The governor of Oyo State, Seyi Makinde, was a well-known Nigerian businessman and engineering genius before he went into politics. He had been a top executive at many Nigerian and international oil and gas companies before going on to establish his own company.
Seyi Makinde news started becoming widely popular after he emerged as the Oyo State governor in 2019. Before this victory, he had been engaged in politics for far longer. Here we give a well detailed Seyi Makinde profile and provide the latest Oyo State news about him as well.
To kick start this article about Oluseyi Abiodun Makinde, we first give answers to some of the most popular questions about him in the next section.
Top 10 Seyi Makinde facts
- Seyi Makinde was born as Oluseyi Abiodun Makinde on 25 December 1967. He turned 53 years old on his 2020 birthday.
- Before he became the governor of Oyo State, he was an engineer with certification from prestigious institutions such as UNILAG, Lagos Business School (now Pan-Atlantic University), Jiskoot Auto Control Training Centre and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
- In 1997, Makinde established his own business, Makon Engineering and Technical Services Limited (METS), at the age of 29 following stints working at Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) and Rebold International Limited.
- Seyi Makinde became more popular in political circles when he contested for the Oyo South Senatorial seat in 2007 under the platform of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) but lost to the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) candidate – Kamoru Adedibu. He tried again in 2010 for the Oyo South 2011 Senatorial seat under PDP and lost again.
- In 2015, Seyi Makinde contested for the PDP gubernatorial 2015 election ticket for the first time and lost. He defected to the Social Democratic Party (SDP) under whose platform he ran for the governorship seat, which he lost.
- He rejoined PDP following the intervention of the Caretaker National Chairman of PDP Senator Ahmed Makarfi and other political stakeholders like national leaders, Oyo State leaders, elders of the SDP, and cross-sections of strategic partners within Oyo State.
- On rejoining the PDP, Seyi Makinde won the gubernatorial candidate ticket and in March 2019, contested for the state governorship position for a second time. This time, he defeated Mr Adebayo Adelabu of the All Progressive Party (APC) at the polls. He was sworn in as the 28th executive Governor of Oyo State thereafter.
- As part of his achievements as governor of Oyo State, Seyi Makinde successfully negotiated the dissolution of the joint ownership of Ladoke Akintola University of Technology LAUTECH between Osun State and Oyo State.
- The governor of Oyo State Seyi Makinde is married to Tamunominini Makinde and they have three children together. Both his parents are late.
- Makinde belongs to many professional bodies such as the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE), Council for Regulations of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN), Oil and Gas Design Engineers of Nigeria (OGDEN), International Society of Automation (ISA), Institute of Measurement and Control UK; and American Measurement Institute (AMI).
Also read: Abiola Ajimobi Biography: Early life, education, political career and death
Seyi Makinde profile: Early life and education
Seyi Makinde was born as Oluseyi Abiodun Makinde on 25 December 1967. His father, late Pa Olatubosun Makinde, was a popular former teacher in Oyo State who later became an accountant. According to sources, his mother was Madam Abigail Makinde of Aigbofa Compound in Oja’ba, Ibadan.
Seyi Makinde is the third child of his family. His elder brother is a traditional ruler in Ibadan who uses the title Jagun Olubadan of Ibadanland. There is not much publicly available information regarding the Oyo State governor’s other siblings.
Seyi Makinde started schooling at St Paul Primary School but switched to St Michael Primary School in Yemetu, Ibadan, where he completed his primary education. After that, he started secondary school at Bishop Phillips Academy, Monatan, Ibadan.
He completed secondary school at a young age and by 18, Seyi Makinde had already gained admission to the University of Lagos (UNILAG) to study electrical engineering. He graduated with a BSc in electrical/electronic engineering in 1990.
In 1997, after a brief working stint of about seven years, he went abroad to further his studies. He got a year’s worth of training on Safety Shutdown System at the Industrial Control Services in Houston, Texas. Thereafter, he returned to Nigeria in 1998.
On his return, Engineer Makinde, as many close friends and relations called him, went for another training on Development of Analytical Competence for Managing Operations at Lagos Business School (now Pan-Atlantic University). He completed his training in 1999 and started another one.
This time, he obtained training in automation – a branch of engineering that deals with the creation and application of technologies to produce and deliver goods and services with minimal human intervention.
Seyi Makinde went abroad again in 2001 for another engineering course. He took a course in Fundamentals of Crude Sampling at Jiskoot Auto Control Training Centre, Kent, England, and got certification in 2002.
He also went to the United States of America in 2005 to complete a course on Understanding and Solving Complex Business Problems at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA.
Seyi Makinde Profile: Professional career
During his compulsory one-year national service as a member of the NYSC, Seyi Makinde got a placement with the Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC). He worked there until 1992 before jumping ship to Rebold International Limited.
It appears that the governor of Oyo State had done some field engineering work in Eket, Akwa Ibom State, until 1995. After this, he was promoted to the position of a field manager.
However, in 1997, Makinde established his own business, Makon Engineering and Technical Services Limited (METS), at the age of 29. The engineering startup with Seyi Makinde at the helm of affairs has now grown to be known as Makon Group of Companies.
Makon Group of Companies
Makon Group is an internationally certified organisation with business interests in the oil and gas facilities, upstream/midstream operations. It handles facility projects for the Nigerian government and other clients.
Seyi Makinde: Recognitions
The Oyo State governor is a member of many national and international professional bodies. Some of them are the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE), Council for Regulations of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN), Oil and Gas Design Engineers of Nigeria (OGDEN), International Society of Automation (ISA), Institute of Measurement and Control UK and the American Measurement Institute (AMI).
Seyi Makinde News: Political career
After establishing the well-run Makon Group, Makinde became active in politics. It was not until 2007 that Seyi Makinde news became popular in political circles. That year, he contested for the Oyo South Senatorial seat under the platform of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) but lost to the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) candidate – Kamoru Adedibu.
In 2010, he tried again. By this time, he had joined the PDP and then ran against the incumbent Oyo South Senator for the Oyo South 2011 Senatorial seat. He lost a second time.
Makinde started gunning for the governorship position as the senatorial seat had eluded him twice. His first bid for the gubernatorial election was in 2014. He tried to obtain the Oyo State 2015 governorship ticket under the platform of PDP in December 2014. However, he was denied the nomination ticket after the result for the party’s primary election was called.
Defection from PDP and return
Seyi Makinde defected to the Social Democratic Party (SDP) because they promised him the governorship nomination ticket. In the Oyo State gubernatorial election in 2015, Makinde, under the SDP banner, ran against his former party PDP and others and lost the election.
His defection from PDP had caused some unrest within the party. Thus, in September 2017, the Caretaker National Chairman of PDP, Senator Ahmed Makarfi, visited Seyi Makinde in his home in Ibadan. Makarfi and other political stakeholders like national Leaders, Oyo State leaders, elders of the SDP, and cross-sections of strategic partners within Oyo State all interceded on the matter.
This led to Seyi Makinde returning to his former political party – PDP. Speaking about his return, Vanguard quoted Makinde as saying:
“This repositioning is not primarily to pursue personal ambition but was largely informed by the resolution of all opposition parties in the state as contained in a recent communique signed by leaders of opposition parties to work together in Oyo state so as to find lasting solutions to the myriad challenges and underdevelopment facing Oyo citizens, such as Educational dysfunction and perennial failure, social and economic woes and lack of adequate security- all which are outcomes and consequences of the ineffective six years of the All progressives Congress rule in our state.”
Victory at 2019 Oyo State governorship election
On rejoining the PDP, Seyi Makinde picked up the gubernatorial candidate form again in 2019 ahead of the general elections. He defeated his closest rival for the candidateship, Senator Hamzat Ayoade Adeseun. Makinde had secured 2,772 votes while Adeseun managed to get 21.

Thus, he ran for the State governorship position a second time in March 2019. This time, he defeated Mr Adebayo Adelabu of the All Progressive Party (APC) at the polls. On 29 May 2019, Seyi Makinde was sworn in as the 28th executive governor of Oyo State.
He succeeded the late Senator Abiola Ajimobi who had served as governor for eight years. Let us take a brief look at some of the most recent Seyi Makinde news since he became Oyo State governor.
Seyi Makinde on EndSARS protest
During the EndSARS protests in October 2020, Seyi Makinde notably debunked a police statement over the death of a protester. According to Oyo State news outlets, the state’s police spokesman Olugbenga Fadeyi had claimed that officers did not fire at EndSARS protesters in Ogbomosho.
“The Police did not fire a shot or kill any protester as widely circulated,” Fadeyi said in his statement. He claimed that they had only used tear gas to disperse the protesters because they had gotten violent.






