In a damning viral post that has ripped the mask off Peter Obi’s crumbling political empire, critics have laid bare the former Labour Party candidate’s glaring weakness: an inability to build any real support in the South, proving once and for all that the so-called “Obidient” movement is nothing but online noise and empty hype.
Social media influencer Dr Alhaji Kowope Cole (@Magixlamy_) did not mince words on X (formerly Twitter) late Friday, accompanying his message with video evidence of the disastrous turnout:
“When Peter Obi Is Beaten Silly At The ADC Primary, Remember As At Today The Numbers They Are Getting Down South Is HORRIBLE 🤣
Don’t Let @tudobams @itadaremercy & @TheSerahIbrahim Deceive You.
This Is How You Guys Know The Whole Movement Is Fake.
@YunusaTanko – You Have A Mail Too From Serah. Stay Tuned 🤣”
The post has already racked up thousands of views, with supporters and neutral observers alike admitting the numbers paint a picture of total collapse. After three years of relentless chest-thumping and online bullying, Obi’s camp cannot even muster decent registration figures in the South – the very region his movement claims as its stronghold.
Cole drove the point home in a follow-up: “YOU’VE WASTED 3 YEARS & YOU AINT EVEN SADDLED WITH THE PROBLEMS OF NIGERIA YET YOU BUNCH OF CLOWNS CANT HOLD A MOVEMENT TOGETHER 🤣🤣🤣”
This is the reality check Obi and his handlers have long dreaded. The man who promised “new Nigeria” cannot organise a coherent party structure, cannot deliver grassroots numbers, and now faces the prospect of being “beaten silly” at the African Democratic Congress (ADC) primary. Even key influencers who once hyped the movement are now accused of deception, while internal leaks (including the tagged mail to Yunusa Tanko) expose the cracks.
Peter Obi’s weakness is no longer hidden behind hashtags or viral clips. The “HORRIBLE” Southern numbers prove the entire project was built on sand – fake enthusiasm, zero strategy, and zero staying power. As registration deadlines loom and the ADC primary approaches, the once-noisy movement is quietly disintegrating, leaving Obi politically exposed and weaker than ever.
The message is clear: when the real test comes, Peter Obi and his fake movement have nothing left.
