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NDC: ‘You looked insecure; in competition Wwth Obi’ — Aisha Yesufu knocks Seriake Dickson

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Activist and member of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC), Aisha Yesufu, has criticised the party’s national leader, Senator Seriake Dickson, saying he appeared “insecure” and was acting as though he was in competition with the party’s presidential candidate, Peter Obi.

Yesufu stated this in a post on X on Thursday while responding to comments made by Dickson during an interview on ARISE NEWS, where he defended the party’s leadership and addressed criticisms from some Obi supporters following the NDC primaries.

Reacting to Dickson’s remarks, Yesufu said she found a portion of the interview “painfully appalling” to watch, arguing that his first major media appearance after the primaries should have focused on reassuring party members and promoting the party’s candidates ahead of the 2027 election.

“This part of the interview was so painfully appalling to watch. It looked as if you were insecure and in competition with your presidential candidate,” she wrote.

“Your first one-on-one interview after the primaries, and instead of selling your candidates and giving confidence to people on how set the road to winning the 2027 election was, you made it about yourself.”

Yesufu also rejected Dickson’s suggestion that some party members may have been unwilling to follow internal rules because of their popularity.

While acknowledging that she would address the allegation more fully later, she maintained that she had complied with the party’s processes during the primaries and had worked to calm supporters who felt aggrieved by developments in the Federal Capital Territory.

“While I took my time to properly address your allusion to me not playing by the rules, which I consider very disingenuous seeing how I followed the process, and even when you had insisted there would be no primaries for the Senate, I let things go and asked my teeming supporters to focus on the bigger picture,” she said.

According to her, she toured parts of the FCT to pacify supporters and party members who felt disrespected after waiting for primaries that did not take place.

The activist further argued that Dickson appeared to view the NDC as a “special purpose vehicle” whose objective had been achieved with its registration rather than as a political party focused on winning the 2027 general election.

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