The Last Card: Kano, Kwankwaso, and Dickson’s Davidian Quiet Gambit

By Citizen Bolaji O. Akinyemi

Politics, like the street game of Whot (WOTH), is not won by the loudest player—but by the one who understands when to drop the last card.

For a while now, the APC has played the game like a master of the table—calculating, patient, and ruthless in execution.

One by one, the opposition cards have been neutralised.

APC’s Opening Hands: Breaking the Table

First, the quiet conquest of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.

Not by outright defeat—but by stealth division:

Structure weakened

Leadership split

Soul and body separated

Today, one could argue:

The body of the PDP sits with Seyi Makinde

The soul is held in custody by Nyesom Wike

A party alive—but not whole.

Then came the containment of the Labour Party.

A movement that surged from obscurity with over 6 million votes behind Peter Obi in 2023 elections was gradually hemmed and boxed into:

Leadership disputes

Legal entanglements

Structural fragility

The energy may remain in a latent mode, but the direction of party is blurred.

The New Nigeria Peoples Party was next.

Its strength concentrated in one man—Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso—and one state: Kano, and with a fringe fervor in the North-West.

Strong, in Kano, yes. But isolated.

And the African Democratic Congress, ADC?
Confused. Searching. Unsettled. Noisome, everywhere and nowhere.

Checkmate… Or So It Seemed

At this point, the board looked predictable.

APC in control.
Opposition fragmented and terminally subdued.
2027—already leaning in one direction.

The game appeared to be entering its final phase.

Then Came Kano: A Different Move

Kano changed the optics.

Not with noise—but with alignment.

Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso hosting Seyi Makinde was not just a courtesy visit.

It was a signal.

A suggestion that:

The North-West is still in play

The PDP body is not entirely immobile

Conversations are ongoing beneath the surface

But even that was not the real move.

The Real Move: The Last Card Appears

Just when the table thought the game was closing…

Henry Seriake Dickson stepped in.

Quietly. Strategically. With a Davidian mien and placed a card many had ignored:

The Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC).

Why Dickson Matters in This Game

Dickson is not noise.

He is:

A former Rep Member

A former governor

A serving senator

A political bridge between South-South, PDP legacy structure, and national reformist thinking

More importantly, he is not trapped in the internal contradictions consuming:

PDP

Labour Party

NNPP

ADC

He represents something rare in Nigerian politics today:

Mobility without baggage.

The NDC Card: Underrated, But Strategic

At first glance, the NDC looks like a minor card.

But in Whot, the last card is rarely the loudest—it is the most timely.

Consider the vote arithmetic in 2023 elections:

Over 6 million Obi voters—disillusioned, searching

Over 1.5 million Kwankwasiyya base—strong, but nationally limited

Over 7 million PDP votes upon a sturdy structure is fragmented but not extinct

What they lack is not numbers but espirit de corps

What they yearn for is a vehicle.

The Proposition: NDC is the Vehicle?

This is where the Dickson card becomes alluring.

The NDC offers:
A clean legal platform

Room for coalition architecture

Flexibility for new alignments

In a political environment clogged with:
Court cases
factional leadership
legitimacy battles,
clean structure becomes strategic advantage.

The Bus Metaphor: Politics Needs Conductors

Structure alone is not enough.

Politics, like public transport, needs:

Drivers (leaders)

Conductors (mobilisers)

Passengers (voters)

Right now:

The stranded passengers at cited bus stops are no longer stranded but waiting at the bus stop.

Negotiation is on for the driver in providence.

Of course, a bus is needed to move the passengers.

Then Dickson showed up to say, here is a brand new luxurious bus !

When the NDC becomes that bus …,

Then the conductors must move fast.

APC’s Likely Reaction

The APC will not ignore the luxurious bus.

Expect:

1. Early Disruption

Infiltration

Internal fractures

Leadership contests

2. Narrative Control

Framing NDC as weak or irrelevant

Undermining its credibility early

3. Strategic Co-option

Pulling key figures away

Offering incentives to fragment alignment

Because APC understands one thing:

Opposition divided is victory guaranteed.

Opposition aligned is a real contest.

The Real Question: has the Last Card ever failed to win the Game?

The emergence of NDC may not guarantee victory.

But it changes the game from:

Predictable → Competitive

Fragmented → Potentially aligned

The real work now is not theory.

It is execution.

Final Analysis: The Game Is Not Over

For those who thought 2027 was already decided—Kano says otherwise.

The table is shifting.

The players are rethinking.

And somewhere between Kwankwaso’s base, Makinde’s structure, and Dickson’s quiet calculation…

A new possibility is forming.

Closing Line

In the game of power, it is not the number of cards you hold—it is the one you play last. And with the NDC on the table, Nigeria’s 2027 game may have just found its missing move.

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