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Emomotimi Guwor: A Man on a Mission
“Dialogue is fine,” he would say quietly, “but action is better.”
In such moments, Hon. Emomotimi Guwor sounds less like a ceremonial head and more like a man measuring time against ambition.
On February 9, 2026, in Abuja, the Speaker of the Delta State House of Assembly was elected Chairman of the Conference of Speakers of State Legislatures of Nigeria. He ran unopposed. A day later, he turned 46. That same week, he and 21 lawmakers defected from the PDP to the APC, citing unresolved party fissures.
The speed of his ascent is striking. Since entering politics in 2019, Guwor has moved from first-term legislator to Speaker, and now to the head of a national legislative bloc. It is a trajectory that suggests calculation rather than happenstance, the kind observers would describe as purposeful and colleagues would call relentless.
But position alone does not define the mission. In his acceptance remarks, Guwor pledged to pursue full legislative autonomy for all 36 state assemblies. The emphasis is clear: autonomy as doctrine, independence as practice. For a system long shadowed by executive dominance, that promise carries institutional weight.
Back home in Delta, Guwor’s agenda leans toward quotidian concerns. A proposed Rent Regulation Bill aims to temper soaring housing costs in Asaba and Warri. Under his watch, the Assembly has prioritised security and economic bills over ceremonial motions.
Outside the chamber, Guwor’s GED Foundation has funded over 1,000 scholarships and free UTME preparatory classes. That philanthropic footprint reinforces a youth-centric narrative. At 46, he stands as part of a cohort seeking to prove that generational shift can coexist with stability.
Still, the timing of his national elevation and partisan realignment is notable. Chairmanship secured; party switched; birthday marked. Within 48 hours, Guwor redrew his political map, anchoring himself simultaneously in Abuja’s legislative calculus and Delta’s local arithmetic.






