Not a Departure, But a Continuation: Adeojo Frames 2027 Ambition Around Makinde’s Legacy

By Oyo Amebo

In the evolving conversation about Oyo State’s political future, Elias Adeojo is positioning himself not as a disruptor, but as a steward of continuity, one shaped by admiration for the work already done and a determination to extend it.

His emerging interest in the 2027 governorship race is anchored less in personal ambition than in what he describes as a responsibility to preserve and deepen the progress achieved under Governor Seyi Makinde.

For Adeojo, the foundation laid by the current administration is neither abstract nor rhetorical. It is, in his view, a tangible shift in governance—one that has restored confidence in public institutions and recalibrated service delivery across critical sectors.

He speaks of this record with measured respect, describing it as a benchmark that any prospective successor must be prepared to uphold rather than dismantle.

His own trajectory within government offers a practical illustration of that philosophy. At the Oyo State Water Corporation, an agency once synonymous with inefficiency and neglect, Adeojo has overseen a steady transformation.

Ageing infrastructure has been rehabilitated, distribution channels revived, and service delivery improved in ways that have begun to directly affect everyday life in several communities.

The turnaround has not only altered public perception of the corporation but has also become, for many observers, a microcosm of the broader governance model championed by the Makinde administration.

It is within this context that Adeojo’s voice has grown more pronounced. Encouraged by a groundswell of support from citizens, political associates and those within his immediate circle, he is beginning to articulate a vision that rests firmly on continuity.

He is clear that his mission is not to supplant what exists, but to ensure that it endures and expands. Central to that outlook is a commitment to completing ongoing projects rather than abandoning them to political cycles.

Adeojo speaks of extending infrastructure to underserved areas, reinforcing gains in education and healthcare, and unlocking economic opportunities that translate into measurable improvements in people’s lives. His emphasis is on consolidation, taking what has been initiated and ensuring it reaches full maturity.

Beyond infrastructure, he signals a sharpened focus on sustainability, particularly in water and power systems, sectors he regards as foundational to both public welfare and economic growth.

This priority is informed by his experience in water resource management, where he has witnessed first-hand the consequences of neglect and the possibilities that emerge when systems are properly maintained and expanded.

Transparency and people-centred governance remain recurring themes in his articulation. Adeojo aligns himself with a style of leadership that privileges accountability and responsiveness, suggesting that the credibility of any administration rests not merely on policy ambition but on the trust it commands among citizens.

While he stops short of a formal declaration, his language reflects a readiness to step into a broader arena should the moment demand it. He acknowledges Governor Makinde’s openness in inviting capable individuals within his administration to express interest in sustaining the state’s developmental trajectory, a gesture that has, in many respects, legitimised internal succession conversations.

There is also the weight of political heritage. The Adeojo name carries longstanding significance in Oyo State’s political history, a factor that inevitably shapes perceptions of his potential candidacy.

Yet, in his framing, legacy is less about inheritance and more about responsibility, the obligation to contribute meaningfully to the state’s continued progress.Ultimately, Adeojo’s emerging narrative is one of progression rather than reinvention.

He presents the future not as a break from the present, but as its logical extension, an opportunity to move forward collectively, guided by a framework that has already demonstrated its capacity to deliver.

In that sense, his message is both simple and strategic: the work has begun, the foundation is solid, and the task ahead is to build upon it, deliberately, responsibly, and together.

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