In the often predictable terrain of Nigerian politics, something unusual is beginning to take shape in Lagos State—not a declaration, not a campaign, but a movement of sentiment.
At the center of it is Akinwunmi Ambode, whose possible return to the 2027 gubernatorial race is gradually transforming from speculation into a symbol of civic reawakening.
Not a Political Comeback—A Public Reconsideration
Unlike typical political reentries driven by elite negotiations, what is emerging around Ambode is different.
There is no formal structure yet.
No official declaration.
No visible machinery.
Instead, what Lagos is witnessing is a people-led reconsideration of leadership.
Across professional circles, grassroots communities, and civic clusters, conversations are shifting from “who will be imposed” to “who truly served.”
And in many of those conversations, Ambode’s name keeps resurfacing.
The Rise of Citizen Platforms
Groups such as Leaders After God’s Own Spirit Initiating A New State (LAGOSIANS), among many others, are playing a subtle but significant role in shaping this discourse.
Their engagements suggest a growing appetite for:
Competence over patronage
Performance over politics
And accountability over allegiance
This signals something deeper than support for an individual—it reflects a citizen-driven recalibration of political expectations.
A Test Case for Lagos Democracy
Ambode’s potential return is quickly becoming more than a personal political decision.
It is evolving into a test case:
Can Lagos voters assert independent judgment beyond entrenched structures?
Can performance-based memory outweigh political displacement?
Can a previously sidelined leader re-emerge through the will of the people rather than the permission of the system?
The Man at the Center of the Moment
For Ambode himself, this is a defining crossroads.
The momentum building around him is not yet power—but it is potential energy.
To convert it into reality, it would require:
Strategic clarity
Grassroots reconnection
Political courage
And a willingness to engage a system that once rejected him.
For a System with Abysmal performance in the last election, will party elites align with the obvious preference of the streets?
Can Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu afford a tensed Lagos political? Or will he and his party align with the reality and served the expectations of the electorates?
Beyond 2027: What This Moment Represents
Whether or not Ambode eventually contests—and whether or not he wins—may ultimately be secondary.
What matters is what this moment represents:
A shift from political dependence to civic consciousness.
For Lagos, this could mark the early stages of a broader transformation where:
Leadership is negotiated in the open,
Citizens become stakeholders,
And governance becomes a matter of collective insistence, not elite arrangement
Conclusion
Ambode’s possible return is no longer just about Ambode.
It is about Lagos discovering its voice again.
And if that voice continues to grow, 2027 may not just produce a governor—it may produce a new political culture.
One where the people, not the system, decide who leads.
Citizen (Dr) Bolaji O. Akinyemi is an Apostle and Nation Builder.

