Ahead of 2027, the African Democratic Congress (ADC) appears to be testing a high-stakes consensus strategy, reportedly advancing a one-term power rotation proposal anchored on a potential Peter Obi–Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso ticket to court Northern leaders.
Framed as a bridge between competing regional interests, the move signals a calculated attempt to re-engineer trust, recalibrate power-sharing expectations, and assemble a broad-based coalition capable of challenging entrenched political blocs in Nigeria’s evolving electoral chessboard.
The two former Governors have intensified moves to secure a joint presidential ticket on the platform of the African Democratic Congress by rallying northern leaders around a one-term power rotation deal.
Multiple party sources said the duo were pushing a “one-term” agenda to persuade key stakeholders in the North to back their alliance and shift support away from former Vice President Atiku Abubakar ahead of the party’s primaries.
The renewed consultations, according to insiders, are part of a broader strategy by the two camps to consolidate northern backing for a southern presidency in 2027, with Obi projected to serve a single term if the arrangement succeeds.
Findings revealed that while the ADC is battling a leadership dispute and expecting judgment from the Supreme Court, presidential aspirants in the party have continued their consultations and mobilisation efforts.
The Kwankwaso’s camp had intensified its movement in the last two weeks, meeting traditional rulers and other major stakeholders who had rejected President Bola Tinubu’s second term.
The former governor’s men had been telling northern stakeholders to play fair politics by supporting the South to complete its eight years, warning that backing Atiku again might not favour the North’s future political prospects.
Kwankwaso and Obi’s camps had launched the joint ticket campaign even before the former Kano governor officially joined the ADC on March 30, 2026.
On April 20, supporters of the former governors inaugurated a group named the Obi–Kwankwaso Movement to drive their ticket ahead of the ADC primaries.
An insider disclosed that Kwankwaso and Obi had penetrated many ADC and northern leaders and swayed them away from Atiku. The ADC official added that some northern leaders supporting the opposition party had given Kwankwaso their word of support, against their initial plan to back Atiku.
He said, “What we’re canvassing is fairness; the South should be allowed to complete its eight years. The North completed its eight years before Tinubu took over power. While we have seen that Tinubu’s administration is a disaster, that should not rob the entire South of its deserved eight years. What we need is to elect another southerner as the next president in 2027, and that is why we are canvassing for Obi, who, luckily, has promised a one term.
“We have been convincing some northern leaders to accept Obi’s one-term proposal and support him. RMK (Kwankwaso) is working on this, and some of our leaders in the North have genuinely thrown their weight behind him.
“From our end, the committee set up by Obi and Kwankwaso on their joint ticket is making plans to formalise Obi’s one-term promise and make it public. Kwankwaso too is driving the one-term promise among northern leaders, but I think he needs to do more on Obi’s part to ensure that ‘an agreement is an agreement.’

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