Opinion
Osun: I2 sacred reasons Aregbesola’s candidate could not defeat Oyetola
Published
4 years agoon
The All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship primary election in Osun state has come and gone. Incumbent Governor of the state, Alhaji Adegboyega Oyetola, has emerged victorious in the direct primary poll held last Saturday.
In all honesty, did former Governor Rauf Aregbesola think that his anointed candidate, former Secretary to the State Government, Alhaji Moshood Adeoti, could have won the February 19,2022 governorship primary election in Osun State.
Some of those reasons the Minister of Interior, Aregbesola and his preferred candidate could NOT have would include:
(1) It does not fall within trajectory of yoruba history for Aregbesola to win. Recall in my previous write up, I warned the former governor working against his boss and benefactor, Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s interest.
(2) It is against the Holy Books: This writer is not so versed about the Quaran but Islamic clerics say tenets of loyalty to the master are there. Clearly written in the Bible is, “those who repay good with evils, evil shall not cease from their house”.
(3) Masses in Osun State ARE NOT for Aregbesola presently. His political phenomenon is not so strong as he may be deceiving himself to believe. It is a minus for an electable politician not to have his or her own political structure in Osun State and solely rely on Aregbesola as a political godfather now. His season in Osun State political space is fast eclipsing.
(4) Aregbesola’s improverishment of Osun State civil servants during his 8 years maximum reign are too fresh in their memories. The negative spiral social-economic effects of half salary payments on the sleepy state despite his credible impacts on infrastructural development have being noted by Osun masses.
(5) Alhaji Moshood Adeoti, the touted Aregbesola’s Candidate is adroit in moving from one political party to the other. He has just been moved back to the APC of recent. In this case,if he loses at the primary election, APC members’ expectation is that he would join either the ADC, Labour, Accord Party out of desperation. The real members of Osun APC know this. There was no way they could have wasted their massive votes on Adeoti at the primary conducted on February 19,2022.
(6) In Iwo town where Adeoti comes from,his impact, as alleged was minimal on his people and the people of Osun State as SSG for 4years during Aregbesola’s tenure. Nigerian workers are becoming wiser; this the Nigerian politicians must note. A politician from Iwo zone, Fatai Akinbade held the same SSG office during Oyinlola’s tenure, was beneficial to Osun people and still their political darling to date, according to political pundits.
(7) The fragile political marriage between former Governor Aregbesola and his SSG, Adeoti, is believed to be a cat and mouse game,not based on trust. Political observers believed that Aregbesola is too garrulous for Sheuu Adeoti’s mien. Adeoti castigated, was allegedly sponsored by another non-APC former governor in the South West,worked against Aregbesola in 2019. When the chips are down, popular political prediction is that Aregbesola would abandon Adeoti to political orphanage home and settle himself and his amiable wife, ‘Sheri’ at their Lagos home. Noticeably, Aregbesola was not seen in Osun State at all, he didn’t participate in voting at his ward during the February 19 primary. What a political leader!
(8) Governor Oyetola could not be regarded as Aregbesola’s godson. Yes! After much pressure, Aregbesola worked assiduously for Oyetola’s emergence in 2019. However, Oyetola was Chief political strategist and fund coordinator for the emergence of Aregbesola as Governor of Osun State. Oyetola may not have the hullabaloo and know much of Saheed Osupa”s songs as Aregbesola but he has displayed more managerial capacities, statesmanship, humility and Gubernatorial composure, obvious to and highly respected by the masses in Osun State.
(9) Governor Oyetola would always win a primary election against Aregbesola’s candidate as people are pleased with his payment of workers’ salaries and humble infrastructural development. Those voters in the direct primary are APC members comprising of workers, pensioners regularly receiving their stipends and traders, business people now making sales.
(10) Obas and traditional heads of communities are more comfortable with the nature, and disposition of the person and governance style of Governor Oyetola. Openly, these leaders have blessed Oyetola’s second term and indicated their unalloyed support. NOT a single Oba has shown up for Minister Aregbesola and his crony Adeoti. Even,the Owaa and Paramount head Obas in Ijesaland, Aregbesola home base, openly endorsed Oyetola. Ditto for the Oba of Iwoland, Adeoti’s home town. Both have given their support to Oyetola..
(11) Grassroot mobilisation by the Ileri Oluwa campaign team ably led by Governor Oyetola was more visible, palpable throughout the 30 local governments and more effective than Aregbesola/ Adeoti’s campaigns. Oyetola mobilised his cabinet members, political appointees,elected representatives,local government council members to their various wards. Emerging political leaders,party elders,APC stakeholders were on Oyetola’s entourage. Adeoti supporters conveyed weekly at Aregbesola’s office at Fakunle area in Osogbo and engaged in much of social media outbursts while the Minister was busy in Abuja.
Chief Bisi Akande, High Chief Akere, Senator (Dr ) Iyiola Omisore were with Oyetola. Brilliant lawyer and SAN, Federal Senator and NASS spokesperson advised the Aregbesola/Adeoti group he couldn’t be with them as the Adeoti agenda is a failed project abinitio. Dr. Bashiru Ajibola openly declared he was pro mainstream APC.
Adeoti and Aregbesola could not in all honesty defeat Oyetola. In the case of Lasun Yusuff, former Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, his buying the primary election form was not to win but to register his participation by all indices on the ground.
(12) Oyetola is a sitting Governor. In today’s Nigeria political space, Nigeria’s Governors are the prestigious elite cabal. The head of H/Qs APC transition committee in which Oyetola is a respected member is a sitting Governor Buni of Yobe State. For the head of Osun State primary election, he found a suitable person in a sitting Governor AbdulHamed of Kwara State, who incidentally has not been on good terms like Oyetola with the Minister from his state, Lai Mohammed.
Governor Ahmed did a very good job. Yes, Nigerian Governors are in charge: primary elections to select candidates, secondary elections to select National party executives, tertiary elections to select Presidential and other candidates for elective posts. The result is stamped from the headquarters of the party. Oyetola is returned as the winner of APC primary election in Osun State, certified by INEC.
Aregbesola and Adeoti stand defeated!
Idowu Ayodele, writes from Osogbo, Osun State
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Growing support has continued to trail a youthful politician and technology advocate, Hon. Khalil Mustapha Adegboyega, popularly known as Repete, as many youths in Ibadan North Federal Constituency expressed confidence in his leadership style and vision for development.
Across several communities within the constituency, residents, particularly students, artisans and young professionals, described Repete as one of the emerging political figures with strong grassroots appeal and a passion for youth empowerment.
Supporters said his growing popularity stems from his consistent advocacy for innovation, entrepreneurship and skills development aimed at addressing unemployment and creating opportunities for young people.
As an engineer and technology enthusiast, Repete is also said to possess a deep understanding of the evolving digital economy and the need to position youths for global competitiveness.
Many of his supporters noted that his approach to leadership focuses on practical solutions, mentorship and capacity-building initiatives capable of helping young people become self-reliant and economically productive.
Some community stakeholders who spoke on his rising profile said his humility, accessibility and relationship with the grassroots have continued to endear him to many residents within the constituency.
They added that Repete’s engagement with youths and community groups reflects his commitment to inclusive governance and people-oriented representation.
Observers within the constituency also maintained that the increasing support for the politician reflects a growing desire among residents for a new generation of leaders driven by innovation, competence and accountability.
According to them, many young people see Repete as a symbol of hope and progressive leadership capable of contributing meaningfully to the development of Ibadan North Federal Constituency.
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The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Oyo State stands on the edge of a consequential decision—one that may define not only its fortunes in Ibadan North Federal Constituency but also its broader political relevance in the state.
As the countdown to the party primaries intensifies, the question before APC leaders is no longer routine. It is strategic. It is urgent. And it is decisive: will the party align with the clear preference of the people or risk repeating costly political miscalculations?
At the centre of this debate is Hon. Khalil Mustapha Adegboyega, widely known as Repete—a name that has, over time, evolved from a political identity into a grassroots phenomenon.
A Candidate Rooted in the People
In contemporary Nigerian politics, where voter awareness is rising and expectations are shifting, candidates are increasingly judged not by promises but by presence. On this scale, Adegboyega stands tall.
His political journey is marked by consistent engagement with constituents—far beyond the optics of election seasons. From youth empowerment initiatives that provide practical skills and startup support, to sustained interventions in healthcare access for the elderly and indigent, his footprint across Ibadan North reflects a model of leadership anchored on service.
Unlike the transactional approach that often defines political relationships, Adegboyega’s connection with the people appears organic—built on trust, accessibility, and continuity. These are not mere campaign attributes; they are political assets.
The Danger of Political Disconnect
History offers the APC a clear lesson: parties that ignore grassroots sentiment often pay a heavy electoral price. The imposition of candidates perceived as distant or untested has, in several instances, resulted in voter apathy, internal dissent, and eventual defeat at the polls.
Ibadan North presents no exception.
With opposition parties closely monitoring the APC’s internal dynamics, any misstep in candidate selection could provide a ready opening. A divided house, coupled with a candidate lacking widespread acceptance, is a formula the opposition is well-positioned to exploit.
The implication is straightforward: this is not merely about party loyalty; it is about electoral viability.
Echoes from the Grassroots
Across the length and breadth of Ibadan North—markets, motor parks, religious centres, and community gatherings—a consistent pattern emerges in political conversations. The name “Repete” resonates with familiarity and acceptance.
Such organic support is not easily manufactured. It is cultivated over time through visible impact and sustained presence. For a party seeking electoral certainty in a competitive environment, this level of grassroots validation is not just desirable—it is critical.
A Test of Leadership and Judgment
For the APC leadership in Oyo State, the moment calls for clarity of purpose. Decisions driven by narrow interests, personal alignments, or short-term calculations may carry long-term consequences.
The task, therefore, is to balance internal considerations with external realities. Elections are ultimately decided by voters, not by party caucuses. A candidate who commands public confidence offers the strongest pathway to victory.
The Stakes Are Clear
Ibadan North is too strategic a constituency for experimentation. The cost of error is not limited to a single seat; it extends to party cohesion, credibility, and future positioning within the state’s political landscape.
In this context, the argument for Adegboyega is less about sentiment and more about strategy. His visibility, acceptability, and record of engagement place him in a strong position to consolidate support and mobilise voters effectively.
Conclusion: A Choice with Consequences
As the APC moves closer to its primaries, the decision before it is both simple and significant: align with a candidate who reflects the mood of the electorate or risk conceding advantage to a watchful opposition.
In politics, moments such as this often separate foresight from hindsight.
For APC in Ibadan North, this may well be one of those defining moments.
Aderibigbe Akanbi, a political analyst, writes from Ibadan.
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Opinion
Ibarapa East: Yusuf Ramon’s Quest for Responsive Representation
Published
3 months agoon
February 14, 2026As the road to 2027 gradually unfolds across Oyo State, political conversations are shifting from routine permutations to deeper questions about competence, generational leadership, and measurable impact. In Ibarapa East, that conversation has found a new voice in Yusuf Abiodun Ramon — a Lanlate-born technocrat whose entry into the race for the State House of Assembly is redefining what representation could mean for the constituency.
In a political environment often dominated by familiar faces and conventional calculations, Ramon presents a profile shaped by technical discipline, structured thinking, and solution-driven engagement. His professional background, anchored in analytical precision and systems management, forms the foundation of his public service aspiration.
For him, representation must move beyond ceremonial presence to practical responsiveness — laws that reflect local realities, oversight that protects public resources, and advocacy that translates into visible development.
Ramon argues that the future of Ibarapa East lies in leadership that listens deliberately, plans strategically, and delivers measurably. He speaks of strengthening rural infrastructure, expanding youth-driven economic opportunities, and institutionalising transparency as core pillars of his agenda. In his view, governance must not merely be symbolic; it must be structured, accountable, and people-centred.
Rooted in Ile Odede, Isale Alubata Compound, Ward Seven of Ibarapa East Local Government, and maternally linked to Ile Sobaloju, Isale Ajidun Compound, Eruwa, Ramon’s story is not one of distant ambition but of lived experience. He is, in every sense, a son of the soil — shaped by the same roads, schools, and economic realities that define daily life in Ibarapa East.
“I was born here. I grew up here. I understand our struggles, our strengths, and our untapped potential,” he says. “Representation must go beyond occupying a seat; it must translate into preparation, competence, and genuine commitment to development.”
His academic journey mirrors that philosophy of steady growth. He began at Islamic Primary School, Lanlate (1995–2001), proceeded to Baptist Grammar School, Orita Eruwa (2001–2007), and later earned a National Diploma in Mechanical Engineering Technology from Federal Polytechnic, Ilaro, between 2009 and 2011. Refusing to plateau, he advanced his intellectual horizon and is now completing a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration at the University of Lagos. “Education,” he reflects, “is continuous capacity building. Leadership today requires both technical knowledge and administrative insight.”
That blend of engineering precision and managerial training has defined a professional career spanning more than a decade. Shortly after his diploma, Yusuf joined Mikano International Limited as a generator installer, gaining hands-on experience in industrial power systems — a sector central to Nigeria’s infrastructural backbone. He later transitioned into telecommunications at Safari Telecoms Nigeria Limited, where he received specialized training in Industrial, Scientific, and Medical radio bands, strengthening his expertise in network operations.
In 2013, he became a Field Support Engineer at Netrux Global Concepts Ltd., then a leading ISM service provider in Nigeria. Over four formative years, he immersed himself in telecom infrastructure deployment and maintenance, mastering field coordination, logistics management, and real-time technical problem-solving.
Since July 2017, he has served as a Field Support Engineer with Specific Tools and Techniques Ltd., a power solutions firm providing services to major operators including MTN Nigeria and Airtel Nigeria. In that capacity, he operates at the frontline of ensuring energy reliability and network uptime — responsibilities that demand discipline, accountability, and systems thinking.
For political observers in Ibarapa East, this trajectory matters. It reflects more than résumé credentials; it speaks to a mindset anchored in efficiency, coordination, and measurable outcomes — qualities increasingly demanded in legislative representation.
Beyond the private sector, Ramon’s political exposure is neither sudden nor superficial. A loyal member of the progressive political family in Lagos, he once served as a personal assistant to a former lawmaker, gaining practical insight into legislative procedure and constituency engagement. Within his community, he has quietly extended financial support to small-scale entrepreneurs and students — modest but consistent interventions rooted in personal responsibility.
“My interest is my people,” he states firmly. “Ibarapa East deserves strategic, responsive, and capable leadership at the State Assembly. We must move from rhetoric to results.”
Across the constituency — from Lanlate to Eruwa — development priorities remain clear: youth employment, vocational empowerment, rural road rehabilitation, stable power supply, agricultural value-chain expansion, improved educational standards, and stronger lawmaking that directly reflects community needs.
Political analysts argue that Ramon’s technocratic background positions him uniquely at the intersection of policy formulation and practical implementation. At a time when national discourse increasingly favours competence over grandstanding, his profile resonates with a broader generational shift toward performance-driven governance. His engineering discipline reinforces problem-solving; his business training strengthens administrative understanding; his grassroots roots anchor his empathy.
For Ibarapa East, the 2027 election cycle may represent more than a routine democratic exercise. It may mark a recalibration of expectations — a demand for representation that understands both the soil beneath its feet and the systems that drive modern development. As political alignments gradually crystallize in Oyo State, Yusuf Abiodun Ramon’s declaration signals the arrival of a candidate seeking to translate private-sector structure into public-sector impact.
One thing is clear: the conversation about the future of Ibarapa East has begun — and it is now framed around competence, credibility, and capacity.
Oluwasegun Idowu sent in this piece from Eruwa, Ibarapa East LG, Oyo State
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