PDP Convention and the Role of Opposition in Democracy
By | Akwa Ibom Times Editorial

As the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, holds its national convention on Sunday, March 29, 2026, amid internal disputes over leadership, legality and factional control, the moment goes beyond one party’s internal affairs. It speaks to a larger question in Nigeria’s politics, what kind of opposition does a democracy need to stay healthy? Recent reports show the convention is proceeding against the backdrop of a prolonged crisis within the party, with rival blocs taking different positions on its legitimacy and participation.
How Opposition Can Help Shape Nigeria’s Democracy
Nigeria does not need a weak opposition. It needs a serious one.
As the Peoples Democratic Party hosts its national convention, the wider significance of the gathering lies in the opportunity before the opposition. This is not only about electing party officers or settling internal scores. It is about whether the opposition in Nigeria can recover its voice, rebuild public trust and play its proper role in a democracy that works for citizens.
Democracy does not thrive when one party dominates the field without pressure. It grows when there is scrutiny, competition of ideas and credible alternatives. An opposition party helps keep the ruling party alert. It asks hard questions. It tests policy claims. It offers voters another path. When that role is absent, governance can become insulated, arrogant and less responsive to the public.
That is why the PDP convention matters. It comes at a time when the party is under strain. The leadership crisis that has trailed its preparations has raised doubts about cohesion and direction. Yet conventions can also serve as turning points. They can deepen division, or they can begin repair. The choice rests with the party’s leaders, delegates and stakeholders.
For the opposition to shape Nigeria’s democracy in meaningful ways, it must first put its own house in order. A party that seeks to govern the country must show that it can govern itself. Internal democracy matters. Clear rules matter. Respect for party structures matters. Transparent leadership selection matters. If the opposition cannot manage disagreement within its own fold, voters will struggle to trust it with national power.
The second task is substance. Nigerians are dealing with inflation, insecurity, unemployment, energy costs and pressure on household incomes. The opposition cannot rely on anger against the government alone. It must present strong arguments, practical alternatives and policy depth. It must show how it would govern differently, and better. Press statements and factional meetings are not enough. Citizens want coherence. They want a programme.
The third task is discipline in public conduct. Opposition politics should not become permanent outrage. It should be strategic, fact-based and focused on the public interest. When opposition figures attack every policy without distinction, they lose credibility. When they support what works and challenge what fails, they earn respect. That balance is what mature democracies demand.
The fourth task is coalition-building. Nigeria is too complex for narrow politics. Any opposition that hopes to shape national outcomes must build bridges across regions, generations and interest groups. It must speak to workers, entrepreneurs, students, professionals and communities outside elite circles. It must become a platform that listens, not just one that reacts.
The fifth task is institutional defence. Opposition parties are not only contestants for power. They are also stakeholders in the integrity of the democratic system. They should defend electoral credibility, judicial independence, legislative oversight, press freedom and the right of citizens to organise and dissent peacefully. When opposition parties defend institutions only when convenient, they weaken the very framework they may one day need.
This is where the PDP convention can become more than a ritual. It can produce a leadership that understands that opposition is not a waiting room for power. It is an active democratic responsibility. A credible opposition improves governance even when it is outside office. It forces debate. It widens accountability. It gives voters meaningful choice.
Nigeria’s democracy will be stronger when the ruling party governs with seriousness and the opposition opposes with purpose. The burden before the PDP is to prove it can still serve that purpose. The convention offers that chance. Whether the party uses it well is another matter entirely.

