How Governor Biodun Oyebanji broke the second-term succession jinx by Tony Ademiluyi

Governor Biodun Oyebanji won a second term in office after winning in all 16 local government areas of Ekiti State, according to results announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

The All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate polled 319,224 votes, dwarfing the 40,543 votes secured by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the 12,872 votes recorded by the African Democratic Congress (ADC).

The APC’s strongest performance came from Ado Ekiti, where Mr Oyebanji secured 38,026 votes, nearly ten times the PDP’s 3,817 votes.

Other major vote banks included Irepodun/Ifelodun (29,278), Ekiti West (28,258), Ikole (26,508) and Ekiti East (26,359).

Together, these five councils delivered close to half of the governor’s statewide tally.

While the APC dominated most councils, Ikere LGA, where PDP candidate Wole Oluyede comes from, produced the closest contest of the election.

The margin of just 1,224 votes represented the narrowest gap between the two leading parties anywhere in the state. Yet even there, the governor emerged victorious.

Overall, three factors stand out from the results.

Firstly, Mr Oyebanji won every local government area, preventing the opposition from establishing any geographical stronghold.

Secondly, the APC amassed overwhelming margins in the state’s biggest voting centres, particularly Ado Ekiti, Irepodun/Ifelodun and Ekiti West.

Thirdly, the opposition vote was thinly spread across the state. The PDP crossed 3,000 votes in only a handful of councils and came close to victory only in Ikere.

With victories in all 16 councils and a margin of more than 278,000 votes over his closest rival, the results suggest that Mr Oyebanji’s re-election was not a competitive race.

There were allegations of vote buying as viral videos of food items especially bread being shared to the voting populace.

According to Premium Times: The results from polling units were collated across the state’s 177 wards before further collation was conducted in each of the 16 local government areas.

Ekiti has 1,059,360 registered voters, but only 1,028,929 of them who collected Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) were eligible to participate in the elections contested by 14 political parties. Less than half of the eligible voters voted on Saturday.

By this victory, Oyebanji has made history as the first Governor of Ekiti State to win a successive second term in the thirty year history of the state.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *