– League of Concerned Lagosians anoints Minister of Education as APC’s torchbearer
– Another unknown name, another calculated gamble, as Lagos’ familiar tradition continues
– The Rising Tide: A Heir Apparent from the Mist
The 2027 gubernatorial race is shaping up to be yet another unfolding script of the familiar. The seasoned pundits and the uninitiated alike have watched with bated breath as political gladiators, each with their own coterie of backers, jostle for visibility. Yet, as history has repeatedly taught us, the one who ascends the coveted throne of Lagos is rarely the loudest in the coliseum of ambition. …CONTINUE READING
Dr. Tunji Alausa, the Minister of State for Education, has now emerged from the twilight of political obscurity into the luminous embrace of kingmakers. The League of Concerned Lagosians (LCL), a formidable pressure group with its fingers on the state’s political pulse, has publicly endorsed him, sending ripples across the already murky waters of succession. With this single move, the weight of the Lagos APC’s machinery seems to be tilting decisively towards the soft-spoken medical doctor, leaving other aspirants clutching at shadows.
A Kingmaker’s Whisper: The Invisible Hands Behind the Throne
It has become almost ritualistic in Lagos’ democratic chronicle that the eventual governor is not the anointed of the streets, but the choice of those who lurk behind the curtain of power. From Bola Tinubu’s tacit selection of Babatunde Fashola in 2007 to the meteoric rise of Akinwunmi Ambode in 2015 and the subsequent emergence of Babajide Sanwo-Olu in 2019, Lagos’ governorship selection process has often been an intricate chess game played by a few grandmasters.
Sources within the All Progressives Congress (APC) have whispered in hushed tones that Alausa is the man whom the inner sanctum favors. The endorsement by the League of Concerned Lagosians is not an isolated event; it is, in fact, the first public unveiling of a well-calibrated political script. Beyond the LCL, murmurs from within the APC’s youth faction and those privy to the clandestine parleys of the party’s high priests suggest that Alausa is the horse upon which the political heavyweights intend to bet. If history is anything to go by, this anointment may signal the beginning of the end for the myriad contenders still embroiled in speculative ambition.
From Kidney Care to the Corridor of Power
To the casual observer, Dr. Tunji Alausa’s name might ring unfamiliar in the bustling political discourse of Lagos. However, his trajectory speaks volumes about the careful curations of a larger political project. A trained physician with an impressive medical career, Alausa built a reputation in Chicago before stepping into Nigeria’s policymaking sphere. As the founder of the Kidney Care Centre (KCC), with a network of medical facilities spanning Illinois and beyond, he carved a niche for himself in the medical world.
His political odyssey began not in the trenches of Lagos grassroots politics but in the corridors of technocratic appointments. Handpicked by President Bola Tinubu, he first served as Minister of State for Health and later assumed the mantle of Minister of Education. His tenure in both ministries has been marked by a series of reforms, notably the revocation of the controversial 18-year age restriction for university admission and a push to align Nigeria’s educational structure with labor market demands.
But in Lagos politics, governance is secondary to the art of political navigation. It is this very skill—his ability to remain within the good graces of the political grandees while steering clear of the gladiatorial bloodbath—that now positions Alausa as the prime contender for the governorship seat.
Death Knell for Political Speculation?
For months, the Lagos political circuit has been abuzz with permutations, each analyst wagering on a different successor for Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu. Names have been thrown around with reckless abandon—powerbrokers testing the political climate with kites that may never take flight. But with the recent endorsement of Alausa by the League of Concerned Lagosians, the dust is beginning to settle.
Should Alausa be officially unveiled as the APC’s flagbearer, it will deal a fatal blow to the speculative musings of party chieftains who have been peddling the names of alternative candidates. The quiet but firm endorsement from the party’s inner sanctum suggests that, barring any political earthquake, Alausa’s path to Lagos’ Round House is already being paved with strategic intent.
A Familiar Dance: The Lagos Tradition of the Unfamiliar Candidate
Lagos has, over the years, been governed by men who, at the outset, were considered outsiders to its political mainstream. Babatunde Fashola was a relatively unknown Chief of Staff to Tinubu before he was thrust into the limelight. Akinwunmi Ambode was a bureaucrat with no grassroots political machinery. Even Babajide Sanwo-Olu, at the time of his selection, was a relatively obscure commissioner. Yet, they ascended, not on the wings of popular demand, but through the machinery of an invisible hand pulling the strings behind the curtains.
Alausa’s emergence follows this exact script. He is not the political warlord with a fearsome electoral base. He is not the loudest voice in the corridors of Lagos political hustings. But what he lacks in electoral braggadocio, he makes up for in elite consensus—a currency that has often proven to be more potent than mass popularity in Lagos’ brand of politics.
If Alausa is to emerge as the governor of Lagos in 2027, the ramifications will be profound. It will not only reaffirm the tradition of anointing relatively unknown figures into gubernatorial prominence, but it will also signal a consolidation of the political status quo under the enduring legacy of Bola Tinubu’s political architecture. More importantly, it will reinforce the power of the APC kingmakers, who have consistently demonstrated their ability to dictate the state’s political destiny with surgical precision.
For Lagosians, the question remains: Will this be another experiment in political grooming, or will Alausa’s medical precision translate into a governance model that truly elevates the state? Will he be a steward of continuity, carrying forward the blueprint of those before him, or will he chart an independent course, defying the very machinery that installed him?
Only time will tell. But for now, the tide is turning, and the physician from Chicago may well be on his way to scripting another chapter in the storied annals of Lagos’ political history.