He was elected
governor of
Blue Nile State in the
Republic of the Sudan in April 2010. Agar was one of the few high-profile members of the Sudanese opposition to run in the election, and was the only non-
National Congress Party (NCP) candidate to win a governorship. Agar defeated the NCP candidate, Farah Ibrahim Mohamed Al-Aggar, by 8,702 votes. On 2 September, Agar was deposed as governor on the orders of President
Omar al-Bashir. He fled to the southern part of the state and was reportedly planning a counterattack. He warned that the
Sudan–SPLM conflict may ignite a wider Sudanese civil war. In February 2012, Agar helped found the
Sudanese Revolutionary Front (SRF); a coalition of Sudanese opposition groups that aims to overthrow the Sudanese government and replace it with a democracy. In mid-2017, Agar split from the mainstream faction of the SPLM–N led by
Abdelaziz al-Hilu. A key factor motivating the split was that al-Hilu's group insisted on including the establishment of a secular state in negotiations with the
al-Bashir government of the time, while Agar's group disagreed. In the 2019–2020
Sudanese Revolution phase of the
Sudanese peace process, al-Hilu's group continued to insist on secularisation of the state as a requirement for a peace deal. In February 2021, Agar was appointed as a member of the
Sovereignty Council of Sudan. In the ongoing civil war, Agar has supported the
Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) in opposition to the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and the SPLM–N of al-Hilu. ==Ideology==