The Lagos State Chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has described former presidential candidate Dele Momodu as a strategic adviser to a confused opposition.
The party stated this while responding to Momodu’s advice to the opposition that it should play the ethnic and religious cards.
Speaking via a statement, the spokesman of the state arm of the party, Mogaji Seye Oladejo, boasted that ethnic politics cannot defeat Tinubu’s performance.
Oladejo argued that Momodu should be the last person to make proposals on winning techniques, pointing out that his political footprints show his failures in winning elections.
The statement reads, “The party notes with characteristic amusement, the latest outburst from “serial political tourist, Mr. Dele Momodu, who has suddenly anointed himself as a strategic adviser to a confused opposition, urging them to play the ethnic card since, in his own words, “Jonathan and Obi can’t defeat Tinubu.
“While we thank him for finally admitting the obvious, that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu remains politically unstoppable, we must question the audacity and credentials of a man whose own political history is nothing but a long tale of experiments, misadventures, and failed auditions for relevance.
“What moral or strategic authority does Dele Momodu possess to lecture anyone about political strategy? A man who is literally attached to the apron strings of a career presidential aspirant. A presidential candidate whose electoral outing was so embarrassing that even his polling agents couldn’t locate his tally on the result sheet
“If anything, Momodu should be the last person to speak on winning strategies. His own record reads like a manual on how not to win in politics, loud on commentary, empty on substance, and perpetually chasing validation from political heavyweights who never take him seriously.
“It is, therefore, sheer comic relief that a man whose entire political relevance is confined to social media timelines now presumes to dictate the opposition’s roadmap to 2027. Nigerians know better. They know that leadership is earned through vision, performance, and consistency, not through editorials written from the sidelines of social gigs.”
Oladejo informed the veteran journalist that the days of weaponising ethnicity as a shortcut to power are long gone, adding that the Nigerian electorate has evolved. “They are now focused on who can deliver results, not who can divide the nation.”
He charged Momodu to focus on rediscovering his own political direction before attempting to offer others advice.
“If the opposition is truly desperate for guidance, perhaps the first counsel they should heed is to stop listening to those who have never won anything, not even a councillorship election. Truth be told, political realists have accepted the defeat of the opposition, come Year 2027, individually and collectively.”