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Why Dapo Abiodun Is Asking for the Silence of a Graveyard

Seunmanuel Faleye by Seunmanuel Faleye
May 7, 2026
in Opinion Bite
Reading Time: 10 mins read
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Why Dapo Abiodun Is Asking for the Silence of a Graveyard

Governor Dapo Abiodun

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There is a peculiar kind of political optics that most governors have mastered over the decades, the art of dressing self-interest in the garments of party loyalty. When Ogun State Governor Prince Dapo Abiodun convened a meeting of House of Representatives and House of Assembly aspirants in Abeokuta days ago, urging them to embrace consensus and step aside gracefully for the good of the All Progressives Congress, he packaged what was essentially a personal political agenda inside the language of statesmanship, writes Seunmanuel Faleye.

“I am not a dictator,” the governor told the gathering. “I have no intention of imposing candidates.”

It was a well-crafted line. But in the combustible politics of Ogun State on the eve of 2027, well-crafted lines rarely tell the whole story. The question that the political class in Gateway State, and indeed, observers across Nigeria, are increasingly asking is; Why is a man who will not be contesting any of those House of Representatives or House of Assembly seats so urgently invested in ensuring that everyone plays nice, steps down without a fuss, and embraces the spirit of consensus? What exactly does Dapo Abiodun stand to gain from a political environment where silence reigns, ambition is suppressed, and grassroots elders, not ballots, decide who gets what?

A Governor Who Preaches Consensus Has a Senate Seat to Protect, and a Rival He Cannot Afford to Face at the Polls

The answer, hiding in plain sight, is the Ogun East Senatorial seat. And standing between Abiodun and that seat is Senator Otunba Gbenga Daniel, a man who refuses to be politically buried by a sitting governor wielding the full machinery of the state.


The Senate Play

Governor Dapo Abiodun publicly declared his senatorial ambition during a stakeholders’ meeting in Ijebu on April 28, announcing his intention to contest the Ogun East Senatorial District seat, a position currently occupied by Gbenga Daniel, a two-term former governor of the state.

The endorsement of Abiodun as the party’s consensus candidate for the 2027 senatorial election took place at a gathering in Adeola Odotola Hall, Ijebu-Ode. The event drew a predictable assembly of party members, including some officials and grassroots representatives. But do not be deceived by the optics. The hall was not filled by independent-minded party faithful who had freely assembled to express the popular will of Ogun East. It was filled, predominantly, by government appointees: commissioners, special advisers, local government chairmen handpicked by the governor, council executives who serve at his pleasure, and political functionaries whose continued relevance depends entirely on staying on the right side of Aso Rock Road, Abeokuta. These were not the rank and file of the APC in Ogun East. These were the instruments of a state governor exercising the blunt force of incumbency.

The 103 councillors, members of the Ogun State House of Assembly, commissioners, special advisers, and members of the Governor’s Advisory Council who were paraded as a “unanimous” endorsement represented, in truth, one constituency: the governor’s payroll. The wider party membership of Ogun East the card-carrying men and women in the wards, the communities, the markets, and the motor parks of Ijebu-Ode, Sagamu, Ikenne, Odogbolu, Ijebu North, Ijebu East, and Ogun Waterside, were conspicuously absent from that calculus. They were not consulted. They were not represented. Their views were not sought. A governor had assembled his people, called it a consensus, and announced himself the winner of a race that had not yet been run.

Former Senator Lekan Mustapha formally announced that Prince Dapo Abiodun had been adopted as the consensus candidate for Ogun East Senatorial District and further disclosed that the senatorial nomination form had already been secured on behalf of the governor. He had not even asked publicly, at least. The optics were generous to Abiodun: a man dragged reluctantly into destiny by the sheer force of popular will. It was theatre. Expensive, elaborate, government-funded theatre.


The Rival He Cannot Beat in a Free Fight

The rivalry became more visible when Gbenga Daniel was prevented from attending a stakeholders’ meeting in Ijebu-Ode, a move believed to be part of a wider struggle within the party, as both leaders are seen as strong contenders for the same Senate seat. Daniel was, in fact, said to have been invited to the meeting where Abiodun’s consensus candidacy was announced, but he reportedly arrived at the venue with three fully loaded coaster buses. Abiodun’s loyalists rebuffed him, insisting that only Daniel could enter the meeting, which was strictly for delegates.

The symbolism of that moment deserves to be sat with. A sitting senator, the constitutionally elected representative of the very district being discussed, was turned away at the gate of a meeting convened to determine his political future. His supporters chanted outside. His buses were parked and waiting. And inside, without him, stuffed with appointees who owe their positions to the governor, a “unanimous” decision was reached to replace him. This is not a consensus. This is choreography.

Daniel’s decision to obtain the party’s nomination and expression of interest indicates his intention to return to the Senate, despite the earlier endorsement arrangement by party stakeholders backing Abiodun as their preferred candidate. In his statement, the senator declared: “Today, I picked up my nomination and expression of interest forms as I seek to return to the Nigerian Senate, continuing my efforts to provide effective and responsive representation for the people of Ogun East Senatorial District.”

It was a direct, unapologetic challenge. And it is precisely this challenge, the prospect of a direct primary where card-carrying members of the APC queue and vote their conscience, without the governor’s hand on their shoulder, that appears to be the true subtext of Abiodun’s elaborate consensus crusade.

The 2027 Ogun East senatorial race promises to provide political drama because the two contenders are former friends turned foes. The history between them is long and layered. What is clear today is that the friendship has curdled, the political alliance has collapsed, and what remains is a raw contest for survival between a governor armed with state power and a senator armed with independent legitimacy and roots that predate Abiodun’s emergence as a political force in Ogun East.

Governor Abiodun publicly accused Senator Gbenga Daniel of sponsoring negative media attacks against him during the Ogun East APC stakeholders’ meeting, coming barely a week after he was endorsed as the party’s consensus candidate. These are not the words of a man serene in his own popularity. A governor confident in his grassroots standing does not spend his time accusing opponents of media warfare. He goes to the people and wins. That Abiodun is so agitated by Daniel’s resistance, so invested in suppressing a primary before it happens, tells its own story.


The Law Has a Different Definition of Consensus

Here is where Abiodun’s persuasion campaign runs headlong into the hard wall of the Electoral Act, and where the mask slips entirely.

The governor can preach consensus from Abeokuta to Ijebu-Ode. He can promise refunds on nomination form fees. He can dangle government appointments before aspirants willing to stand down. He can fill halls with his appointees and call it “unanimous.” But none of these gestures, however politically generous, however theatrically staged, constitute consensus as defined by Nigerian law.

The Electoral Act, 2026, signed into law by President Bola Tinubu in February 2026, repealing the previous Electoral Act No. 13, 2022, governs all political parties in Nigeria, including the APC. Under this Act, consensus is not a vibe. It is not a show of hands at a governor’s invitation. It is a strict legal process requiring every cleared aspirant to voluntarily withdraw in writing, endorsing the consensus candidate without coercion. The law is remorseless in its follow-through, where a political party is unable to secure the written consent of all cleared aspirants, it shall revert to the choice of direct or indirect primaries for the nomination of candidates.

As one legal voice put it bluntly during the APC presidential convention debate: “Consensus means 100 percent agreement. 99.99 percent, where an atom of .01 is still contesting, saying I do not accept consensus, the party will not go for consensus. According to the Electoral Act, the candidate must write formally to withdraw and say he has not been coerced to withdraw from the race.”

The conditions are unambiguous: cleared aspirants must not only voluntarily withdraw in writing, but they must also endorse the consensus candidate in writing. Gbenga Daniel has not done any such thing. He has done the precise opposite, picking up his nomination forms and publicly declaring his intention to contest. Under the Electoral Act, that single act of defiance is legally sufficient to collapse the entire consensus arrangement and trigger a direct primary. One man. One form. That is all it takes to blow the entire edifice apart.


What a Direct Primary Would Actually Mean

A direct primary in Ogun East would not be a coronation. It would be a reckoning.

Every card-carrying APC member across the nine local governments of the district, Ijebu-Ode, Ijebu North, Ijebu North East, Ijebu East, Sagamu, Ikenne, Odogbolu, Remo North, and Ogun Waterside, would have a vote. Not just the councillors assembled in a hall at the governor’s invitation. Not just the local government chairmen whose jobs depend on the governor’s goodwill. Not just the commissioners and special advisers whose loyalty was manufactured, not earned. Every party member. Every card. Every conscience.

The Ijebu political heartland, which forms the bulk of Ogun East’s voting population, has deep historical ties to its own political figures. Senator Daniel is not a stranger parachuted into the district. He is a product of it. His networks, built over decades of political engagement long before Abiodun emerged as a significant force in the area, remain active and independent of the state machinery. The idea that he would be swept aside in a free and fair direct primary is not a certainty, and Abiodun, with all the political intelligence available to a sitting governor, knows this better than anyone.

Loyalists of Daniel, under the BATOGD Movement, rejected the consensus process entirely, alleging that it was engineered to exclude their principal and manipulate the outcome in favour of the governor’s camp, describing the Ijebu-Ode meeting as “a carefully orchestrated exclusion” that did not reflect genuine party consensus and violated APC guidelines on consensus candidacy. Those are not the words of a defeated camp conceding the fight. Those are the words of a group that believes it can win in a free contest, and is counting on exactly that opportunity.


The Architecture of Fear and the Price of Loyalty

Abiodun’s offer to aspirants across the board, refund their nomination fees, reward those who stand down with government appointments, promise future political opportunities to those who swallow their ambitions quietly, is a political economy of managed silence. He disclosed that several aspirants who stepped down or aligned with party decisions have already been considered for government appointments, describing the move as a way to retain experienced members and discourage anti-party activities.

Read that again carefully. Government appointments, funded by Ogun State taxpayers, are being deployed as instruments to suppress political competition and consolidate the governor’s personal electoral agenda. This is not party management. This is the weaponisation of public resources for private political ambition. Aspirants are essentially being told: yield your constitutional right to contest, and we will find you a comfortable corner in the government’s structure. Resist, and you are on your own.

The silence that Abiodun is demanding across Ogun State is not merely the silence of party discipline. It is the silence of a graveyard, where all competing ambitions are interred quietly, without ceremony, so that one man’s path to the Senate remains unobstructed, uncontested, and unexamined.

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The Verdict

Governor Dapo Abiodun is a shrewd politician. His mastery of party structure, his control of state resources, and his ability to assemble the kind of grand-coalition endorsement spectacle that unfolded at Adeola Odutola Hall are marks of a man who understands power and how to project it. But political shrewdness and popular legitimacy are not the same thing. And in 2027, it is popular legitimacy that will be put to the test.

The consensus he is building has a crack in its foundation named Gbenga Daniel, a man who has made it legally, constitutionally, and politically impossible to simply wish him away. The Electoral Act 2026 makes provision for only two methods of primaries: consensus or direct primary, ruling out indirect primary entirely. Consensus, as the law demands, requires the written, voluntary, uncoerced agreement of every cleared aspirant. Daniel has not signed. Daniel will not sign. And until he does, or unless he is somehow legally outmanoeuvred, the path to the Senate for Prince Dapo Abiodun runs not through a stage-managed gathering of government appointees in Abeokuta, but through the most democratic and unpredictable process available: a direct primary, where the actual men and women of Ogun East speak for themselves.

That is the test Abiodun appears desperate to avoid. And in his desperation to silence the contest before it begins, across every ward, every council, every constituency in Ogun State, he has inadvertently answered the question he hoped no one would ask.

Is Dapo Abiodun afraid of a direct primary?

Seunmanuel Faleye
Seunmanuel Faleye

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.

Tags: Dapo Abiodun

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