For 16 years, the People's Democratic Party (PDP) wasn’t just a party; it was the system.
They called themselves “the largest party in Africa.”
At their peak in 2007, Nigeria’s political map was almost entirely PDP green.
They controlled 26 out of 36 states.
Fast forward to early 2026?
They’re down to four.
So what happened?
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When Nigeria returned to democracy in 1999, PDP became the ultimate “big tent” machine.
It United:
• Retired generals
• Business elites
• Regional power brokers
• Traditional political godfathers
Under Olusegun Obasanjo, the party mastered federal dominance.
By 2003, they were flipping opposition states with ease.
By 2007, under Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, the PDP looked untouchable.
For many Nigerians, it felt like PDP would rule forever.
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The first real crack came after President Yar’Adua’s death.
The party’s informal “Zoning Formula,” which rotated power between North and South, was disrupted.
When Goodluck Jonathan sought another term, Northern power blocs felt sidelined.
Then came the real bomb:
The nPDP Breakaway (2013)
Five sitting governors walked out of the PDP convention and helped form what became the APC power coalition.
2015 Defeat
For the first time in Nigerian history, an incumbent president lost.
PDP went from a dominant ruling party to the opposition overnight.
From 21 states before the election… to about 12 shortly after.
The aura was gone.
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If 2015 wounded the party, 2023 fractured it.
The G5 Governors (led by Nyesom Wike) openly rebelled against the party’s presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar.
Their argument?
The party ignored Southern power balancing in its leadership structure.
Instead of fighting the APC, the PDP was fighting itself.
The result:
• Internal sabotage
• Divided campaign structure
• Weak electoral performance
After 2023, PDP looked unstable and vulnerable.
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Then came the political survival instinct.
Throughout 2025, governors began defecting to the ruling APC.
Why?
Because in Nigeria, power flows from the center.
When you’re an opposition governor:
• Federal funding becomes harder.
• Political protection weakens.
• Infrastructure approvals slow down.
So many chose self-preservation over loyalty.
By late 2025, waves of defections, especially from the South-South and South-East, reduced the PDP to a historic low.
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Why PDP Really Collapsed
PDP wasn’t held together by policy. It was held together by access to power.
Once the power was gone, the glue dissolved.
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For years, the party relied on consensus deals and internal elite arrangements instead of transparent primaries.
That built resentment and factionalism.
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In Nigeria, governors often move toward the ruling party to secure federal advantages.
Politics here isn’t about ideology. It’s about alignment with power.
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The Final Four
As of early 2026, PDP reportedly survives in just:
• Adamawa
• Bauchi
• Oyo
• Zamfara
From 26 states… to 4.
That’s not a decline. That’s near-extinction.