It is not often that a political party’s spokesperson stands on national television and admits, plainly, that someone’s departure hurt them. But that is what happened this week at the Labour Party.
The Admission
Ken Asogwa, the Labour Party’s national spokesperson, appeared on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily on Monday. He was asked about Peter Obi. He did not dodge the question.
“We can’t close our eyes to the fact that we lost Peter Obi,” Asogwa said. “He was a colossus within the party.” And then he said it directly: “His departure left a void.”
Coming from a party official, in public, on camera — that is a significant thing to say.
Where Obi Is Now
Since leaving Labour Party at the end of December 2025, Obi has aligned himself with the Nigerian Democratic Congress as part of a broader opposition coalition aimed at unseating President Bola Tinubu in the 2027 elections. In 2023, Obi brought Labour Party over six million votes — a figure many Nigerians found remarkable for a third-party candidate.
The Rebuilding Plan
Asogwa says the party did not sit still after the exit. Labour has gone back to its roots — specifically, to the Nigeria Labour Congress and the Trade Union Congress, the institutional bodies from which the party originally drew its strength. He says those relationships, which had frayed under previous party leadership, are now being restored.
Whether that is enough to replace what Obi represented — the energy, the youth movement, the “Obidient” base — remains a very open question as 2027 approaches.
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