Labour Party candidates.

    Punch earlier reported the underlying directive, stating the court ordered INEC to “grant the Labour Party an access code.”

    Echotitbits take:

    Candidate-list disputes can trigger legitimacy problems long before voting day. Watch for INEC’s documented compliance steps, and whether the matter escalates into contempt proceedings or further interim orders.

    Source: The Nation — January 1, 2026 (https://thenationonlineng.net/court-warns-inec-chair-against-disobeying-order-to-recognise-lps-candidates-for-fct-polls/amp/)

    The Nation 2026-01-01

    Photo Credit: Punch

  • Obi’s ADC talks deepen as opposition parties jockey for a 2027 coalition lane

    Obi’s ADC talks deepen as opposition parties jockey for a 2027 coalition lane

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-28 09:00:00

    According to PUNCH, discussions around Peter Obi potentially aligning with the African Democratic Congress (ADC) have intensified as the party plans a convention and opposition actors reposition ahead of 2027.

    Analysts say the move—if it materialises—would reflect a broader scramble to consolidate structures, ballot access, and negotiating power across rival opposition blocs.

    The ADC has presented itself as an organising platform for coalition talks, though details of timelines and agreements remain fluid.

    PUNCH’s political desk flagged the convention as a key milestone that could shape coalition bargaining going into 2027.

    Echotitbits take: Coalition politics is about structure, not slogans. Watch whether ADC can unify factions, secure credible primaries, and avoid the fragmentation that weakened past “third force” efforts.

    Source: The Punch — December 28, 2025 (https://punchng.com/obi-set-to-join-adc-as-party-plans-convention/)

    The Punch December 28, 2025

    https://punchng.com/obi-set-to-join-adc-as-party-plans-convention/

  • Opinion: Nation Building Over Party Politics – Nigeria’s Path for the Next 24 Years

    Opinion: Nation Building Over Party Politics – Nigeria’s Path for the Next 24 Years

    The Aso Rock, Nigeria

    Opinion: Nation Building Over Party Politics – Nigeria’s Path for the Next 24 Years

    Nigeria stands at a crossroads where the choice between perpetual political brinkmanship and purposeful nation building will determine the fate of over 200 million people. For decades, our politics has revolved around personalities, ethnic arithmetic, and empty party slogans, rather than coherent ideologies or long-term visions. Today, no major political party in Nigeria sincerely advances a consistent political philosophy; instead, parties often serve as shifting platforms for elites to capture power, switch allegiances, and share spoils.

    Given this reality, it is neither radical nor undemocratic to argue that the country’s focus over the next generation must shift decisively from party-centered politics to nation-centered governance. If those entrusted with leadership — regardless of partisan labels — dedicate themselves to genuine social and economic transformation, it should matter less whether they belong to one party or a hundred. What matters is progress, stability, and prosperity.

    Critics may call this a drift toward a de facto one-party state, but it is better understood as a call for ideological unity on nation building. Nigeria desperately needs leaders who see beyond election cycles and prioritize industrialization, quality education, universal healthcare, modern infrastructure, and social justice. We need continuity in policies that work, not endless resets every four or eight years just because a new party wants to mark its territory.

    History shows us that countries like Singapore and Rwanda achieved rapid development not by fetishizing partisan competition but by forging a national consensus on discipline, economic planning, and inclusive growth. In these contexts, the energy spent on political bickering was redirected into building systems, attracting investment, and delivering results.

    Of course, the danger of unchecked power is real; accountability must never be sacrificed. But accountability can come through institutions — independent courts, vibrant civil society, free media — rather than the illusion of multiparty rivalry that offers no ideological choice. When opposition parties simply mirror ruling parties in opportunism, democracy becomes a hollow ritual.

    For Nigeria, the question is simple: if a government is genuinely transforming the economy, empowering citizens, and entrenching good governance, why should the nation interrupt that trajectory in the name of an election that merely swaps one set of self-interested politicians for another? Why not build a broad coalition of stakeholders — across regions, ethnicities, faiths — around a shared developmental agenda and hold leaders accountable to that, rather than to party colors?

    Over the next 24 years, what Nigeria needs is not a rotating door of politicians but a sustained national project: one that creates jobs, ends poverty, secures lives and property, modernizes agriculture, and raises Nigeria’s human capital. We should champion policies, not parties; performance, not propaganda; and unity, not division.

    The time has come for Nigerians to reject the empty spectacle of party politics without ideology and embrace a renewed, patriotic commitment to nation building — for the sake of today’s citizens and generations yet unborn.

    Bunmi Adebayo, writes from Abeokuta