TDOn Thursday, April 30, 2026, the Supreme Court set aside the status quo ante bellum imposed on the African Democratic Congress, ADC and restored Senator David Mark as National Chairman.
The apex court affirmed the legitimacy of the Mark-led National Working Committee after days of legal uncertainty.
While the court directed parties back to the lower court, the ruling effectively restores leadership authority and stabilises the party’s structure pending final determination.
The dispute was brief but instructive. It reflects a recurring pattern in Nigeria’s political space; legal interruptions that test opposition stability and resolve at critical moments.
Three trends are familiar in this regard:
first, post-convention lawsuits that introduce doubt; second, conflicting court orders that create confusion at the grassroots; third, diversion of time and resources from mobilisation to litigation.
As Mr Peter Obi has argued, democracy is weakened when opposition platforms spend more time defending legitimacy than presenting alternatives.
So what does this ruling mean for ADC?
One, stability!
With congresses and convention concluded, the party now operates under restored leadership.
The immediate task is consolidation and full compliance with electoral requirements.
Two, urgency!
With 2027 approaching, time cannot be treated casually. The party must accelerate organisation and strategy.
Senator David Mark must match this moment with speed and clarity, especially as growing confidence builds among Nigerians seeking alternatives.
Three, credibility!
Judicial affirmation reinforces internal democracy and signals that due process remains the strongest safeguard in contested political environments.
The next question is strategic: how does ADC consolidate the confidence Nigerians at home and abroad are beginning to build?
First, unity!
Internal cohesion will be critical. External pressure often exposes fault lines, and how ADC manages them will define readiness.
The party must also respond to national concerns, from hyper inflation caused by poor fiscal policies to persistent insecurity under the current All Progressives Congress, APC administration.
Second, transparency!
A fixed timetable for primaries must be set and respected.
Nigerians no longer respond to vague assurances. They respond to structure, clarity, and consistency.
Third, substance!
Policy depth must match ambition. Nigerians demand costed, practical, and executable proposals. Criticism alone is insufficient. Alternatives must be clear and realistic.
This leads to the next decisive phase: the primaries.
Congresses are concluded. The convention has produced leadership.
What remains is candidate emergence.
Whether through consensus or contest, the process must be transparent, orderly, and credible.
It will serve as an early test of the party’s governing ethos. Pointedly, a litmus test!
Above all, the result of the primaries should necessarily reflect the yearnings of most Nigerians and must be one without any encumbrance, going into the general election.
A clear date, credible process, and broadly accepted outcome are the benchmarks.
That is how trust is built. That is how momentum is sustained. And that is how elections are positioned to be won.
The Supreme Court has restored leadership authority. The structure is in place.
The National Working Committee, NWC of ADC must now convert legal clarity into political momentum and translate growing public confidence into electoral strength.
There is no need for ADC to hesitate further. The High Court is now expected to proceed in line with established legal principles and deliver a timely resolution. Nigerians will be watching closely.
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