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PDP: We Don’t Attack Opposition Parties Because We Have Common Adversary
•Mulls membership dues for funding
Chuks Okocha in Abuja
The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has said that one of the reasons why it does not attack or criticise other opposition political parties is because they are a common adversary ahead of the 2027 general election.
The PDP National Publicity Secretary, Ini Emembong, in an interview with journalists at the weekend, stated that though the time for merger with other political parties “hasn’t matured,” the collaboration is in an “embryonic stage.”
Emembong said his party is working with other opposition political parties to forge a common front ahead of the 2027 general election.
According to him, there is “an understanding among the opposition (parties) because we face a common adversary – the ruling party – which won with less than 40% of the vote.”
He added that PDP “refrains from attacking other opposition parties like the Labour Party or ADC because we are focused on the larger goal.”
Emembong expressed confidence that PDP will win the February 21 Area Council elections in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory, because “the FCT is historically PDP territory at the local government level.”
He explained that the party is reaching the people directly “rather than through one elite gatekeeper.”
According to him, PDP is witnessing a rebirth, which includes analysing its mistakes and successes, noting that the party started from zero in 1998 and went ahead to rule the country for 16 years.
“We have reached the bottom of the valley, and now we are heading back up. This is a rebirth process, which is always painful. We are analysing our mistakes and successes.
“We have both ‘qualitative’ and ‘quantitative’ voices in the party. While the qualitative voices (the elite) are essential, democracy is a game of numbers.
“We are balancing these while navigating the court process. Simultaneously, we are using a ‘poly-opportunity strategy’, fighting in court while conducting grassroots mobilisation and stakeholder engagement,” he added.
The PDP spokesperson stated that the party leadership is taking the party back to the people, noting that “when people are with you voluntarily, they fund the cause.
“In 1998, people brought small contributions to fund the party, and that gave them a voice. When governors took over the funding, the people were pushed aside.
Meanwhile, the party is planning to return to members at all levels to raise money as a way of stopping godfatherism that has crippled the party.
“When governors took over the funding, the people were pushed aside. We are returning to that voluntary model. If 60 million Nigerians give ₦10,000 each, that is a huge sum. We are seeing this mass movement already in states like Plateau and Akwa Ibom”.
Speaking on the expected outlook for 2026 regarding security and the economy, he said “the outlook is gloomy. We are seeing a “normalization of insecurity” where feeling unsafe is the standard.
“We need comprehensive, sustainable solutions, not makeshift ones like using NYSC camps for police training. The best ambassadors to change the narrative aren’t PR firms in Washington, but the citizens in Benue, Plateau, and Borno who live these realities every day.”







