POLITICS
How Tinubu & APC Systematically Subdued PDP in South‑South – Governors Surrender to Power Play

How Tinubu & APC Systematically Subdued PDP in South‑South – Governors Surrender to Power Play
South‑South, long PDP’s stronghold, is now dominated by APC through shocking governors’ defections. The full story behind the mass political shift. Read full now.
…. From oil-rich Delta to strategic Rivers, APC’s takeover of the PDP stronghold exposes internal rot and political betrayal ahead of 2027
In a dramatic shift that will send tremors through Nigeria’s political landscape, the South‑South, once a formidable bulwark of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) since 1999, has fallen under the heavy influence of President Bola Tinubu’s All Progressives Congress (APC). Strategic defections by key governors have left the PDP gasping for survival in its own territory.
Once the uncontested ruler of all six South‑South states, the PDP’s grip began to loosen in 2008 when Comrade Adams Oshiomhole hijacked Edo State for the APC. A brief comeback by Godwin Obaseki failed to hold, and by 2024, Edo and Cross River were firmly in APC hands, while Delta, Rivers, Akwa‑Ibom, and Bayelsa teetered on the edge.
On April 28, 2025, Delta Governor Sheriff Oborevwori, a PDP stalwart, stunned the nation by defecting to the APC — handing over Asaba and the entire state without a single ballot cast. The move, reportedly brokered through “months of undisclosed consultations” with Tinubu, was rationalized by PDP’s national crisis. But insiders call it a calculated capitulation that left the PDP rudderless in an oil-rich powerhouse. Major party figures, including Ifeanyi Okowa and former governor Emmanuel Uduaghan, have since aligned with the APC.
On June 6, 2025, Governor Umo Eno of Akwa‑Ibom defected to the APC, ushering in dominance for Senate President Godswill Akpabio. What was once a fragmented APC base vanished overnight as Eno and Akpabio solidified power. Critics warn this façade of unity could fracture once 2027 politics heat up — the promised mutual leadership may unravel into a power struggle.
In Rivers State, Governor Siminalayi Fubara, suspended since March amidst a feud with godfather Nyesom Wike, is set for reinstatement after a truce brokered by Tinubu. Under the terms, he is expected to—and may be forced to—join the APC. His suspension under military rule and pending crossover signals a near-certain collapse of PDP control in the state.
Cross River was first lost in 2021 when Gov. Benedict Ayade defected, installing APC’s Bassey Otu by 2023. Edo had already shifted in 2008 under Oshiomhole, then briefly flipped with Obaseki before reverting to APC in 2024. What was once a brief detour has now become permanent.
Bayelsa remains the lone PDP territory—but its fate looks sealed. Visits by Delta’s Oborevwori and Okowa to Governor Douye Diri have sparked speculation of talks pushing him toward crossing over. The lure of federal projects—like the Nembe‑Brass road—backs those whispers. Still, Diri claims any decision will involve the people, not whisper campaigns.
Key Takeaways
Issue Implication
PDP’s Fealty Broken Governors surrendered authority through deals, not votes.
APC Power Consolidation Tinubu’s strategy: local manipulation of governors to dominate.
Internal PDP Rot National crisis and internal divisions left PDP unprepared.
2027 Power Race South‑South now APC territory — PDP faces uphill battle.
Summary:
Tinubu’s APC has claimed not just territory but engineered a political transformation across Nigeria’s key oil region without elections—only strategic defections. With four states now securely APC, Rivers poised to fall, and Bayelsa on the brink, the PDP has gone from dominance to desperation. Its failure to coordinate and retain loyalty among governors has called into question its viability in the next presidential election.
Related