The Board of Trustees (BoT) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has relocated its meetings from the party’s national secretariat in Abuja to a hotel, citing security concerns.
Senator Adolphus Wabara, the BoT Chairman, presided over an emergency meeting at a well-known Abuja hotel, expressing dismay over last week’s incident where thugs allegedly disrupted a party gathering.
During the meeting, the BoT endorsed Sunday Ude-Okoye as the party’s National Secretary, calling on the National Working Committee (NWC) to officially recognize and swear him in.
The endorsement follows a resolution by PDP governors, who met in Asaba, Delta State, last week to back Ude-Okoye for the role.
However, Senator Sam Anyanwu dismissed the governors’ decision, arguing that their forum is not an official organ of the PDP but merely a pressure group.
In a petition dated February 1, 2025, addressed to the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Anyanwu warned that any attempt to enforce the Enugu Court of Appeal judgment in his absence could lead to unrest.
The BoT, in a communiqué released after the meeting, stated that there was no stay of execution against the appellate court’s ruling that removed Anyanwu as National Secretary.
It cited Section 32(5)(a) of the PDP Constitution (as amended in 2017), which empowers the BoT to uphold the party’s moral standards and call erring members to order.
The board also adopted the findings of its committee, led by Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) Kabiru Turaki, affirming Ude-Okoye’s position as the legitimate National Secretary of the PDP.
Meanwhile, the Senate plenary session took a dramatic turn as lawmakers clashed over the defection of Senator Ned Nwoko (Delta North) from the PDP to the All Progressives Congress (APC).
PDP senators argued that Nwoko’s move was unconstitutional, as the party was not facing an internal crisis that would justify his defection.
The debate intensified when Senate Minority Leader Abba Moro raised a constitutional point of order, questioning the validity of Nwoko’s switch.
In response, Deputy Senate President Jibril Barau and Senate Leader Opeyemi Bamidele defended Nwoko, stating that the Nigerian Constitution permits defections when there is a division within a party.
Barau pointed to the well-documented rift between the Nyesom Wike and Bala Mohammed factions as evidence of such a division.
Moro, however, countered that the PDP remains a law-abiding institution, adhering to the Court of Appeal’s ruling on its leadership.
Senate President Godswill Akpabio interjected, asking, “What does the Supreme Court say?” to which Moro reiterated that the appellate court had upheld Anyanwu’s position as National Secretary.
Following his defection, Nwoko was formally welcomed at the APC national secretariat in Abuja by the party’s National Chairman, Abdullahi Ganduje, alongside Minister of Aviation Festus Keyamo and other chieftains.
Addressing reporters, Nwoko dismissed speculations that Delta State Governor Sheriff Oborevwori might follow suit and defect to the APC ahead of the 2027 elections.
He warned that APC leaders in Delta would not accept the governor, citing his alleged lack of leadership capacity and failure to be accountable to the people despite the state receiving over ₦52 billion monthly in oil derivation and statutory allocations.
Nwoko also ruled out contesting the Delta governorship election in 2027 on the APC platform, focusing instead on strengthening the party’s presence in the state.