Nigeria’s main opposition party, the People’s Democratic Party, has suffered a major legal and political setback after the Supreme Court of Nigeria voided its disputed national convention held in Ibadan in November 2025, effectively extinguishing the factional leadership that emerged from the gathering and reopening unresolved questions about the party’s internal stability ahead of future electoral contests.
The apex court’s ruling brings to an end months of courtroom battles surrounding the convention, which produced a parallel national executive led by Tanimu Turaki. By affirming earlier judgments of both the Federal High Court and the Court of Appeal, the Supreme Court has made clear that political expediency cannot override constitutional procedure — even within a party struggling to hold itself together.
Convention held under legal cloud
The November 15–16 convention in Ibadan was controversial from the outset.
It went ahead despite subsisting court orders restraining the party from conducting the exercise. At the heart of the dispute were allegations that the process violated the PDP’s constitution, failed to address lingering disputes from state congresses, and shut out some aspirants from participating in what should have been an inclusive internal democratic process.
A Federal High Court first ruled that the convention was fundamentally defective, citing non-compliance with judicial directives and internal constitutional breaches. That judgment was later upheld by the Court of Appeal, which found that a process conducted in defiance of valid court orders could not produce a lawful leadership structure.
The Turaki-led faction’s appeal to the Supreme Court was widely viewed as its final legal lifeline. That option has now closed.
More than a legal defeat
The ruling is not merely a courtroom loss; it is a political reckoning for a party already battling fragmentation, defections, and credibility concerns after successive electoral disappointments.
For ordinary Nigerians, the immediate consequence may appear confined to party politics. But the wider implication is significant: a weakened opposition can diminish democratic competition, reduce scrutiny of those in power, and narrow policy debate at a time when voters are demanding stronger alternatives on inflation, insecurity, and economic hardship.
The judgment also reinforces a broader judicial message — that internal party democracy remains subject to the rule of law, and that political actors cannot sidestep constitutional processes simply because of factional urgency.
What happens next?
What is now clear is that the executive produced by the voided convention has no legal standing.
What remains uncertain is how the PDP will rebuild consensus. The party may now be forced back to the negotiating table to organise a fresh, legally compliant convention or establish an interim arrangement acceptable to its competing blocs.
That process will test whether the PDP can resolve its internal contradictions or slide deeper into division.
For a party once dominant at the national level, the Supreme Court’s verdict is more than a legal closure — it is a stark warning that without internal order, political revival may remain out of reach.
















