Senator Ndume To Tinubu: Fix Nigerian Situation Or I Will Leave 'Sinking Ship' APC | Sahara Reporters
The senator, who has recently been vocal in his criticism of the Tinubu administration, said he still has hope in the president’s ability to lead effectively but insisted that the current situation must improve.
Senator Ali Ndume has said he may leave the All Progressives Congress (APC) if President Bola Tinubu fails to address the growing problems facing the country.
Ndume, who represents Borno South, issued the warning on Tuesday during an interview on Arise Television.
“If I decide to leave the APC, I will not hide it,” he said.
The senator, who has recently been vocal in his criticism of the Tinubu administration, said he still has hope in the president’s ability to lead effectively but insisted that the current situation must improve.
“I still believe President Tinubu can fix things. Failure to fix those things may cause me to leave the APC,” he said.
Ndume also expressed concerns over the rising number of defections to the APC, warning that it could destabilise the party.
“If Tinubu continues this way, it doesn’t matter if he loads more people or governors, you are just endangering APC. When you overload a ship, it might lead to the capsizing of the party,” he said.
Ndume has also warned that the ruling APC is in danger of political implosion due to unprincipled defections and what he described as an increasingly dysfunctional administration.
Though still a card-carrying APC member, Ndume expressed deep dissatisfaction with the party’s trajectory under President Bola Tinubu.
Ndume acknowledged the emergence of an opposition coalition ahead of the 2027 elections and called it a necessary democratic development.
According to him, true democracy cannot exist without a strong opposition, something he says both the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and Labour Party have failed to offer meaningfully.
He criticised the growing trend of politicians defecting solely for political survival, arguing that such actions strip the process of credibility and principle.
“Jumping ship without ideology or conviction weakens our democracy and endangers the future of the country,” he said, warning that the APC itself may soon capsize under the weight of opportunistic entrants.
He likened the party to an overloaded ship destined to sink if it continues to accept defectors without discernment or strategy.
Despite repeated invitations to join the emerging opposition coalition, Ndume insisted he remains with the APC at least for now.
He made it clear that his loyalty to the party is conditional on whether it corrects its course.
“I still believe this president has the capacity to fix things,” he said, “but if nothing changes, I will have to reconsider. I will not go down with a sinking ship.”
While defending his own political history, Ndume explained his movement between parties over the years as circumstantial rather than opportunistic, emphasising his loyalty to those he believes in.
He reaffirmed his longstanding support for former Minister Rotimi Amaechi, who he believes still holds the qualities to lead Nigeria effectively.
Ndume also offered a candid assessment of the current National Assembly, lamenting that it no longer functions as a deliberative body.
Instead, he said, it has become a rubber-stamp institution for executive decisions.
He decried the erosion of legislative independence and warned that the lack of checks and balances could ultimately destabilise governance.
Turning to the state of security, particularly in his home state of Borno and the wider Sahel region, Ndume criticized President Tinubu’s handling of regional diplomacy during his tenure as ECOWAS chairman.
He said the administration missed critical opportunities to resolve tensions in countries like Niger and Burkina Faso, which have since withdrawn from ECOWAS.
The fallout, according to him, is worsening security in Nigeria’s border states as militant groups exploit regional instability.
“Rather than using Nigeria’s elder statesmen for diplomacy, the President remained insulated by his close circle, weakening our leadership role in West Africa,” Ndume said, adding that Nigeria is now bearing the consequences in the form of renewed insurgency and cross-border violence.
He concluded by reaffirming his mission, to speak the truth, regardless of personal cost.
Dismissing a recent presidential aide’s attempt to belittle him as a “frustrated lone wolf,” the senator responded defiantly, “I’m not a dependent of anyone. I have a duty to my conscience and my country and I will speak out, even if I stand alone.”