… Victory In Tandem with The New Diplomat’s Prediction
Despite waves of oppositions against his ambition to be the number two man at the Nigerian Senate, having won a re-election, Senator representing Delta Central, Ovie Omo-Agege has emerged Deputy President of the 9th Senate Tuesday.
He blazed over one of the longest serving Senators in the country, Ike Ikweremadu, who represents Enugu West, scoring 68 votes to defeat Ekweremadu who had 37 votes to his name.
Recall The New Diplomat had predicted a landslide victory for Omo-Agege in the build up to the elections of principal officers to various positions at the National Assembly.
While voting in the election of Deputy President of the Senate started at 12.30p.m, the process was concluded at 1:30pm.
Some 105 senators-elect participated in the process. One abstained. One of the votes was invalid.
When counting was concluded at 1.48 p.m, Omo-Agege was declared winner with a land slide victory and was sworn in at 1.59p.m.
Omo-Agege who hails from Orogun in Ughelli North Local Government Area of Delta State was born on August 3, 1963. The new Senate President attended St. George Grammar school, Obinomba Obiaruku, Delta State, after which he proceeded to the University of Benin where he graduated in Law in 1985 and was called to the Nigerian Bar the following year. He obtained his Master’s degree in Law from the University of Tulane University Law School in 2002.
After completing his mandatory one year national service with the Directorate of Criminal Investigation and Intelligence, Kwara State Command of the Nigerian Police Force, Omo-Agege began his Law practice in 1987 with PAT OKUPA & Co in Lagos.
In 1989, Omo-Agege co-founded a law firm, Agege & Co. Omo-Agege, and later moved to the United States in 1990, where he worked as a foreign associate at Charles O Agege’s Law Office in Los Angeles, California.
He was called to the state bar of California, United State District Court and the United States Supreme Court, Washington, DC and returned to Nigeria in 1992. In the same year he established the Omo-Agege & Associates where he was also Senior Partner. In 1996, he merged his firm Omo-Agege & Associates in a partnership resulting in the name Agege & Esin.
Omo-Agege started out in politics by contesting for the ticket to be a representative at the Delta State House of Representatives under the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party, a ticket he lost in the party primaries. In 2003, former governor of Delta State, James Ibori, appointed Omo-Agege as an executive assistant, a position he held for two years. He was later appointed as a commissioner for special duties by the governor.
He ran for the office of the Governor of Delta State but lost out at the People Democratic Party’s primaries to Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan..
Omo-Agege was appointed as the Secretary to State government (SSG) of Delta State by Governor James Ibori in 2007.
In 2015, he ran for a senator position under the platform of the Labour Party. He was elected as senator representing Delta central senatorial district on March 28, 2015.
Omo-Agege defected from the Labour Party to the All Progressive Congress (APC) on March 7, 2017. Ovie Omo-Agege is the Senator elect representing Delta Central in 2019 general election.
The 9th Senate will be Ekweremadu’s last sojourn in the upper chamber; that is, if he sticks to the promise he made in May this year that he will retire from the Senate in 2023.
He pledged never to seek election to the Red Chambers again.
Ekweremadu, who represents Enugu West in the National Assembly, made the announcement during his 57th birthday celebration on May 12, 2019 in Enugu, the Enugu State capital.
The former Deputy President of the Senate, who was re-elected for a fifth term in the National Assembly in the last general elections, told the congregation that it was time to quit the legislature, informing that he would use his remaining term in the National Assembly to complete ongoing projects in his constituency.
After 16 years in the National Assembly, Ekweremadu said it was time to give new breed politicians to render service to fatherland. He chest-thumbed that his 16 years in the National Assembly had yielded a bountiful harvest of projects.