
The All Progressives Congress (APC) has reportedly settled on a new national chairman, with Professor Nentawe Yilwatda emerging as the consensus nominee to lead the ruling party.
Yilwatda, the current Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and a former Resident Electoral Commissioner in Independent National Electoral Commission(INEC), will replace Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, who recently resigned from the position citing health concerns.
It was gathered that his emergence followed a late-night meeting between President Bola Tinubu and governors elected on the platform of the APC in Abuja.
The party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) is expected to ratify his appointment at a meeting scheduled for later today(Thursday).
The 56-year-old former don, hails from Plateau State and was the APC’s gubernatorial candidate in the state during the 2023 general elections.
His nomination aligns with the party’s zoning arrangement, which allocated the national chairmanship to the North-Central geopolitical zone comprising Benue, Kwara, Kogi, Nasarawa, Niger, and Plateau states.
Multiple party insiders said his Christian faith also worked in his favour. With both the President and Vice President being Muslims, APC leaders reportedly reasoned that appointing a Christian chairman would help the party project inclusivity and appeal more broadly to voters of other faiths.
“He is young, suave, well-educated, and doesn’t carry the usual political baggage.
“We believe he can give the party a new face and restore credibility ahead of future elections,” a senior party official told PREMIUM TIMES.
Yilwatda comes with a blend of academic, bureaucratic, and political experience. Before venturing into politics, he was an engineering lecturer at the Federal University of Agriculture, Makurdi.
He also served as a REC for INEC from 2017 to 2021, overseeing elections in Benue, Anambra, Osun, Rivers, and Cross River states.
In December 2021, he resigned abruptly from INEC and returned to Plateau State, where he joined the APC and quickly rose to become its governorship candidate. Although he lost the election to the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), President Tinubu later named him Minister of Humanitarian Affairs.
His selection as APC chairman signals an apparent shift in strategy for the ruling party, which has in recent years faced growing criticism over internal divisions, declining popularity in some regions, and leadership instability.