The PDP crisis deepens following a fresh split within the party’s Board of Trustees. Two factions issued conflicting interpretations of a Supreme Court ruling. Both sides claim legitimacy over the party’s national leadership structure. The PDP crisis deepens as control of the National Working Committee remains contested.
The dispute centres on the Mohammed–Anyanwu National Working Committee. One faction endorsed the leadership as valid and binding. The opposing faction rejected it and declared a leadership vacuum. The PDP crisis deepens amid competing claims of authority.
The PDP crisis deepens against a backdrop of prolonged internal disputes. The party has faced recurring leadership conflicts at national level. Court judgments have repeatedly shaped factional alignments. The latest dispute follows rulings nullifying the Ibadan convention. That convention had produced rival party leadership structures.
The legal outcome has triggered fresh political interpretations. The Board of Trustees remains split along factional lines. Each group claims constitutional backing for its position. The disagreements reflect wider instability within party organs.
The Wike-aligned BoT faction, led by Senator Mao Ohuabunwa, maintained that the Supreme Court ruling validated earlier judgments. It insisted the Ibadan convention remains legally nullified. The faction affirmed that the Mohammed–Anyanwu NWC remains valid. It described the leadership as stabilising for the party structure.
It argued that no alternative structure has legal foundation. In contrast, the Wabara-led BoT faction took a different position. It claimed the ruling created a leadership vacuum at national level. It said the BoT must assume interim responsibility for coordination.
The faction also called for reconciliation within the party. It urged the National Working Committee to initiate dialogue. The goal was to prevent further fragmentation across state chapters. The PDP National Working Committee remains a central administrative organ. It oversees daily party operations and national coordination functions.
The PDP crisis deepens concerns over internal governance stability. Conflicting leadership claims weaken organisational clarity. This affects decision-making across party structures.
The dispute may also impact preparations for future elections. Candidate selection processes could face further delays. State chapters may experience parallel directives. Legal interpretations continue to shape political positioning. Future court decisions may further redefine leadership legitimacy.
