Manny Ita –
As the political chessboard for Nigeria’s 2027 elections takes shape, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has made a high-stakes opening move. Documents from the U.S. Department of Justice reveal that Atiku has committed $1.2 million (approximately ₦1.9 billion) to a Washington-based lobbying firm, signaling an aggressive intent to secure international favor and a dominant position within his new political home, the African Democratic Congress (ADC).
The 12-month deal with Von Batten-Montague-York, L.C., formally registered under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) on April 1, 2026, is a strategic investment in “soft power.” The firm is tasked with a surgical mission: strengthening Atiku’s standing among U.S. policymakers, shaping his leadership vision, and actively countering narratives from incumbent authorities. For a candidate whose past has been shadowed by decade-old bribery scandals and visa restrictions, this is more than a contract—it is a reputation-scrubbing operation designed to project global viability.
The timing of this $1.2 million engagement is far from coincidental. Having exited the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku has pivoted to the ADC, which is emerging as the primary vehicle for a powerful opposition coalition. This sets the stage for a heavyweight clash for the party’s presidential ticket against Peter Obi, the 2023 Labour Party sensation who retains a formidable grassroots following. By engaging K Street elites, Atiku is attempting to demonstrate a level of diplomatic readiness and international “reach” that his rivals may struggle to match.
This move follows a two-decade pattern of high-value American diplomacy for the former Vice President. From spending over $500,000 between 2005 and 2006 to a series of multi-thousand-dollar bids for visa coordination and campaign messaging in 2018 and 2022, Atiku has long viewed Washington as a critical theater for Nigerian domestic politics. These latest FARA disclosures provide a rare, transparent window into the staggering costs of Nigerian political ambition.
While the ₦1.9 billion price tag is eye-watering, it underscores the lengths to which Nigeria’s “eternal candidate” will go to ensure his 2027 run starts on solid international footing. As the ADC ticket battle looms, the central question remains: can Washington’s influence help Atiku overcome the domestic hurdles of age, party friction, and the rising popularity of rivals like Obi? The race for 2027 has officially crossed international borders, and for Atiku, the price of admission is $1.2 million.

