The deepening crisis within the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has taken a more troubling turn, as optimistic presidential aspirant and founding member, Dr. Gbenga Hashim, is now weighing the option of exiting the party amid the collapse of reconciliation efforts and growing fear of opposition capture. What began as an internal leadership dispute has evolved

The deepening crisis within the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has taken a more troubling turn, as optimistic presidential aspirant and founding member, Dr. Gbenga Hashim, is now weighing the option of exiting the party amid the collapse of reconciliation efforts and growing fear of opposition capture.
What began as an internal leadership dispute has evolved into a full blown structural breakdown, with entrenched factions and competing interests rendering the party increasingly ineffective as a national opposition platform.
More concerning are growing indications that elements within the PDP may have aligned with the political establishment under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, raising fears that the party is being systematically weakened from within.
For many observers, this has fueled speculation that the PDP risks losing its identity as an opposition force, with some even warning of a drift toward tacit support for the ruling order ahead of the 2027 elections.
For Dr. Hashim, the implications are clear.
Remaining within a fractured and potentially compromised structure could undermine both his presidential ambition and his long standing commitment to democratic plurality.
His ongoing consultations across party lines suggest a deliberate effort to build or align with a broader coalition capable of resisting the emergence of a one party dominant system in Nigeria.
This moment may well represent a turning point, not just for Hashim, but for the future of opposition politics in Nigeria. If key actors begin to exit or disengage from the PDP, the party could face a rapid decline in relevance, paving the way for a new political alignment to emerge.
At stake is more than partisan advantage. The weakening of viable opposition structures raises fundamental questions about the health of Nigeria’s democracy. Without a strong and independent opposition, the risk of democratic erosion becomes increasingly real.
As 2027 approaches, the choices made by actors like Hashim will help determine whether Nigeria sustains a competitive political system or slides into a de facto one party state.
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