When Seyi Makinde casually dropped the name of Sikiru Sanda among those expected to play defining roles in 2027, it did not go unnoticed.
In a political environment where words are often weighed for intent, the mention has since stirred quiet speculation across Oyo State, is this merely recognition of loyalty, or a subtle signal of bigger ambitions ahead?
Sanda’s journey within the state’s political architecture is neither accidental nor hurried. A former member of the State House of Assembly, his alignment with Makinde dates back to 2015, when both men took the less-travelled path under the Social Democratic Party, long before the current political order took shape.

That early association, forged in a period of uncertainty, has evolved into a partnership marked by consistency and calculated trust.
Yet, beyond political loyalty, it is Sanda’s administrative record that continues to command attention. As a two-term Executive Chairman of Egbeda Local Government, he has built a reputation anchored in grassroots governance, an increasingly rare commodity in a system often criticised for detachment from local realities.
Roads that were once impassable have been rehabilitated, primary health centres constructed and equipped to serve growing communities, and new blocks of classrooms erected to ease the strain on public education.
In many rural pockets, electrification projects have flickered to life, bringing with them both visibility and economic promise.
His tenure as a two-term Chairman of the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria further elevated his profile.
In that role, Sanda demonstrated a capacity for coordination that extended beyond his immediate constituency, managing the delicate balance of local government interests across the state with a steadiness that has become his political signature.
Observers often pointed to this period as evidence of his ability to operate not just as a local administrator, but as a figure with statewide relevance.
It is this blend of loyalty, experience, and tangible development that has placed him firmly in conversations about the future.
While no formal declaration has been made, the possibilities, whether a senatorial bid, a governorship ambition, or another strategic role, remain open-ended, feeding a growing narrative around his next political chapter.
For now, Sanda remains measured, his public posture offering little in the way of explicit intent. But in the intricate theatre of Nigerian politics, where endorsements are rarely accidental and timing is everything, Makinde’s early nod may yet prove to be more than passing acknowledgement.
As 2027 gradually edges into view, the question lingers with increasing urgency: what exactly does the governor have in mind, and how central will Sikiru Sanda be to the unfolding script?

