Education
He attended the following schools: Nguru Central Primary School (1953–1954), Islamic Quaranic School(1954–1956), Hausari Primary School, Maiduguri (1956–1959), Nguru Senior Primary School, Nguru (1959 – 1960), Provincial Secondary School, Maiduguri (Now Government College 1964 – 1968). He obtained the following Certificates First Primary School Leaving Certificate (1960), University of London General Certificate of (General Certificate of Education 1966), West African School Certificate (1968).
Career
While in the senate, in recognition of his administrative and managerial acumen, he was elected APP Senate Leader, a position he occupied from June 1999 to April 2003. He resigned this appointment voluntarily. In June 1999, Albishir was appointed to committees on Selection, Banking & Currency, Defense, Transport and Privatization.
After reelection in 2003, he was appointed Senate Minority Leader, but resigned the position under pressure in December 2004.
However, due to legal issues the party named Bello Ali as candidate and he was elected. Albishir appealed this decision, and the case dragged through the courts until in February 2010 the Supreme Court finally dismissed his last appeal.
Albishir later transferred to the People"s Democratic Party (PDP) in hopes of winning the 2011 governorship election on that platform. On 11 January 2011, at the PDP primaries held at the August 27th Stadium in Damaturu, Yobe State, Usman Albishir defeated former minister of Police Affairs Alhaji Adamu Maina Waziri and Mallam Garba Umar to clinch the party"s governorship ticket for the general election in April 2011.
Engineer Yakubu Bello withdrew from the race shortly before the commencement of the election while Hassan Saleh, erstwhile Secretary to Yobe State government, withdrew a few days later.
Albishir scored 388 votes. Waziri got 226 while Garba Umar scored 46.
Politics
His political expedition started in 1998 transitional programme of late General Sani Abacha, where he contested and won with landslide, senatorial election into the then National Assembly on the platform of United Nigeria Congress Party (UNCP).