• President is my friend, I won’t deny him second term, Soludo pledges
• Shagari says Tinubu ‘unbeatable’ despite soaring hardship
The senator representing Nasarawa West Constituency, Nasarawa State, Aliyu Ahmed Wadada, has signalled his political homecoming to the All Progressives Congress (APC).
The lawmaker, who spoke with newsmen after a courtesy visit to President Bola Tinubu at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, lauded the President’s policies, declared the “space already taken” for the next election, and challenged opposition hopefuls to present a better plan for Nigeria.
The senator, who once served as a national officer in both the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and APC, stressed that his move to the SDP was “purely circumstantial” and that the party had “not offended” him.
He said: “I could even say I am in APC already, though not officially. Life is dynamic. Politics is dynamic.”
Wadada, however, praised Tinubu’s push for massive road projects, such as the Sokoto–Badagry and Abuja–Kano highways, and credited him with driving the Federal Capital Territory’s (FCT) transformation.
RELATEDLY, Anambra State Governor, Prof. Chukwuma Soludo, has openly backed Tinubu for re-election in 2027, saying: “Tinubu is my friend, 22 years and counting, and I won’t deny him a second opportunity.”
Soludo, who met with the President separately at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, said he was impressed by Tinubu’s “bold steps” in economic and structural reforms.
He, therefore, urged all parties that claim to be progressive to form a “massive coalition” for national development.
Soludo, however, revealed that his administration’s kinetic and non-kinetic strategy had driven the “deadly native doctors” who were accused of aiding criminality out of the state.
HOWEVER, former Deputy Governor of Sokoto State, Muktar Shagari, has dismissed the mounting public frustration over economic hardship, insisting that Tinubu remains politically “unbeatable” ahead of the 2027 elections.
Shagari, who spoke during an interview on Arise TV, lauded Tinubu’s controversial removal of the fuel subsidy and suggested that much of the opposition criticism was rooted in bitterness from those who have lost political influence.
“The truth is, for over 15 years, I have been against fuel subsidy because it is a scam. Journalists know it, politicians know it — the subsidy was simply a channel for corruption. It was costing Nigeria trillions that could be used for development. I have to give credit to President Tinubu for having the courage to do what others feared to do by removing it completely,” Shagari said.