At 50, Uzodimma Positions Imo into National Political Consciousness
Posted on February 6, 2026
AMBROSE NWAOGWUGWU

When Imo State was young, its voice at the centre was often a voice of appeal. Chief Sam Mbakwe, remembered as the “weeping governor,” embodied that era. His tears were not weakness. They were a loud plea from a new state struggling to be seen and supported within a crowded federation. Imo existed, but it had to beg to be noticed.
Fifty years later, that posture has changed.
Under Governor Hope Uzodimma, Imo no longer pleads for relevance. It asserts it. The state now speaks from a place of confidence, access, and earned respect. What once required emotional appeals is today secured through political capital, strategic alignment, and steady leadership.
Uzodimma’s administration has deliberately repositioned Imo within the national political space. This has not happened by noise or theatrics, but through consistent engagement with the federal structure and a clear understanding of power dynamics. The result is visible. Imo is now a destination for federal presence, not an afterthought.
One clear example is the federal Imo power plant project handed over to the state. This is not a symbolic gesture. It is infrastructure with long term implications for industrial growth, energy security, and economic confidence. It signals trust. It signals relevance. It signals that Imo is considered capable of managing assets of national importance.
Beyond projects, the human footprint of Imo at the centre has expanded. Today, Imo sons and daughters occupy strategic positions across the national political landscape. The national convention of the ruling party is chaired by the Imo State Governor. The presidential campaign structure is led by him. Key coordinating bodies within the federal political system have Imo indigenes at the helm. Even within the digital political space, the South East Progressive Digital Media team is coordinated by an Imo man.
These are not coincidences. They reflect deliberate positioning.
Political relevance is rarely gifted. It is negotiated, earned, and defended. Uzodimma has understood this truth and acted accordingly. By aligning Imo with the centre without losing its identity, he has placed the state where decisions are shaped and influence is traded. This is a sharp departure from the era when Imo waited for attention. Today, attention seeks Imo.
The broader implication is important. States that matter politically attract development faster. They are consulted. They are carried along. Their interests are harder to ignore. In this sense, Uzodimma’s leadership has moved Imo from the margins to the table.
At fifty, Imo is no longer defined by its struggles, but by its standing. The state has grown into a confident political actor within the federation. That confidence is rooted in leadership that understands timing, loyalty, and the value of strategic presence.
History will remember Mbakwe for giving Imo a voice when it had none. It may remember Uzodimma for ensuring that the voice is now heard, respected, and influential. In a country where political visibility often determines opportunity, that shift may be one of the most enduring legacies of Imo at fifty.
– Ambrose Nwaogwugwu is the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Electronic and Creative Media.











