The party of Nigeria's president- elect Muhammadu Buhari has won governorship elections in a majority of the country's 36 states, building its strength nationwide after a historic presidential win, official results today showed.
The All Progressives Congress (APC) held at least 21 governor's seats following Saturday's regional polls but could add to that tally with results from a handful of states still pending.
President Goodluck Jonathan's People's Democratic Party (PDP) had controlled the federal and most state governments since the end of military rule in 1999 but has suffered sweeping losses in the ongoing election cycle.
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Jonathan's loss to Buhari in the presidential vote two weeks ago was the first ever democratic change of power at the federal level since Nigeria gained independence from Britain in 1960.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) described the regional vote as "relatively peaceful" while lamenting 66 separate incidents of violence surrounding the polls.
Governors are influential figures in Nigeria, with near-total control of their states and collective power at a national level to bolster or check the presidency.
The 72-year-old Buhari will be sworn in on May 29 and his administration will benefit from having a majority of loyalist governors, including in the economic capital Lagos, where the APC was re-elected after a tough PDP challenge.
The PDP today conceded that it was "repositioning" itself to provide "a credible opposition" to the ascendant APC.
It urged supporters to "gear up for a rescue mission in the overall interests of the Nigerian people".