The African Democratic Congress (ADC) has cautioned Bola Tinubu over his political future, warning that rising hardship and declining living standards could cost him reelection in 2027.
In a statement issued by its National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, the party accused the president of being disconnected from the realities facing ordinary Nigerians, including insecurity and economic strain.
The response follows comments by Tinubu, who dismissed opposition figures—including Atiku Abubakar, Peter Obi, and Rotimi Amaechi—over their involvement in the party’s April 14 convention, describing the gathering as a “street convention” and insisting he could not be intimidated.
The ADC pushed back strongly, describing the president’s remarks as inappropriate and out of touch. The party stated:
“The African Democratic Congress has taken note of the comments made by Bola Ahmed Tinubu at the Presidential Villa concerning the ADC and the state of the opposition. What Nigerians saw was not the confidence of a leader in control. It was the anxiety of a President increasingly disconnected from the reality of hardship, insecurity, and frustration facing millions of citizens.
“At a time when families are battling a historic cost-of-living crisis, food inflation, rising debt burdens, and collapsing purchasing power, the President chose to mock the opposition instead of addressing the suffering of Nigerians. However, even as he spoke, reports of children being abducted from examination centres were circulating. This is the reality of today’s Nigeria, insecurity spreading deeper into everyday life while the government appears distracted.
“The President should not be ridiculing the opposition. He should be deeply concerned that the majority of Nigerians have rejected his government, whose ill-conceived policies have ruined lives and destroyed livelihoods. These are the reasons he should be scared, because the people are determined to vote him out.”
The party also rejected claims that its convention lacked structure, insisting it was properly conducted. It argued that restrictions on public venues reflect a shrinking democratic space under the current administration.
It added:
“We did not hold our convention on the street. If that was the story supplied to the President by agents of disruption, then he has been misinformed.
“But even if any opposition party were forced to gather outside established venues, Nigerians would understand why. Under this administration, democratic space has shrunk significantly. No government before now had denied political parties fair access to public venues such as Eagle Square, a national civic ground that belongs to all Nigerians, not to any ruling party.
“The President also cannot preach separation of powers while simultaneously assuming the role of interpreter of the law, political referee, and commentator on judicial matters. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu cannot be a President and a judge at the same time.
“If this administration truly respected the separation of powers, Nigerians would not have witnessed the repeated weakening and humiliation of institutions meant to serve as checks and balances. The legislature, in particular, has too often appeared reduced to an extension of executive convenience.”
The ADC further criticised what it described as political inconsistency in the president’s recent positioning regarding Muhammadu Buhari.
Concluding, the party said:
“The issue before the country today is simple: hardship is rising, insecurity is worsening, debt is mounting, and hope is fading. No amount of political theatre can hide that truth.
“The ADC remains focused on building a credible alternative anchored on competence, security, prosperity, and democratic freedom. Nigerians deserve better than excuses, propaganda, and power games.”