“Ọmọlúàbí ni í jẹ́ kí a lè fi ọwọ́ kan ọmọ elòmíràn.” (It is the Omoluabi’s character that makes him a mediator in others’ disputes.) This timeless Yoruba adage finds its living embodiment in Otunba Engr. Gbenga Daniel, FNSE, FAEng, a man whose political odyssey has been a masterclass in grace under fire. Like the ancient Ayan drum that remains unshaken even in the fiercest storm, Otunba Gbenga Daniel’s composure amid provocation speaks to his Omoluabi ethos. Whether as a two-term governor, a crisis manager in the PDP, or now as the APC’s strategic asset in Ogun East, he stands tall, unmoved by the whirlwinds of vendetta, Seunmanuel Faleye writes.
To witness Otunba Gbenga Daniel in politics is to watch a grandmaster play chess on a battlefield. His defection to the APC wasn’t merely a switch of allegiance; it was a seismic realignment that recalibrated Ogun’s political calculus. While lesser men crumble under the weight of persecution, demolition notices, media trials, and orchestrated allegations, Otunba Gbenga Daniel wields his crises like a sculptor’s chisel, carving out defiance from every attack. His detractors mistake his restraint for weakness, but the unruffled senator knows: in politics, the patient hunter bags the elephant.
The recent demolition theatrics by the Ogun State government only amplify Otunba Gbenga Daniel’s mythos. A man whose hotels and homes are marked for ruin by a governor eyeing his Senate seat? It’s the stuff of Shakespearean drama. Yet, Otunba Gbenga Daniel’s response, measured, legal, and dripping with irony, reveals the mind of a tactician. He knows that in Nigeria’s political jungle, the loudest lion isn’t the most feared; it’s the silent one who outlasts the hunt. His 2027 senatorial bid? A foregone conclusion. The people’s loyalty isn’t bought with bulldozers but earned through decades of service.
As the APC’s silent storm, Otunba Gbenga Daniel’s value transcends partisan lines. He is the bridge between warring factions, the whisper that cools tempers, and the iron fist in a velvet glove. For a party grappling with internal fissures, his presence is a stabilizer. And when the dust settles, history will record this truth: while others played checkers with bitterness, Otunba Gbenga Daniel played 4D chess with wisdom. The lesson? In the economy of power, the unflappable always cash out.
Mic drop. The readers now lean in, hungry for the next chapter of this political symphony.

Seunmanuel Faleye is a brand and communications strategist. He is a covert writer and an overt creative head. He publishes Apple’s Bite International Magazine.


















