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OPINION: Okowa, His Daughter, and the Question of Political Concentration in Delta North

by NewsNet Nigeria
3 weeks ago
in Opinion
OPINION: Okowa, His Daughter, and the Question of Political Concentration in Delta North
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By Chidi Chukwutem

I believe firmly in the constitutional right of every Nigerian to seek public office. Democracy demands that citizens be free to aspire to leadership based on their convictions and capacity to serve. However, beyond legality, there is also the critical issue of ethics, public perception, and the long-term health of our political system. Not everything that is legally permissible is necessarily wise or beneficial to society.

Today, Ifeanyi Okowa is touted to be contesting for the Senate seat in Delta North, while his daughter, Marylin Daramola-Okowa, will be simultaneously seeking election into the Delta State House of Assembly to represent Ika North East for the second term. While both of them may claim personal merit and qualification, this development raises serious concerns that, in my view, cannot be ignored.

As a concerned citizen of Delta North, I find it troubling that one family is seeking to occupy two major legislative positions in the same political space at the same time. A Senate seat and a House of Assembly seat are both powerful platforms for influence, policymaking, and political control. When these positions are pursued by a father and daughter concurrently, it creates the impression of political concentration rather than inclusive governance.

To me, this is not merely about individuals. It is about the message it sends to the public. It suggests that political power is gradually becoming centralised within a family, instead of being shared across capable citizens. Democracy becomes weakened when leadership begins to look like an inheritance within a family.

What makes this situation even more concerning is that we have seen similar scenarios in Delta State before, and we know the tensions they create. A clear example is what happened during the time of Joan Onyemeachi. She was a member of the State Executive Council, serving as a commissioner, while her brother, Pastor Jude Chukwuwinke, sought to contest for the chairmanship of Aniocha South Local Government Council.

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At that time, there was serious tension in the local government. Many people openly questioned the propriety of having a commissioner at the state level and a local government chairman from the same family and the same LGA at the same time. The public sentiment was clear: it did not reflect fairness, balance, or respect for democratic diversity. People argued that it was wrong for one family to dominate political leadership within a single local government area.

Eventually, Joan Onyemeachi resigned from the State Executive Council. Her resignation was widely understood as an attempt to reduce political tension and restore public confidence. It was a recognition that, even if the arrangement was technically legal, it was politically unhealthy and socially divisive. It showed an understanding that leadership sometimes requires sacrifice for the sake of peace, unity, and public trust.

That episode is important because it demonstrates that our people are not blind to issues of political concentration. They understand instinctively that democracy works best when power is spread, not clustered. They understand that it is not politically healthy for one family to take over multiple positions of authority.

If such concerns were valid at the level of a commissioner and a local government chairman, how much more serious should we be when we are talking about a Senator representing Delta North and a House of Assembly member representing Ika North East, both from the same family?

In my view, this makes the current situation even more difficult to justify.

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It raises the question: if it was considered problematic for siblings to hold high offices within one LGA, why should it now be acceptable for a father and daughter to occupy major legislative positions in the same senatorial district?

At this point in our political journey, Delta North should be thinking about stability, continuity, and institutional growth. Senator Ned Nwoko has already laid foundations in the Senate and has begun building legislative, developmental, and advocacy structures that require time to mature. Effective representation is not achieved overnight. It is built through consistency, experience, and sustained engagement.

For this reason, I believe strongly that Ned Nwoko deserves the opportunity to be allowed for a second term and consolidate on what he has started. Allowing him to continue his work will strengthen Delta North’s voice at the national level and ensure that ongoing projects and initiatives are not abandoned halfway.

On the other hand, Okowa’s return to contest for the Senate risks disrupting this continuity. Instead of building on existing progress, it introduces unnecessary political rivalry driven more by personal ambition than by collective interest. It also diverts attention from governance to political survival and family positioning.

In my opinion, the more responsible path would have been for Okowa to step aside and allow space for democratic balance. True leadership sometimes requires knowing when to withdraw and give opportunity for others to take charge.

I am also deeply concerned about accountability. When close relatives hold influential offices at the same time, institutional independence becomes harder to guarantee. Oversight can be weakened, criticism may be softened, and political alliances may be influenced by family loyalty rather than public interest. Even if no wrongdoing occurs, the perception alone is damaging. In governance, perception is almost as important as reality.

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Public trust is fragile. Once citizens begin to feel that politics is becoming a family enterprise, they become disengaged, cynical, and hopeless. They begin to believe that competence and integrity matter less than connections and lineage. This is dangerous for democracy.

Furthermore, leadership should be about building strong institutions, not political dynasties. When the same families dominate the political space, it is seen as building a family dynasty as a means of holding on to power for as long as one wishes.

In my opinion, therefore, supposedly experienced leaders like Ifeanyi Okowa should be focusing more on mentoring new leaders, strengthening institutions, and preparing the next generation for responsible leadership. True statesmanship is not measured by how long one remains in office, or how many family members enter politics, but by the legacy of strong, transparent, and inclusive governance.

The example of Joan Onyemeachi’s resignation reminds us that sometimes, leadership requires restraint. It requires recognising when personal or family ambition may harm public harmony. It requires placing collective interest above private considerations.

Ultimately, I believe that we, voters in Delta North, must ask ourselves whether our choices promote fairness, accountability, and democratic balance. We must reflect on whether electing both a father to the Senate and his daughter to the House of Assembly at the same time truly strengthens our political system.

For me, this is not about personal attacks. It is about principles. It is about protecting the integrity of our democracy. Delta North deserves a future built on merit, shared opportunity, and strong institutions, not on the concentration of power within a single family.

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