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Rescuing The Democratic Nigerian Republic: The Consolidation Trap (I) - Daily Trust

The gravest danger confronting the Nigerian Republic today is not merely bad governance, nor even the visible distress of the economy and the security order.

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The gravest danger confronting the Nigerian Republic today is not merely bad governance, nor even the visible distress of the economy and the security order. It is the steady narrowing of political space in a federation that can only endure through plural accommodation, competitive renewal, and the continuing legitimacy of democratic choice.

Rescuing The Democratic Nigerian Republic: The Consolidation Trap (I) - Daily Trust

In September 2025, through this same medium, I warned that Nigeria was entering one of the most defining stretches in its post-civil war history. Six months later, that trajectory has not altered. It has accelerated.

The fault lines already visible then – economic distress, institutional decay, judicial compromise, elite impunity, and growing public alienation – have deepened. But another development has now emerged with even greater structural significance: the steady transformation of Nigeria into a de facto one-party state, not by military decree or formal constitutional change, but through the systematic absorption of opposition forces into the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). This development is being celebrated in some quarters as political consolidation and stability.

It is neither. What is being consolidated is not democratic legitimacy, but political dominance. And in a republic such as Nigeria, political dominance without effective competition is not a sign of institutional strength.

It is a warning of institutional distortion. I do not make this argument as a casual observer of Nigerian politics. I make it also as one who participated in the National Constitutional Conference of 1994/95, one of the important stages in the constitutional journey that culminated in the 1999 Constitution.

For those of us who reflected seriously on Nigeria’s federal condition at the time, a vibrant and resourceful multiparty political culture was never an ornamental democratic preference. It was part of the political engineering required for the survival and development of the Nigerian Republic as a single political community. That conviction did not arise in abstraction.

It arose from a historical understanding of Nigeria itself. Nigeria was not simply an arbitrary coming together of “strange bedfellows.” The contemporary federation rests on much older patterns of interaction, interdependence, political contact, trade, migration, and shared historical processes among the peoples and communities that now constitute the Nigerian state.

Nation-building in such a setting is always a process, never a finished product, and its central challenge is the degree of integration achieved within a single political and economic community. That is why the present drift toward one-party dominance should worry every serious student of the Nigerian federation. The historicity of Nigeria, and the practical demands of holding it together, do not align with the narrowing of political space into one dominant formation.

Nigeria is not a naturally centralised, homogeneous nation-state. It is a plural and negotiated political community whose coherence depends on dialogue, bargaining, inclusion, circulation of elites, and the periodic renewal that only meaningful competition can provide. A strong multiparty system is, therefore, not an imported ornament of liberal democracy.

It is one of the internal mechanisms through which a diverse federation manages its tensions and reproduces its legitimacy. What has happened over the past two years should, therefore, be described plainly. Between mid-2024 and early 2026, the APC absorbed multiple sitting governors from the Peoples Democratic Party, drew in large numbers of federal and state legislators, and consolidated overwhelming legislative dominance.

Meanwhile, the Labour Party, which disrupted the old duopoly in 2023 and mobilised millions of voters, has been weakened by internal fracture, while the PDP has been gravely diminished. The point is not that opposition has formally disappeared, but that competitive opposition at the federal level has been hollowed out to a degree that should concern every democrat. The mechanisms of this consolidation are not mysterious.

Politicians are not migrating to the ruling party because they have suddenly discovered a superior governing philosophy. They are moving because the incentives of the Nigerian state are increasingly arranged in such a way that remaining outside the ruling formation imposes severe political costs: exclusion from federal patronage networks, vulnerability to selective institutional pressure, and progressive political irrelevance. In such a setting, defection is less an act of conviction than an act of survival.

The result is not consensus, but capitulation. This is why the language of “stability” must be treated with caution. What appears stable on the surface may be dangerously brittle underneath.

When opposition is absorbed rather than defeated in open competition, the tensions that a multiparty system would ordinarily distribute across rival organisations become concentrated within one dominant structure. Every ambition, grievance, regional claim, and factional rivalry that would otherwise be mediated through inter-party competition is forced inward. The party ceases to function primarily as a vehicle for governing ideas and becomes instead an arena of internal warfare, managed without transparency, principled discipline, or public accountability.

Comparative political history offers little comfort here. Dominant-party systems often preserve the outer rituals of democracy while steadily draining away its corrective substance. Elections still take place.

Legislatures still sit. Courts still function in appearance. But the absence of credible competition weakens institutional independence, encourages complacency, deepens impunity, and hollows out the very structures through which a republic corrects itself.

That was part of the experience of Mexico under the PRI, Malaysia under UMNO, and, in different ways, other systems where dominance postponed instability only to intensify it later. Nigeria’s danger is in some respects greater. Some dominant parties elsewhere at least possessed a foundational ideology that gave them internal coherence, however compromised over time.

The APC has no comparable ideological anchor. It was born as a coalition of convenience to defeat an incumbent and has governed largely as a platform for aggregation and retention of power. A dominant party without ideology is not a national compass.

It is a holding company for ambition. It can distribute patronage, but it cannot generate principled discipline or durable political loyalty. This is why the coming cycle of party primaries may itself become a pressure point.

A ruling party that has absorbed governors, legislators, defectors, regional power-brokers, and career aspirants from across the federation must still confront the basic arithmetic of politics. Only one person can emerge as presidential candidate. Only one candidate can fly the party’s flag in each gubernatorial race.

Only a limited number can secure legislative tickets. The contradiction is obvious. A party that has become a refuge for nearly every significant ambition cannot indefinitely satisfy the ambitions it has accumulated.

The more it expands, the more combustible it becomes. Much has been made of procedural improvements in the electoral framework. Such improvements are not insignificant.

But procedure cannot be substitute for competition. If the political field is already distorted by overwhelming one-party dominance and the collapse of credible alternatives, even technically improved elections may become substantively hollow. A well-administered election in the absence of meaningful competition does not fully express democratic choice.

It merely confers procedural legitimacy on an imbalance produced before the first ballot is cast. This is the heart of the consolidation trap. It is not only that one party becomes too powerful.

It is that the republic loses one of its principal mechanisms of self-renewal. In a genuine multiparty democracy, parties do more than contest office.

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