Close Menu
National Update
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Tragic End: Edo Police Arrest 31-Year-Old for Murder of Missing Girl
    • June 12: Presidency Shreds Lamido’s Claims, Defends Tinubu’s Pro-Democracy Legacy
    • Gombe Tragedy: NEMSA Probes Power Surge, Blames Jos DISCO
    • Family Announces Burial Plans for Benue Girl Murdered in Abuja Hotel
    • Gov Sule Seeks Royal Backing to End Benue/Nasarawa Border Crisis
    • Alago Group Urges Tinubu to Demarcate Nasarawa–Benue Border
    • Ododo Launches N600m Ekinrin-Adde Fund, Urges Communities to Invest in Infrastructure
    • Group Slams Gowon Over Aburi Claims, Accuses Him of Justifying Biafran Genocide
    • News
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Economy
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • Security
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    National UpdateNational Update
    Subscribe
    Sunday, June 22
    • News
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Economy
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • Security
    National Update
    Home»Opinion

    Opposition Defections: An Albatross for Nigerian Democracy

    National UpdateBy National UpdateJune 9, 2025Updated:June 9, 2025 Opinion No Comments3 Mins Read
    Dr Augustine Eigbe
    Dr Augustine Eigbe
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    By Augustine Eigbe, Ph.D.

    Nigeria’s democratic journey since 1999 has been fraught with systemic challenges, including weak institutions, electoral malpractices, and elite manipulation of governance processes.
    Among the most noxious threats to democratic stability is the unbridled defection of opposition politicians to the ruling party, a phenomenon that weakens political competition, stifles transparency and accountability, and embeds one-party dominance in the country.
    The defection epidemic, often driven by personal ambition rather than ideological conviction, exemplifies elite capture, where a select few override the democratic will of the majority for selfish gains. If unchallenged, this practice will sabotage the very mainstay of Nigeria’s democracy, necessitating urgent pushback from citizens and civil society.
    The defections in Nigeria have degenerated from political realignments into a patronage system where elites trade party loyalty for state resources, legal protection, and political career longevity. The absorption of opposition figures by the All Progressives Congress ( APC) is not pluralism but the methodical gutting of democratic accountability.
    A vibrant democracy thrives on robust opposition that holds the government accountable. However, when opposition members routinely defect to the ruling party, it diminishes alternative policy perspectives and consolidates power in the hands of a single bloc and subverts democratic norms.
    The ongoing exodus of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP),Labour Party (LP), and New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) members, including governors and legislators to the APC is crippling opposition capacity. This threatens to worsen Nigeria’s democratic deficit, potentially leaving the already biddable legislature unable to restrain executive overreach.
    These defections betray the trust of the electorate. When politicians elected on an opposition platform switch allegiance without justification, they invalidate the votes and preferences of their constituents. This weakens representative democracy, as the people’s mandate is hijacked by elite interests. Nigeria’s constitutional provisions (Section 68(1)(g) of the 1999 Constitution) on defections are often ignored, with courts reluctant to enforce sanctions, further emboldening political mercenaries.
    The gale of defections reinforces a political culture that reduces governance to a transactional enterprise. Politicians prioritise patronage over public service, perpetuating a system where loyalty to individuals and not party ideologies or national development dictates political behaviour. This elite capture distorts policy priorities, diverting attention from critical national issues like rising cost of living, poverty, hunger, insecurity, infrastructural decay, and electoral reforms.
    Therefore, to salvage Nigeria’s democracy, citizens and civil society organisations (CSOs) must intensify advocacy against defections and elite impunity. CSOs should pursue sustained legal challenges enforcing constitutional provisions on defections, particularly through public interest litigation compelling courts, to vacate seats of politicians who defect without just cause, as constitutionally mandated.
    The majority of the citizens must relentlessly demand transparency and accountability from elected officials. Grassroots campaigns should educate voters on how political defections harm democracy and mobilise them to reject defectors in future elections. The mainstream and new media must amplify these concerns to reshape public discourse
    Without ideological roots, opposition parties are merely defections waiting to happen. To survive, they must unite behind clear governance alternatives or watch Nigeria’s democracy degenerate into a marketplace for elite transactions.
    The defection of opposition figures in the country is not merely a political manoeuvre but a direct assault on democratic values. It ingrains elite dominance, degrades  accountability in governance, and deprives the electorate from benefiting from the dividends of democracy.
    This trend perpetuates democratic deterioration, institutionalising a hollowed-out political system that benefits only a privileged minority. Such systemic exclusion requires citizens and civil society to mobilise all available legal, judicial, and advocacy mechanisms to dismantle elite dominance and restore inclusive democracy.

    Historian and Development Communication Expert.

    Email: augustineeigbe20022002@gmail.com 

    National Update

    Keep Reading

    Passing Through The Furnace Of Ajaokuta: Prince Shuaib Abubakar Audu’s Journey Via Renewed Hope

    Displaced Politicians pull up ADA, a political Party

    Governing with the People: How Governor Umar Namadi’s Gwamnati da Jama’a Are Changing the Face of Governance in Jigawa

    The People’s Choice: Jubilant Kano Endorses Abba Kabir Yusuf for 2027

    Midterm Appraisal of Akpabio-led Tenth Senate

    Defections: Will Wike honour Tinubu’s invitation to join APC?

    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Most Viewed Posts
    • Tinubu names El-Rufai, Tope Fasua, others in New appointments (1,462)
      President Bola Tinubu has named 18 Special Advisers and Senior Special Assistants in New appointments to help execute the Federal Government’s agenda across various sectors of the economy. The Director of Information at the Office of the Vice President, Olusola Abiola gave the indication in a statement released on MondayThe team, which comprises 6 Special
    • Police nabs Killer of Varsity Lecturer in Niger (1,096)
      The Niger state Police Command has apprehended a 14 year old girl, Joy Afekafe 'of Gbeganu community in Minna, the state capital as a prime suspect over the gruesome murder of a Lecturer with the Federal University of Technology (FUT) Minna, Professor Mrs. Funmilola AdefolaluThe late  Prof. Mrs. Funmilola Adefolalu, was murdered at her residence
    • FCT-IRS tells socialite Aisha Achimugu not to forget to file her annual returns (1,051)
      ***As the Service extends its warmest birthday wishes to her The FCT-Internal Revenue Service has reacted to the news of an Abuja based business Nigerian Lady Aisha Achimugu who recently set Genada aglow with 7-day 50th birthday party reminding her of her tax obligations to FCT-IRS. Achimugu is the founder and managing director of Abuja’s
    • Sule Lamido tackles Tinubu over Democracy Day speech, says its share Hallucination (960)
      Former Jigawa State Governor, Senator Dr. Sule Lamido has faulted the June 12, Democracy Day speech of president Bola Ahmed Tinubu describing it as mere hallucination Lamido on his X handle wrote with the title: “Hallucinating June 12, there was a June 11 before June 12”. Taking on Tinubu, Lamido said, “It is obvious the
    • ICAN bill suffers setback at Senate as stakeholders object to some sections (932)
      ***Warn against use of the ammendment to usurp mandates of other professions Stakeholders in the financial sector on Thursday raised objections to some sections of a bill for an Act to amend the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), Act No. 15 of 1965 and for other matters connected thereto. At a public hearing

    Latest News

    Tragic End: Edo Police Arrest 31-Year-Old for Murder of Missing Girl

    June 22, 2025

    June 12: Presidency Shreds Lamido’s Claims, Defends Tinubu’s Pro-Democracy Legacy

    June 22, 2025

    Gombe Tragedy: NEMSA Probes Power Surge, Blames Jos DISCO

    June 22, 2025

    Family Announces Burial Plans for Benue Girl Murdered in Abuja Hotel

    June 22, 2025

    Gov Sule Seeks Royal Backing to End Benue/Nasarawa Border Crisis

    June 22, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    National Update
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    © 2025 National Update. Designed by Lamark Cre8ives.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Go to mobile version