Okonkwo was the LP campaign spokesperson in the 2023
election.
In his resignation statement, he said the LP has been afflicted
by internal and leadership crises.
“My entrance to politics is for good governance, and I will
continue to work for it to ensure that Nigeria becomes a great country of
incorruptible men. This aim can no longer be realised within Labour Party as
presently constituted,” he said.
“Since the party is non-existent as presently constituted, I
am constrained to resign my membership of the party to all Nigerians of
goodwill who supported us when we needed them most and to pledge my continued
loyalty to the Nigerian people in all I will decide to do in my political
future.”
The Nollywood actor said he is open to pitching his
political tent elsewhere.
“This resignation takes effect from the 25th of February,
2025, which marks the second anniversary of the presidential election of 2023,
after which I will be at liberty to join other well meaning, and like minded
Nigerians in charting a great future of good governance for this great country
blessed by God,” he added.
Okonkwo said the tenure of the party’s leadership had long elapsed
and the caretaker committee set up to salvage the party has been hindered by
unnecessary litigation.
He criticised Julius Abure, national chairman of the LP, for
allegedly prioritising personal interests over the party’s survival.
In June 2024, Okonkwo described the LP as “a secret society
led by a group of clowns”.
In an interview on Symfoni, a news platform, Okonkwo warned
that he would not rule out joining another party if the LP continues on a
“trajectory where they cannot even hold an acceptable national convention”.
In July, Okonkwo said he no longer had confidence in the
ability of Peter Obi, ex-presidential candidate of LP, to build a party that
can win elections.
He said Obi has “proved that even if the people vote for him,
he does not have what it takes to secure the mandate”.
Okonkwo left the All Progressives Congress (APC) for LP in
2022, citing the former’s adoption of a Muslim-Muslim ticket for the 2023
presidential poll.
LP LEADERSHIP CRISIS
The LP has been embroiled in a leadership crisis since
Lamidi Apapa, deputy national chairman of the party (south), declared himself
the acting national chairman last year.
The crisis deepened in 2024 when a national convention of
the party in Anambra saw Abure re-elected as chairman amid opposition from a
faction of the party.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had
said it did not monitor the LP’s national convention.
The board of trustees (BoT) of the party described the
convention that re-elected Abure as a charade and added that Abure’s tenure was
over.
In February 2024, Oluchi Oparah, the party’s national
treasurer, accused Abure of misappropriating N3.5 billion, a claim the LP
chairman denied while threatening legal action.
The allegation led to calls from party members for Abure’s
removal.
In April, the FCT high court issued an order restraining
Abure from parading himself as the national chairman of the LP.
While ruling on an ex parte application, Hamza Muazu, the
presiding judge, also restrained Farouk Ibrahim, national secretary; Clement
Ojukwu, national organising secretary; and Opara; from parading themselves as
national officers of the party.
In September, Nenadi Usman, a former senator representing
Kaduna south, was appointed to chair a 29-member caretaker committee after Alex
Otti, governor of Abia state, convened a stakeholders meeting of the party in
Umuahia.
Obi and Datti Baba-Ahmed, his running mate in the 2023 vote,
were among the top party members that attended the meeting.
INEC had also invalidated Abure’s leadership, saying the
national convention violated the constitution and Electoral Act.
The electoral body said the party failed to meet legal
requirements for holding the convention, insisting that Abure’s tenure as LP
national chair expired in June 2024.
But in a judgment on October 8, the federal high court
affirmed the Abure-led leadership and the March 2024 Nnewi convention that
produced the party executives.
Nwite ordered INEC to recognise Abure as the legitimate
chairman of the party.
On January 17, 2025, the court of appeal in Abuja affirmed
Abure as the LP national chairman.
The court ruled that its earlier decision of November 2024,
recognising Abure as the party’s chairman, remains valid and has not been
overturned by any court.
A verdict delivered by Hamma Barka also voided a judgment of
the federal high court delivered on October 8, 2024 by Nwite, on the grounds
that the lower court lacked the jurisdiction to hear the suit.