Site icon eelive

2Baba Reacts Wife, Natasha Idibia, Joins Peter Obi’s NDC

Legendary singer Innocent Idibia, better known as 2baba or 2face, has left the internet talking following his sweet gesture towards his wife, Natasha Idibia.

The lawmaker representing Egor Constituency in the Edo State House of Assembly  officially joined the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) alongside other prominent political figures, received their membership card, marking the beginning of a new chapter with the political party.

In a clip making the rounds online, the legendary singer, dressed in blue jeans and a white top, sang his famous 2026 ‘One Love’ song to the cheers of the crowd.

Recall, the national Leader of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC), Sen. Seriake Dickson, on Thursday, warned politicians against ‘transactional politics’ as serving lawmakers from Edo State formally joined the party in Abuja.

The event, attended by lawmakers, political actors and delegates from several states, featured the formal reception of the Minority Leader of the Edo State House of Assembly, Hon. Charity Aiguobarueghian.

Hon. Natasha Osawaru-Idibia, wife of legendary Nigerian singer, songwriter, and philanthropist, Innocent Idibia aka 2Baba, also decamped and was received into the emerging political movement.

Speaking at the gathering, Dickson said the NDC was not created as a platform for short-term political gains, but as a movement anchored on ideology, discipline and long-term nation-building.

“You are not joiners of this party. You are co-founders and co-builders. This is not a platform for transactional politics. It is a platform for ideological commitment and nation-building,”  he said.

He urged new members to see themselves as part of a long-term political project, stressing that a strong grassroots organisation remains key to the survival of any political movement.

According to him, political popularity without structure cannot sustain electoral success.

“A political party is like a horse. No matter how skilled the rider is, if the horse is weak or untrained, it cannot win a race,” he said.

He added that political parties are “living institutions” that must be continuously nurtured to remain viable.

Exit mobile version