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LP National Chairman, Nenadi Usman
The Labour Party has launched what may be its most consequential internal reset yet — a sweeping grassroots rebuilding effort born out of hard lessons from the 2023 general elections and driven by a renewed determination to emerge stronger in 2027.
At a high-level strategic summit in Abuja themed “Reuniting the Labour Party: Consolidating Strength for Sustainable Political Impact,” the party’s National Chairman, Nenadi Usman, delivered a strikingly candid assessment: Labour’s greatest weakness in 2023 was not electoral technology or transmission controversies — it was structure.
“Without knowing who your members are, where they are, how many you are, you can never plan well,” she declared.
While rival parties locked horns over electronic transmission of results, Usman insisted Labour’s failure was more fundamental — it did not fully organise, document, and deploy its natural grassroots strength.
“That is not our problem. Our problem is to ensure that we register our members right from the grassroots.”
In one of the most sobering moments of the summit, Usman admitted that the party’s post-election court battles exposed structural gaps that could not be ignored.
“When the Labour Party went to court to prove their case… they couldn’t really prove the number of votes that we claimed we had.”
The absence of coordinated polling-unit agents and properly documented result sheets, especially the Form EC8A, weakened the party’s position. It was, by her account, a painful but necessary wake-up call. Yet she maintained that the party’s true strength was always there — just underutilised.
“There is no polling unit in this country where you go to that you don’t have either a serving worker or a retired worker. We are all over.”
From the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) to the Trade Union Congress (TUC) and affiliated unions, she argued that Labour possesses what no other political party does — an organic, nationwide workforce presence. What was missing in 2023 was coordination and structure.
“In 2023, we were mocked for not having a structure. And we didn’t have a structure because we did not utilise what we had.”
Now, the party is moving decisively to correct that.
“A membership registration drive — combining manual and electronic systems — is being rolled out to capture verifiable data at polling-unit level. The goal is clear: know every member, document every vote, secure every unit.
“No structure can ever be built without a foundation,” Usman emphasised.
“The registration exercise will feed directly into ward, state, and national congresses, ensuring that leadership positions reflect a verifiable membership base.”
She also addressed internal leadership disputes that previously rocked the party, describing them as resolved and urging aggrieved members to return through democratic channels.
“If anybody feels strongly that he must occupy any position, the congresses are here. Go out and contest.”
Adding political weight to the summit was Abia State Governor Alex Otti, who sent a strong message of unity and consolidation through his deputy, Ikechukwu Emetu.
Speaking on Otti’s behalf, Emetu described the summit as a defining moment for the party.
“Politics, like governance, thrives on unity of purpose. The strength of any political movement lies not merely in numbers, but in clarity of vision, discipline, and shared conviction.”
He positioned Abia State as living proof that the Labour Party can govern effectively, not just campaign powerfully.
“Under the leadership of Dr. Alex Otti, Abia State has shown that the Labour Party is not just an electoral vehicle, but a platform for purposeful governance, accountability, and people-centred development.”
From infrastructural renewal to fiscal discipline and institutional reforms, Abia was presented as the template for a national Labour Party government.
No More Echo Chambers
Otti’s message, delivered through Emetu, was equally blunt: elections are not won in the election year — they are won through sustained engagement.
“Elections are not won in the election year alone. They are won through consistent engagement, credible governance, and sustained connection with the electorate.”
He urged party leaders to move beyond rhetoric and produce measurable outcomes.
“This summit must produce actionable resolutions, not just speeches.”
Reconciliation, he said, must be real — not symbolic.
“Reuniting the party is not about papering over differences. It is about building trust, strengthening structures, and ensuring that every stakeholder feels valued and heard.”
The atmosphere at the summit was neither celebratory nor defensive — it was corrective and strategic.
The Labour Party appears to have drawn a hard line under 2023. No more overreliance on momentum without machinery. No more emotional energy without institutional depth. No more echo chambers.
The new doctrine Is clear: Register every member. Secure every polling unit, Strengthen internal democracy, Communicate governance achievements, Build alliances and Engage consistently.
For a party that surged dramatically in 2023 but stumbled at the structural level, this moment signals something deeper than rebranding — it signals re-engineering.
As Usman summed it up: “The basic foundation is what we are doing today — to make sure our members are registered and that we know where they are.”
The message from Abuja was unmistakable: before Labour can win Nigeria, it must first organise Nigeria — polling unit by polling unit. The rebuilding has begun. (The Guardian)