A major political earthquake hits Abia PDP as a top 2023 governorship figure Hon. (Barr.) Phillip Okey Igwe formally resigns. What this means for the party and 2027 politics will surprise many.
The Abia State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has suffered what many party insiders now describe as a terminal political blow, following the formal resignation of Hon. (Barr.) Phillip Okey Igwe, a major stakeholder and former governorship power player in the state.
Hon. Okey Igwe, who served as the Deputy Governorship candidate to the late Prof. Uche Ikonne in the 2023 general elections, formally announced his resignation from the PDP in a letter dated January 6, 2026, addressed to the Chairman of the party in Amuda Ward, Umunneochi Local Government Area.
In the resignation letter, Igwe cited what he described as the “inexorable disintegration” of the PDP, stressing that his decision followed wide consultations with party leaders and loyal supporters across Abia North and beyond.
Political observers note that Igwe’s exit is not an isolated development but part of a wider collapse of confidence in the Abia PDP, especially among influential figures who played key roles in the party’s last governorship outing.
Reliable sources within Abia’s political circle have confirmed to All Facts Newspaper that Hon. Okey Igwe is set to officially join the African Democratic Congress (ADC) shortly, a move that could significantly reshape the opposition landscape ahead of the 2027 elections.
The resignation is particularly symbolic because Igwe was not just a card-carrying PDP member but a central figure in the party’s 2023 governorship campaign, standing beside the late Prof. Uche Ikonne at a critical moment in Abia’s political history.
Analysts say his departure underscores growing internal fractures, unresolved leadership crises, and strategic confusion within the PDP, especially as other opposition platforms gain traction across the state.
With ADC positioning itself as a potential rallying point for disenchanted politicians, Igwe’s anticipated defection is expected to trigger further exits, weaken PDP’s grassroots structure in Abia North, and intensify realignments ahead of the next election cycle.
For many party faithful, the question is no longer whether the Abia PDP is in crisis — but how much of the party will survive the coming months.




