Senate Minority Whip Osita Ngwu Dumps PDP, Joins APC as Opposition Bloc Crumbles
Opposition Bloc in Freefall as Senate Minority Whip Joins APC
Nigeria’s opposition in the Senate has taken another severe hit. Senator Osita Ngwu, the Senate Minority Whip representing Enugu West Senatorial District, has formally defected from the Peoples Democratic Party to the All Progressives Congress, extending a wave of departures that has left the ruling party with near-total dominance of the upper chamber.
The defection was announced on the Senate floor on Friday, following last Thursday’s mass crossing that saw nine senators move to the African Democratic Congress (ADC). Senator Tony Nwoye of the ADC has since been named the new Senate Minority Whip — a development that underscores how thoroughly Nigeria’s legislative opposition has been reorganised ahead of 2027.
PDP’s Senate Presence Near Collapse
The numbers tell a stark story. Thursday’s mass defections — presided over by Senate President Godswill Akpabio — brought APC’s Senate tally to 83. With Ngwu’s departure on Friday, that figure has climbed further while PDP is left with just a handful of senators. The ADC, which absorbed former Senate President Aminu Tambuwal, Enyinnaya Abaribe, and seven others last week, now holds nine seats.
According to The Sun, the Thursday session was “historic,” with departing senators citing internal party crises and unresolved leadership disputes. Senator Seriake Dickson also separately resigned from PDP to lead the newly formed Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC), becoming the first sitting senator to found and represent a political party while in office.
What This Means for 2027
The near-collapse of the opposition bench is not just a political headcount. With APC holding a commanding position in both chambers of the National Assembly, the ruling party faces virtually no meaningful legislative resistance as Nigeria enters the 2027 election cycle. Political analysts have noted that a hollowed-out opposition makes it harder to check executive decisions on spending, policy, and constitutional amendments.
For the ADC, the defections represent a complicated windfall. The party has gained visibility and a formal Minority Whip role, but absorbing multiple defectors in rapid succession will test whether it can function as a credible opposition — or simply becomes a transit lounge for politicians switching allegiances.
Senator Ngwu has not issued a public statement explaining his decision to join the APC, particularly given that his home state of Enugu is governed by PDP’s Peter Mbah.
Sources: Nigerian Eye, Daily Post, The Sun, Nigerian Observer, BusinessDay
Written by
Tunde Bakare
Political journalist covering Nigerian politics, the National Assembly, and electoral developments. Political Editor at NaijaTrend.
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