Yusuf Datti Baba-Ahmed has joined the Peoples Redemption Party (PRP), and he wants to be clear about one thing — he’s not there to chase a presidential ticket.
The former vice-presidential candidate made this known on Monday at the party’s national secretariat in Abuja, where he addressed party leaders, supporters and the press.
His message was simple: the decision is about Nigeria, not ambition.
“I didn’t come here to get a presidential ticket. I came here to fix Nigeria. If supporting someone achieves that, so be it. If contesting achieves that, so be it.”
That line matters because the moment his defection became public, many Nigerians read it as the start of a 2027 presidential move. Datti is clearly trying to shut that down early and reposition the conversation.
Why He Left and Why PRP
Datti framed his move as both ideological and strategic.
He argued that Nigeria is going through a difficult phase — politically and economically — and that leadership cannot be left to chance. In his view, too many capable people have stepped back from active politics, and that vacuum is part of the problem.
He also pointed to what he described as a steady weakening of opposition parties in recent years.
That’s where PRP comes in.
According to him, the party has the kind of resilience needed to withstand pressure and offer Nigerians a credible alternative going into 2027.
That’s a strong claim, and it puts PRP directly in the conversation as more than just a fringe party.
What This Means for the Opposition
This move is bigger than Datti alone.
It speaks to a wider issue — the opposition space in Nigeria is still unsettled.
Since the 2023 elections, major opposition parties have struggled with internal disputes, leadership questions, and lack of clear direction. That has created room for realignment.
Datti leaving that space and choosing PRP suggests two things:
- He no longer believes the existing structure is strong enough
- He’s betting on building something different, even if it starts small
The risk is obvious.
PRP has history and ideology, but it does not yet have the nationwide structure needed to compete at the highest level.
So this move will only matter if it attracts more credible players and builds momentum quickly.
PRP’s Position Going Forward
The party has welcomed him as a major addition.
PRP leadership described his entry as a boost to their vision of offering an alternative platform focused on governance, economic recovery and national stability.
Datti also made it clear that the party is not thinking small.
He said PRP is positioning itself to win elections at all levels in 2027 and warned Nigerians to resist any attempt to compromise electoral integrity.
That signals intent.
But intent alone won’t be enough.
My View
This move makes sense, but it’s not a safe one.
Datti is trying to step away from a shaky opposition environment and create something more stable. That’s understandable.
But joining PRP doesn’t automatically solve the problem.
The real work starts now.
He needs to show:
- structure
- clarity
- a working strategy
Because Nigerians are no longer impressed by movement alone. People want direction.
If this becomes another case of strong words without follow-through, it will fade quickly.
But if it turns into a proper political build-up, then this could be one of the early moves that shape 2027.
Final Word
Datti has made his position clear — he says he’s not chasing power for its own sake.
Now Nigerians will watch what he does next.
Because at this point, it’s not about what he says.
It’s about whether this move actually leads to something real.
