Nigeria’s opposition has once again rearranged itself, like pieces on a chessboard reset mid-game, raising a familiar question ahead of the next presidential election: is this strategy, or a sign of desperation?
The latest defections and alliances expose a deeper instability at the heart of the opposition. What was presented as a unified front has fractured into overlapping camps, each promising renewal while carrying the same burdens of internal disputes, legal wrangling and competing ambitions. For many voters, the spectacle inspires both cautious interest and growing fatigue.
Supporters insist the new alignment could sharpen the opposition’s edge, consolidating regional influence and re-energising a base weary of disunity. In a political landscape where momentum can be as decisive as policy, even the perception of cohesion may prove powerful against an entrenched ruling party.

But history offers a sobering counterpoint. Nigeria’s opposition has often behaved like a river in flood season, surging with force before splintering into smaller, weaker streams. Personal rivalries, thin ideological grounding and unresolved tensions have repeatedly undermined coalitions that once seemed formidable.
As the election draws closer, this latest realignment may become either a bridge to genuine competition or another political mirage. It reflects a democracy in motion, but also one still searching for coherence. Whether this coalition can hold its shape long enough to matter will determine if it marks a turning point or merely another cycle of reinvention.
– Inah Boniface Ocholi writes from Ayah – Igalamela/Odolu LGA, Kogi state.
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