Dr. Ben Nwoye, a familiar name in Enugu State politics, has become an emblematic figure in the ongoing transformation of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the South East. His political journey has been marked by founding achievements, internal party strife, dramatic exits, and a bold reentry aimed at redirecting both his personal influence and the fortunes of the APC in a state traditionally dominated by the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). Now, as the 2027 gubernatorial race approaches, Nwoye has positioned himself not only as a potential reconciliator within the APC but also as a key player attempting to lure the current PDP governor, Peter Mbah, into the APC fold.
Nwoye’s prominence in Enugu politics began in earnest in 2014 when he assumed the chairmanship of the APC in the state. At a time when the APC was still trying to find its footing in the South East, Nwoye played a central role in building the party’s structure from the ground up. His leadership saw the expansion of the party’s grassroots base, with offices and ward-level networks springing up across the state. He championed the APC’s national agenda while tailoring its appeal to local constituents. However, beneath the surface of this growth, the seeds of division were already being sown.
Tensions escalated within the party as accusations emerged regarding Nwoye’s leadership style. Libelous party members purported his unilateral decision-making, alleging installation of ward executives without consensus. In 2021, a gang-up State working committee passed a vote of no confidence in him, triggering a wave of intra-party confrontations. These tensions exploded when Ugochukwu Agballah emerged as a rival leader, with significant backing from party figures in Abuja, including Minister Uche Nnaji and the ousted national chairman Abdullahi Ganduje. The resulting power struggle fractured the Enugu APC into two distinct factions, each claiming legitimacy and neither willing to yield.
By April 2025, after years of internal wrangling and perceived marginalization, Nwoye publicly resigned from the APC. In a striking rebuke of the party’s direction, he declared that the broom, the APC’s symbol of unity, had not only unraveled but was irreparably scattered. He cited “vindictive politics” and a national leadership indifferent to reconciliation efforts as central reasons for his exit. His resignation did not come quietly; it reverberated across local and national media, further underscoring the APC’s disarray in Enugu.
Rather than retreat from politics, Nwoye responded by forming a new platform in June 2025 known as The Progressives Group. This initiative was not designed to rival the APC or PDP directly but to serve as a political sanctuary for disillusioned members across party lines. Drawing participants from APC, PDP, Labour Party, SDP, and ADC, the group rapidly built a presence in all the political wards of state. The platform was envisioned as a community for political actors sidelined by party structures, a home for strategic thinking, policy discussions, and preparation for 2027. Nwoye was adamant that The Progressives was not a political party but a civic force that could influence governance from outside traditional lines.
His new role afforded him a unique vantage point. Having been both insider and outsider, critic and loyalist, Nwoye began to realign his political calculus. By mid-2025, he started to gravitate back toward the APC, now with a fresh agenda: to broker a political alliance capable of transforming the APC’s fortunes in the next gubernatorial election. Central to this agenda is his effort to woo Governor Peter Mbah to join the APC and become its standard-bearer in 2027.
Peter Mbah, elected governor in 2023 under the PDP banner, is a formidable figure in Enugu politics. A technocrat with a private sector background, he won the governorship with close to 161,000 votes, outpacing his closest competitor significantly. Yet his administration has not escaped criticism. Nwoye, even while extending political overtures, has not hesitated to challenge the governor publicly. In April 2025, Nwoye chastised Mbah for failing to deliver on his promise to provide potable water across the state within his first 180 days in office. This dual approach of critique and courtship forms the essence of Nwoye’s political strategy—pressure from within and persuasion from without.
Nwoye’s return to APC is as much about political rehabilitation as it is about party revival. His reemergence has been met with a mixture of skepticism and optimism. For loyalists and grassroots mobilizers who remained within the APC during its turbulent years, his comeback is seen as a chance to reclaim a sense of structure and credibility. For others, the royalists of his antagonists, his involvement offers the possibility of bridging old divides and reinvigorating a demoralized party apparatus.
Equally significant is the APC youth wing’s separate but parallel push to recruit Governor Mbah. Promising their full support should he defect and seek re-election under the APC in 2027, the youth leaders argue that such a move would reflect a pragmatic approach to governance rather than a betrayal of ideology. Their efforts complement Nwoye’s own, giving the impression of a coordinated campaign to realign Enugu’s political trajectory.
Whether this strategy will succeed remains to be seen. The Enugu APC has been deeply fractured for years, and reconciling its factions requires more than symbolic gestures. Mbah, meanwhile, must weigh the risks of abandoning a PDP structure that remains relatively robust in the state. Defection could alienate key allies, yet it might also offer broader national alignment under a federal APC government, along with enhanced access to resources and influence.
As the 2027 race draws nearer, Nwoye’s actions suggest he envisions a realignment of political forces that transcends traditional party boundaries. He has demonstrated a capacity for reinvention, turning setbacks into platforms and political isolation into a mandate for coalition-building. His pivot from APC chairman to third-force leader, and now back to APC peacemaker, reveals a shrewd understanding of Nigeria’s evolving political landscape.
In the end, Dr. Ben Nwoye’s political journey mirrors the broader story of Enugu State’s politics: dynamic, turbulent, and always in flux. Whether his renewed effort will result in Enugu as an APC State remains to be seen. But if he manages to bring a sitting PDP governor into the APC and rally a fractured party behind him, it could mark one of the most significant political shifts in Enugu’s post-1999 democratic history.
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