In politics, there are moments when silence becomes impossible. Ondo State has entered one of those moments.
A viral declaration by a prominent supporter has framed the current political struggle as a moral contest between Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa and Interior Minister Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, popularly known as BTO. The language was blunt. Sitting on the fence, the post declared, is a sign of cowardice or being a traitor. By one stroke, neutral ground has been eliminated.
What makes the statement remarkable is not only its emotional force but what it reveals about widening fractures within Ondo’s political architecture. For decades, politics in the Sunshine State revolved around influence blocs and regional loyalties. Those tensions are no longer hidden behind diplomatic curtains.
At the centre of this confrontation are two contrasting symbols. Governor Aiyedatiwa represents incumbency, institutional authority and the machinery of state power. He ascended to office under difficult circumstances following the death of former Governor Rotimi Akeredolu. Since then, he has sought to consolidate legitimacy while navigating fragile coalitions within the APC.
On the other hand, BTO embodies youthful ambition, aggressive grassroots networking and rising national relevance. As Minister of Interior, he has built a reputation that stretches far beyond Ondo. To supporters, he represents a new generation of technocratic influence. To rivals, that growing influence appears threatening.
A Federal High Court ruling in March 2026 added fuel to the fire. The court declared that Aiyedatiwa is ineligible for re-election after his current term, finding that serving again would exceed the eight-year constitutional limit because he completed the tenure of his predecessor before being sworn in for his own. That decision, whether it stands on appeal or not, has shifted perceptions of who holds the future.
Both men have publicly denied any conflict. Aiyedatiwa has stated that he has no issues with Tunji-Ojo, emphasising that they are both leaders within the same party. But behind the polite statements, a cold war reportedly simmers. The BTO Unit-to-Unit movement is actively mobilising coordinators to secure a 90 per cent vote for President Tinubu and APC candidates in 2027, positioning BTO as either a kingmaker or a successor.
Once politics reaches the point where every neutral voice is treated as an enemy, the battlefield is no longer about persuasion—it becomes about conquest.
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