Oyo 2027: BANA and the Case for Structural Rebirth |By Eniola Akinsipe

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In a season of recycled promises and familiar political faces, one voice is cutting through the noise with the precision of a courtroom objection and the urgency of a reformer on a mission.

Barrister Niyi Aborisade, popularly known as BANA, is not merely seeking to occupy the Oyo State Government House under the platform of the African Democratic Congress (ADC). He is advancing a deeper proposition: that governance in Oyo must be rebuilt from its constitutional and institutional foundations.

A UK-trained human rights lawyer, political thinker, constitutional advocate and Mogaji of Ajagba Oke-Ofa Baba-Isale Ibadan, BANA represents an uncommon blend in Nigerian politics, global legal exposure fused with indigenous legitimacy.

From the courtrooms of England to the turbulent arenas of Nigeria’s partisan politics, he has cultivated a reputation as a relentless critic of constitutional ambiguity, electoral manipulation, executive overreach and economic mismanagement. Now, he seeks to transition from critic to chief reformer.

The Legal Luminary with Political Teeth
Armed with an LLB and an LLM (Hons) from the University of Westminster, Aborisade has spent decades practising law in the United Kingdom while sustaining active engagement in Nigeria’s democratic evolution. His interventions have rarely been casual commentary; they have been structured, clause-driven and historically grounded.

Unlike many aspirants who frame politics as loyalty to personalities, BANA frames it as loyalty to law. His political trajectory includes involvement with the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), where he publicly confronted what he described as an “existential crisis” rooted in factionalism and ego-driven leadership. Today, within the ADC, he presents himself as a candidate who argues constitutional logic before partisan sentiment.

The Man Who Calls Out Power
Where others deploy coded political language, Aborisade speaks in constitutional clauses.

He has openly criticised the APC-led Federal Government, warning against what he characterises as a gradual weakening of opposition structures and the dangerous centralisation of authority. For him, democracy is not an emotional slogan but a carefully engineered system of checks and balances.

On Rivers State’s political tensions, he reached back into history, drawing parallels with the 1962 Western Region emergency and constitutional controversies of 1979, to caution against normalising expansive emergency powers. His position is clear: once constitutional safeguards are bent for convenience, democratic suffocation becomes incremental.

Electoral Integrity as a Red Line
One of BANA’s most forceful interventions followed amendments to the Electoral Act. While acknowledging reforms such as direct primaries and technological innovation, he expressed concern about provisions allowing manual collation where electronic transmission is deemed “not feasible.”

To him, that clause represents not flexibility but vulnerability.

“The whole idea behind BVAS and electronic transmission is transparency,” he argues. “If officials can revert to manual collation at will, public confidence collapses.”

In a country where post-election litigation has become routine, Aborisade positions himself as a guardian of electoral sanctity—arguing that trust in the ballot is the oxygen of democracy.

Constitutional Surgery, Not Cosmetic Reform
Aborisade’s politics is diagnostic and prescriptive. He contends that governance failures are rarely accidental; they are products of weak structures.

Among the constitutional amendments he advocates are: Clarifying ambiguities surrounding Abuja’s status in presidential election calculations. Reforming Section 162 to dismantle inefficiencies in joint state-local government accounts.Granting genuine autonomy to local governments. Empowering INEC to conduct local government elections nationwide to end what he describes as “selection, not election.”

For BANA, institutional reform is not radicalism; it is maintenance. Weak structures, he insists, cannot produce strong outcomes.

The Oyo Blueprint: Law as Development Infrastructure
If elected governor, Aborisade proposes to deploy law as a developmental instrument. His agenda includes: Strengthening the state’s anti-graft mechanisms; reforming judicial processes to improve efficiency and access to justice; institutional restructuring of public education and healthcare, and embedding transparency in fiscal management through enforceable frameworks.

Unlike conventional campaigns anchored on projects and pronouncements, his approach centres on process. Development, he argues, becomes sustainable only when systems outlive administrations.

The Mogaji with Global Perspective
Beyond professional credentials, BANA’s traditional role as Mogaji anchors him within Ibadan’s cultural architecture. In Oyo politics, such legitimacy carries weight. It reflects community trust and ancestral continuity, qualities that resonate deeply in grassroots mobilisation.

He often describes himself as a bridge between Westminster and Oja’ba, between structured legal systems abroad and lived socio-political realities at home.

Yet perhaps what distinguishes Aborisade most is his blunt realism. He concedes that governors do not determine elections alone, citizens do. Hunger, he says, is stronger than money; anger is stronger than intimidation. Political orchestration, in his view, cannot indefinitely suppress collective will.

He is not promising miracles. He is promising structural recalibration.

A Different Kind of Contest
In an environment frequently driven by populist theatrics, BANA offers jurisprudence. In a system often lubricated by patronage, he offers procedure. In a political culture that sometimes privileges spectacle over substance, he insists on doctrine.

Whether that doctrine translates into electoral momentum in 2027 remains to be seen. Politics demands organisation, coalition-building and grassroots stamina. But as Oyo’s political climate evolves, the appetite for institutional clarity may well deepen.

Barrister Niyi Aborisade is not simply contesting for office.

He is contesting the architecture of power, how it is structured, exercised and restrained.

And in the unfolding narrative of Oyo State, that may prove to be the most consequential campaign argument of all.

Akinsipe, a first-class graduate of Mass Communication, is a political analyst and Online Deputy Editor of Morning Star News.

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