Politics
Kaduna Emerges Transparency Leader, Posts Strong Gains in 2025 GATI Report
Kaduna Emerges Transparency Leader, Posts Strong Gains in 2025 GATI Report
Kaduna State has emerged as one of Nigeria’s top-performing states in the 2025 Governance Accountability and Transparency Index (GATI), a development widely regarded as a strong endorsement of Governor Uba Sani’s reform-driven leadership.
The report, released by the Guild of Online Media Editors and Publishers (GOMEP) Nigeria, placed Kaduna in the prestigious Category A – Exceptional Performance tier. The state joins Abia, Borno, Ekiti, Anambra, Osun, Delta, Kano, Enugu, and Kogi in the top-performing group.
A Significant Leap in Performance
Kaduna’s latest ranking marks a notable improvement from its 2024 position. In the inaugural edition of the index, the state was placed in Category B (Strong Performance) with a score of 81.7. However, in the 2025 assessment, Kaduna advanced to Category A with an impressive score of 89.3.
The 7.6-point increase—representing a 9.3 percent improvement—has been described by analysts as clear evidence of measurable progress in transparency, accountability, and citizen-focused governance.
Reforms Driving the Progress
Observers attribute Kaduna’s rise to a series of reforms introduced under Governor Uba Sani, which have focused on openness, inclusiveness, and institutional accountability.
Key initiatives include improved fiscal transparency through the timely publication of budget data and enhanced public access to government expenditure records. The administration has also deepened citizen engagement through regular town hall meetings and stakeholder consultations, ensuring broader participation in governance.
In addition, the expansion of digital governance platforms has streamlined service delivery and reduced bureaucratic bottlenecks, while strengthened oversight systems and procurement processes have boosted public confidence in government operations.
Beyond transparency reforms, the state government has intensified development efforts across critical sectors such as infrastructure, education, healthcare, and rural development.
A Model for Governance Excellence
Governance experts highlight Kaduna’s consistency in policy implementation and strong leadership commitment as key drivers of its success. Unlike in some states where reforms have been uneven, Kaduna’s approach has been marked by sustained efforts to build institutions, promote inclusiveness, and strengthen public trust.
These efforts align closely with GATI’s evaluation criteria, which emphasize transparency, responsiveness, anti-corruption measures, and citizen engagement.
Rising Public Confidence
The improved ranking appears to reflect growing public confidence in the administration. Residents and stakeholders have increasingly acknowledged the government’s efforts to promote openness and deliver tangible development outcomes.
For many observers, Kaduna’s progress demonstrates how political will and reform-oriented leadership can significantly improve governance outcomes within a relatively short period.
Setting the Pace
While several states share the top tier, Kaduna’s upward trajectory from 2024 to 2025 stands out as a compelling success story.
The GATI report ultimately positions the state as a benchmark for governance excellence in Nigeria, reinforcing the idea that transparency, accountability, and development can coexist under purposeful leadership.
With expectations rising, attention will now turn to whether the administration can sustain—and potentially surpass—these gains in the coming years.
Politics
Obi-Kwankwaso Defection: Recalibration That Could Redefine The Country’s Power Structure
Obi-Kwankwaso Defection: Recalibration That Could Redefine The Country’s Power Structure
Obi-Kwankwaso surge; the defection storm that could upend Nigeria’s political system.
Politics does not whisper at defining moments; it roars, demanding bold choices and decisive turns. Today, the evolving journeys of Mr. Peter Obi, presidential candidate of the Labour Party in the 2023 elections, and Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, flagbearer of the New Nigeria Peoples Party in that same contest, capture the urgency of this moment.
This is not a quest for mere relevance or routine recalibration; it is a high-stakes pivot and a deliberate search for a credible platform capable of bearing the weight of a serious national challenge and reshaping the country’s political destiny.
What many once dismissed as improbable is now gaining the texture of inevitability: a broad, reform-minded alliance anchored on the convergence of supporters of Obi and Kwankwaso, now christened the OK Movement. This is no ordinary political maneuver; it is a recalibration that could redefine the country’s power structure while opening a path toward a more inclusive and stable democratic order.
Eereporter.com
Both figures have, in recent cycles, moved away from their former party homes, briefly converging within the African Democratic Congress (ADC) and now gravitating toward the National Democratic Congress (NDC). Kwankwaso’s migration from the NNPP to the ADC was not merely symbolic; it signaled that the old political camps were no longer fit for purpose. As he put it, “We left the NNPP because of externally influenced legal challenges that made our stay perilous.”
Obi’s departure from the Labour Party to the ADC further consolidated what many hoped would become a formidable coalition. However, the ADC, rather than emerging as a stable opposition platform, became entangled in internal disputes, legal battles, and structural inconsistencies that many insiders now describe as unreliable. Explaining his exit, Obi noted: “My decision to depart from the ADC was not due to personal issues with the party leadership… but was driven by unresolved political conflicts and recurring legal and internal disputes that distracted the party from national issues.”
What we are witnessing is not indecision; it is strategic migration, a revolt against weak platforms and a determined search for a viable electoral vehicle. The ADC phase offered proof of concept, an early coalition impulse, but also exposed the limitations of platforms lacking internal cohesion. By contrast, the emerging NDC option presents itself as a more structured vehicle and one that promises clarity of leadership, a predictable primary process, and an institutional spine capable of sustaining a national campaign.
With this shift, a potential exodus of key members from the ADC appears imminent, further weakening a party already burdened by litigation over its leadership. Yet, the true engine of this moment is not party labels rather it is people. The fusion of the Kwankwasiyya Movement and the Obidient Movement represents one of the most compelling political alignments in contemporary Nigeria.
Kwankwasiyya brings disciplined grassroots organization, particularly across northern constituencies, with a proven record of loyal and enduring mobilization. The Obidient Movement, by contrast, is youthful, decentralized, digitally savvy, and driven by a reformist ethos that prioritizes transparency, competence, and accountability.
Together, they offer a rare synthesis: structure meets spontaneity; regional strength meets national reach; experience meets aspiration. In electoral terms, this alignment has the potential to consolidate a broad alliance cutting across geography, class, and generation. In governance terms, it could nurture a culture that blends technocratic discipline with active citizen engagement. This is precisely the mix many analysts argue Nigeria needs to move from cyclical contestation to sustained development.
This is where the NDC’s proposition becomes pivotal. Beyond serving as a landing ground, the party is positioning itself as an enabling architecture. Its most significant offering to an Obi–Kwankwaso ticket is not merely access, but assurance: a transparent pathway to nomination, a commitment to internal democracy, and a platform anchored on policy coherence rather than factional bargaining.
In a political environment often defined by contentious primaries and legal disputes, such guarantees can be decisive. They reduce uncertainty, attract broader coalitions, and allow candidates to focus on articulating a national agenda rather than navigating intra-party conflict.
The potential implications for electoral success are considerable. A unified ticket anchored on these two leaders could redraw Nigeria’s political map by aligning northern organizational strength with southern reformist momentum. It could also recalibrate voter psychology, shifting the narrative from fragmented opposition to a credible alternative. In many democracies, it is this moment of perceived viability that transforms enthusiasm into votes.

Obi-Kwankwaso
More importantly, the NDC offers narrative clarity. In modern politics, perception is shaped not only by what a movement stands for, but by how clearly and consistently it communicates its purpose. By providing a structured environment, the party enables the OK Movement to maintain message discipline while articulating a vision centered on economic reform, governance efficiency, and national unity. This clarity could convert widespread goodwill into measurable electoral support.
Analytically, the implications of this convergence are significant. Nigerian elections are often decided at the intersection of structure and sentiment. The Obidient Movement brings the sentiment, an energized, emotionally invested base seeking change.
Kwankwasiyya contributes the structure, a disciplined network capable of translating enthusiasm into votes. Their alignment, under a stable platform, creates a political equation that could fundamentally alter electoral dynamics.
Globally, such alignments have often catalyzed both electoral success and political stability. In diverse democracies, coalitions that bridge ideological, regional, or generational divides have demonstrated an ability not only to win power but to govern with a broader mandate. Their strength lies in inclusivity: carrying multiple constituencies along, reducing post-election tensions, and fostering shared ownership of governance.
In Kenya, intense political rivalry gave way to alliance arrangements that restored stability, most notably the 2008 power-sharing framework between Mwai Kibaki and Raila Odinga. In South Africa, the Government of National Unity in the 1990s brought former adversaries together, stabilizing a fragile transition and laying the foundation for enduring democratic institutions.
The lesson is clear: alliances are not easy, but when thoughtfully constructed, they can transform fragmentation into functionality. They convert competition into shared responsibility and create the conditions for stability.
For Nigeria, the Obi–Kwankwaso surge represents a similar possibility. It offers an opportunity to move from fragmented contestation to coordinated engagement, from narrow political calculations to a broader national vision, one grounded in competitive credibility rather than entrenched dominance.
No movement is without challenges. Alliance management demands discipline, compromise, and clear decision-making frameworks. Messaging must remain consistent, expectations must be managed, and internal cohesion must be actively maintained. Yet, these are the natural tests of any serious political enterprise.
What matters is the direction of travel and here, it is unmistakable: toward consolidation, credibility, and a reimagined political center.
The defection storm, therefore, should not be seen merely as instability. It is a manifestation of political evolution and a sign that actors are responding to the demands of a changing electorate. It reflects a growing insistence on platforms that can deliver not just participation, but performance.
In the final analysis, the Obi–Kwankwaso surge is more than a moment; it is a message. A message that Nigeria’s political space remains open to reinvention and that that alliances can be rebuilt, narratives reshaped, and power redefined.
As the storm gathers strength, one truth stands out: this is not simply about upending an existing order. It is about constructing a new one: more inclusive, more responsive, and more aligned with the aspirations of the Nigerian people.
And as the OK Movement weighs its next steps, the path forward becomes clearer. The future of Nigeria’s political contest will not be decided by rhetoric alone, but by the ability to align vision with structure, energy with organization, and aspiration with execution.
In that sense, the journey from the ADC to the NDC is not merely a change of address. it is a statement of intent: an intent to move from possibility to preparedness, from momentum to machinery and from movement to mandate.
News
Labour Party (LP) Releases 2027 Primaries Pimetable, Fixes Nomination Fees
Labour Party (LP) Releases 2027 Primaries Pimetable, Fixes Nomination Fees
The Labour Party has released its timetable and schedule of activities for the 2026 primary elections.
The Labour Party has released its timetable and schedule of activities for the conduct of its 2026 primary elections, with concessions for women, people living with disabilities and youths.
The national publicity secretary of the party, Ken Asogwa, who disclosed this in a statement on Monday, added that the timetable was released in accordance with the 1999 Constitution.
He also said its release complied with the Electoral Act, 2026, and the Independent National Electoral Commission’s revised timetable and schedule of activities for the conduct of the 2027 elections.
According to him, the timetable indicates that nomination forms for all elective offices will be available for sale from May 6 to 16.
Mr Asogwa said that the submission of completed forms would begin on May 17 and end on May 18.
“Screening of aspirants for the House of Assembly and Governorship election will be on May 20, while that of the National Assembly and the Presidential election will be on May 22,” he said.
He said the screening results would be published on May 23.
Eereporter.com
He added that appeals and petitions for House of Assembly and governorship aspirants would be heard on May 24, while those for National Assembly and presidential aspirants would be heard on May 25.
He further said that the final list of cleared aspirants would be published on May 26.
According to him, party primaries for House of Assembly and governorship positions will be held on May 27, while those for National Assembly and presidential positions will take place on May 29.
Mr Asogwa also announced the structured fees for nomination forms for various offices.
For the House of Assembly, the expression of interest form costs ₦1,000,000, while the nomination form costs ₦2,000,000, bringing the total to ₦3,000,000.
For the House of Representatives, the expression of interest form costs ₦1,500,000 and the nomination form ₦3,500,000, totalling ₦5,000,000. Senatorial aspirants are to pay ₦2,500,000 for the expression of interest form and ₦7,500,000 for the nomination form, for a total of ₦10,000,000.
Governorship aspirants will pay ₦5,000,000 for the expression of interest form and ₦20,000,000 for the nomination form, for a total of ₦25,000,000. For the presidential ticket, the expression of interest form costs ₦10,000,000, while the nomination form costs ₦40,000,000, bringing the total to ₦50,000,000.
He, however, said that the party’s National Working Committee decided to give Abia Governor Alex Otti the form free of charge.
The spokesman said that in line with the party’s motto of “Equal Opportunity and Social Justice’’, concessions had been approved for certain categories of aspirants.

Labour Party
“Female aspirants, people living with disabilities and youths aged 25 to 30 would only be required to pay for the expression of interest forms for all positions,’’ he said.
He also said that the LP was calling on all prospective aspirants for the 2027 elections who had not yet registered to take advantage of the ongoing membership registration.
He said registration was open from May 3 to midnight of May 4, ahead of the compilation and submission of the party’s membership register to INEC in compliance with the Electoral Act, 2026.
News
ADC Release Timetable For 2026 Primary Elections, Urges Aspirants To Ensure Full Compliance With Party Constitution, Electoral Act
ADC Release Timetable For 2026 Primary Elections, Urges Aspirants To Ensure Full Compliance With Party Constitution, Electoral Act
The African Democratic Congress (ADC) has officially released its timetable for the conduct of its 2026 primary elections, outlining the guidelines and requirements for nomination of candidates for the 2027 general elections.
The timetable reflects the party’s commitment to internal democracy, orderliness, and full compliance with electoral guidelines.
As outlined in the timetable, the process is already underway, with the collection of application forms running from April 1 to May 4, 2026. The sale of nomination forms will take place from May 5 to May 10, 2026, while the submission of completed forms is scheduled for May 11 to May 13, 2026.
Eereporter.com
The party will conduct the screening of aspirants from May 14 to May 15, 2026, followed by the publication of screening results on May 17, 2026. Appeals will be heard between May 18 and May 19, 2026, with the final list of cleared aspirants to be released on May 20, 2026.
The party’s primary elections will commence on May 21, 2026, with elections for State Houses of Assembly, House of Representatives, and Senate seats holding simultaneously at the ward level. The Governorship primaries will take place on May 22, 2026, while the Presidential Primary is scheduled for May 25, 2026.
This will be followed by a meeting of the National Executive Committee on May 26, 2026, and the Special National Convention on May 27, 2026, where final ratifications will be made.

ADC
In line with its commitment to inclusivity and broad participation, the ADC has also approved a structured fee regime for nomination forms across all elective positions. The presidential nomination form is pegged at N100 million, governorship at N50 million, Senate at N20 million, House of Representatives at N10 million, and State House of Assembly at N3 million.
To encourage wider participation, the party has introduced concessional rates, offering a 50 percent discount for youthsand a 25 percent discount for women and persons with disabilities.
The ADC calls on all members, stakeholders, and aspirants to adhere strictly to the outlined schedule and guidelines, as the ADC continues to position itself as the primary platform for Nigerians seeking competent, accountable, and people-focused leadership in 2027.
Signed:
Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi
National Publicity Secretary
African Democratic Congress (ADC)
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