As conversations around Oyo 2027 begin to take shape, attention is shifting from personalities to capacity. Beyond popularity and political structure, the next phase of leadership will require a mix of execution, connection, economic thinking, and continuity.
There is also a political reality that cannot be ignored. Oyo State’s electoral weight sits heavily within Ibadan. Across party dynamics and informal zoning expectations, the path to the governorship is often anchored there, with the deputy role often balancing out to Oke-Ogun.
This time, another dynamic has cropped up. The Oke-Ogun/Ogbomoso Senatorial seat has often gone to the Ogbomoso zone. However, it appears that the political parties will be zoning this to Oke-Ogun during this electoral circle, leaving Ogbomoso to produce the Deputy Governor as it happened in 2003, when Akala became deputy.
The Metrics of Leadership
To bring structure to the conversation, we assessed the top five Oyo State political contenders across four key areas: execution, connection, economic thinking, and continuity.
The questions Oyo State people are asking are:
- Execution: Can they deliver?
- Connection: Do people feel them?
- Economic Thinking: Can they grow the state?
- Continuity & Stability: Will they sustain or disrupt?
The Contenders: A Comparative Scorecard
1. Bimbo Adekanmbi: He is grounded in finance and administrative control, having served under Senator Abiola Ajimobi. While his technocratic appeal is strong, he faces “consistency questions” due to his later criticism of the government he served.
- Execution: 6.0 | Connection: 5.5 | Economic Thinking: 6.5 | Continuity: 5.0
- Overall: 5.75/10
2. Segun Ogunwuyi: He is fully embedded in the current administration. He possesses a strong grassroots political network but faces a “geopolitical constraint” as a non-Ibadan candidate in a system that favours the state capital’s volume.
- Execution: 6.0 | Connection: 7.0 | Economic Thinking: 5.5 | Continuity: 8.0
- Overall: 6.6/10
3. Dr Debo Akande: He works across agriculture, investment, and infrastructure. He is a “system builder” directly involved in the design of current projects. His main hurdle is “late public visibility” compared to career politicians.
- Execution: 8.5 | Connection: 6.5 | Economic Thinking: 8.5 | Continuity: 9.0
- Overall: 8.1/10
4. Beulah Adeoye: He brings strong professional credibility and legal depth. However, he has “limited executive governance experience” and is seen as more external to current systems.
- Execution: 5.5 | Connection: 5.0 | Economic Thinking: 5.5 | Continuity: 4.5
- Overall: 5.1/10
5. Fatai Owoseni (Rtd): He is well known in the security space. While he offers institutional discipline, he is primarily seen through a “narrow governance perception” rather than a broad economic lens.
- Execution: 5.5 | Connection: 6.0 | Economic Thinking: 5.0 | Continuity: 4.5
- Overall: 5.25/10
The Path to Scaling Oyo
The differences between contenders are becoming clearer. Some bring financial discipline, others bring political structure. But as the Seyi Makinde succession looms, the conversation shifts towards systems: who can build them, sustain them, and scale them?
The question may not just be: Who can govern? But: “Who understands what has been built… and how to take it further?”
*Aderibigbe sent this piece from Itutaba, Ibadan.