June 30, 2026
Home ยป Only a Tested and Trusted Leader Like Makinde Can Float a New Party With Impact – Akin Fagbemi
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As political realignment talks intensify ahead of the 2027 general elections, one argument keeps resurfacing in Oyo State and beyond: starting a new political platform without proven leadership is a non-starter.








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The consensus among party stakeholders is simple – it is only a tested and trusted leader like Governor Seyi Makinde who has the credibility and structure to float a new party that will have real impact.




Credibility is the currency of a new platform

Nigeriaโ€™s political history is littered with parties that existed only on paper. The difference between a paper party and a movement lies in trust.

A leader who has delivered visible projects, managed state finances prudently, and maintained consistent grassroots engagement brings immediate legitimacy to any platform he leads.

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Governor Makindeโ€™s two-term record in Oyo State – covering education reform, infrastructure expansion, health sector upgrades, and a reputation for paying salaries and pensions promptly – gives him that capital. Supporters argue that this record allows him to attract both voters and political actors without starting from zero.

Structure matters more than slogans

Floating a new party is not just about a name and logo. It requires ward-level structures, funding, candidate recruitment, and conflict management across 36 states.

That is where a leader with an existing, functioning political machinery holds an advantage.

In Oyo, the PDP structure built around Makindeโ€™s administration has shown capacity to win elections across diverse local governments.

Political analysts say replicating or repurposing that structure for a new platform would give it a running start that most new parties lack.

Impact requires delivery, not just rhetoric

Voters in 2027 are expected to prioritize delivery over party branding. The argument being made is that a new party led by someone with a verifiable delivery record can convert skepticism into support quickly.

โ€œPeople donโ€™t join parties because of names anymore,โ€ one Ibadan North-West stakeholder noted. โ€œThey join because they believe the person at the top can get things done from Abuja to the ward. Thatโ€™s why only a leader like Makinde can make a new party matter.โ€

The road to 2027

While no official declaration has been made regarding a new party, the conversation reflects a broader frustration with party discipline, candidate selection, and policy consistency in the established parties.

If that frustration hardens into a movement, the test will be leadership. And in that debate, the name that keeps coming up in the South-West and beyond is Seyi Makinde – not because of speculation, but because of the political capital that comes from eight years of governing under public scrutiny.

Whether a new party emerges or not, the underlying point remains: in Nigerian politics, impact follows trust, and trust follows delivery.

Written by
Mogaji Akin Fagbemi LL.B, Ph.D

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