Atiku Raises Alarm Over Alleged Plot To Exclude ADC From 2027 Polls

Former Vice President and presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Atiku Abubakar, has raised the alarm over what he describes as a fresh and coordinated attempt by elements within the ruling establishment to deploy political and legal machinations to keep his party off the ballot ahead of the 2027 general election.

Atiku disclosed this on Monday in Abuja through his Senior Special Assistant on Public Communication, Phrank Shaibu. The former Vice President said he had received credible information indicating that renewed efforts may be underway to exclude the ADC from next year’s election, describing the plot as “a coordinated onslaught by anti-democratic elements within the ruling party”.

“We are fully aware of their plots. While they seek to sow confusion within the opposition, we know their real target is the ADC because it represents the most credible alternative. If the All Progressives Congress (APC) is truly confident in its popularity, why is it so terrified of the ADC?” Atiku queried.

He identified what he called a now-familiar pattern of assault on the opposition, warning that institutions meant to be neutral were being drawn into partisan contests, frivolous litigations were gaining unusual momentum, administrative powers were being selectively deployed, and political pressure was being mounted behind closed doors.

Atiku accused the ruling establishment of being consumed by the obsession with silencing the opposition at the expense of governance, saying that “at a time when Nigerians are battling hunger, inflation, unemployment, insecurity, and collapsing purchasing power, those entrusted with public office appear preoccupied with political survival rather than national survival”.

He warned that any attempt to prevent the ADC from participating fully in the electoral process would represent one of the gravest assaults on Nigeria’s constitutional democracy since the return to civil rule, stressing that no administration possessed the constitutional authority to determine which political party Nigerians were permitted to vote for.

“The ballot is sacred, and every attempt to tamper with it is an attack on the Republic itself. The desire for change cannot be outlawed. Hope cannot be deregistered. Democracy cannot be subverted by administrative fiat,” Atiku declared.

The former Vice President called on the judiciary to remain faithful to its constitutional oath and resist every form of external pressure, reminding judicial officers that history had never been kind to those who sacrificed justice on the altar of political convenience. He also urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), security agencies, civil society organisations and the diplomatic community to remain vigilant against any action capable of undermining the credibility of the electoral process.

“We are placing Nigerians on notice because democracy flourishes only when citizens refuse to be indifferent. Eternal vigilance remains the price of liberty,” Atiku said, assuring that no amount of intimidation, blackmail, judicial manipulation or political engineering would weaken the resolve of millions of Nigerians who had embraced the ADC as the vehicle for rescuing the nation.

The ADC’s predicament is not an isolated case. The Federal High Court in Abuja recently ordered the deregistration of five parties, namely the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Accord Party (AP), Action Alliance (AA), Action People’s Party (APP) and the Zenith Labour Party (ZLP) over an alleged failure to meet constitutionally required vote thresholds. A stay of execution from the Court of Appeal has since halted enforcement, but the episode left the ADC fighting for its survival on the ballot.

Comrade Timi Frank, a former Deputy National Publicity Secretary of the APC and current Senior Advisor to Atiku Abubakar, has also raised the alarm over an alleged coordinated plot by the Presidency, INEC, and elements within the judiciary to remove the ADC from the ballot. Frank claimed that credible intelligence points to the ADC and its presumed presidential candidate as the primary targets of a scheme designed to cripple the opposition and entrench a one-party state.

“The ultimate objective is to ensure that the ADC and its presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, do not participate in the 2027 election at all costs,” Frank said.

The ADC, which has presented itself as a coalition platform for the 2027 contest, is currently split three ways: a faction led by former Senate President David Mark, considered the mainstream bloc and presently recognised by INEC; a faction led by Kingsley Ogga; and another led by former deputy national chairman, Nafiu Bala. The Mark camp counts Atiku among its prominent allies. The ADC’s national publicity secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, confirmed that the party is contending with three separate cases in court, including a suit by Bala challenging Mark’s leadership, a suit on the party’s deregistration, and another filed by aggrieved state chairmen.

Meanwhile, the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC), which had become the vehicle for Peter Obi and former Kano State Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso’s presidential ambitions, has also been thrown into legal limbo following a Federal High Court decision in Lokoja setting aside its earlier order compelling INEC to register the party.