From Idu Jude, Abuja
Acting national chairman of the Labour Party, Senator Nenadi Usman, has condemned the All Progressives Congress (APC) for its lack of commitment to protecting the nation`s democracy while accusing it of using various tactics to infiltrate and co-opt opposition parties.
This allegation came days after other opposition parties alleged that Tinubu’s administration has weaponized poverty in Nigeria as a means of underdevelopment.
Speaking at the African Democratic Congress (ADC) Global Award and Dinner Night held on Monday in Abuja, Senator Usman stated that APC has adopted the style of using state institutions to intimidate, harass, and manipulate the opposition to weaken them.
In the speech delivered by the Senior Special Adviser, Media, to the acting national chairman, Ken Eluma Asogwa, Senator Usman noted “Since the emergence of the All Progressives Congress (APC) as the ruling party, there has been a deliberate and relentless campaign to undermine the opposition.
“Tactics range from infiltration and co-optation to the use of state institutions for harassment, intimidation, and even judicial manipulation. The ruling party has become adept not just at consolidating power but at weakening every form of challenge to it. This is not democracy. This is domination masked as governance.
“The APC cannot in good conscience profess commitment to democratic ideals while simultaneously working to destabilize opposition parties like the Labour Party and others.
A system that weaponizes state resources to sow discord within rival parties is not one committed to free and fair competition – it is indeed one invested in authoritarian control.”
While stressing the need to build and sustain a virile and patriotic opposition, the Labour Party’s acting national chairman maintained that democracy depends on the presence of dissent, as she added that the system “thrives not through silence or submission but through robust debate, critique, and the offering of credible alternatives.”
According to Send. Usman, “Without a strong and functional opposition, we cannot claim to be practicing democracy, only a shadow of it.
Around the world, we have seen how opposition movements shape democratic resilience. Yet here at home, we are witnessing the slow suffocation of opposition voices – not by accident, but by design.”
This is as she called on opposition parties in the country to drop personal ambitions, greed, and internal divisions and focus on providing Nigerians with credible alternatives.
“But let me also be brutally honest: while external interference from the APC has played a role, it is not the only culprit. The opposition has too often been complicit in its weakening.
“We must acknowledge that personal ambition, greed, and internal divisions have made us vulnerable. No amount of external sabotage can succeed if there is no internal decay. That is why I say the most potent antidote is not merely vigilance, but patriotism – genuine, uncompromising patriotism.
“When our leaders put Nigeria first – above ambition, above ego, above the lure of quick power – no ruling party can break us. It is time to stop acting like victims and start behaving like visionaries. Our role is not to whine about the state of the nation but to fight for its redemption.
“It does this country no good to operate a system where one party dominates unchecked. Even the APC, if it is wise, should understand that democracy dies not with a bang but with the silence of dissent. Once the people are left with no real alternative, the legitimacy of the entire system is at risk.
“As Nelson Mandela wisely said, “A strong democracy needs a strong opposition – because only through scrutiny, criticism, and open debate can a government serve its people well.”
“That is our task. That is our mission. We must rebuild the opposition – not as scattered entities chasing relevance – but as a united force driven by shared values, sound policy ideas*, and the unshakable will to offer Nigerians the leadership they deserve.
“We must call out the failures of the APC administration, its economic mismanagement, insecurity, shrinking civic space, and worsening inequality.* But more importantly, we must come armed with real solutions and speak not just to the frustrations of Nigerians but to their hopes.
“In the words of former U.S. President Barack Obama, “The role of an opposition party is not simply to oppose, but to hold the government accountable, to challenge ideas, and to propose better ones. That is what we owe the Nigerian people.
Not just criticism, but conviction. Not just slogans, but substance. Not just ambition, but action’, She stated.