• Hausa Edition
  • Podcast
  • Conferences
  • LeVogue Magazine
  • Business News
  • Print Advert Rates
  • Online Advert Rates
  • Contact Us
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Leadership Newspapers
Read in Hausa
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Leadership Newspapers
No Result
View All Result

Coalition Or Continuation? Nigeria’s Politics On Repeat

by Abdulrauf Aliyu
3 weeks ago
in Backpage, Columns
Nigeria’s Politics On Repeat
Share on WhatsAppShare on FacebookShare on XTelegram

In Nigeria, politics is many things, but boring is not one of them. We have a political culture where the pot never stops calling the kettle black, where defectors become prophets, and where yesterday’s villains are today’s moral referees. Enter the latest act in our never-ending democratic drama: a new coalition, now aligning with the African Democratic Congress (ADC), has declared its intention to challenge the status quo.

Advertisement

 

Cue the outrage.

Almost immediately, spokespersons for the ruling party, unofficial megaphones, and some of their media surrogates began firing off rehearsed talking points. The coalition, they said, is made up of “spent forces,” “recycled politicians,” and most colourfully, “hungry men/women.” According to them, these are the same individuals who brought Nigeria to its knees in the first place, men and women who looted, failed, and now want back in.

Let’s hold that thought for a moment. Because, while that sentiment may generate social media applause, it deserves closer scrutiny, especially coming from the very architects of today’s Nigerian condition.

RELATED

Entry Permit: Gatekeepers, Emperors, And The Politics Of Control

Entry Permit: Gatekeepers, Emperors, And The Politics Of Control

4 hours ago
Power, Pretence, And Precipice: Nigeria’s Unbroken Pattern

Power, Pretence, And Precipice: Nigeria’s Unbroken Pattern

1 day ago

 

The Hypocrisy Is Almost Artistic

To accuse others of hunger for power while sitting squarely at the banquet table is rich – pun intended. Nigerian politicians are not monks. None of them are renouncing worldly ambition. Every man and woman who has contested for office in this country has done so with the clear-eyed pursuit of power.

The hunger is not new. It is bipartisan. It is pandemic.

The only difference between those currently holding power and those now trying to reclaim it is that the former succeeded at their last attempt. That’s all. Let’s not dress victory up in moral superiority.

This is why the attacks on the coalition, especially the jabs about “hunger” is not only intellectually lazy, but deeply dishonest. They presume that those currently holding office are there for altruistic reasons, while everyone else is a rogue trying to hijack the system. It’s the political equivalent of a thief accusing another thief of being too greedy.

 

The Coalition May Be Flawed, But So Is the Status Quo

Let’s be clear: no one is suggesting that the coalition is a messianic force. Many of its members have been around the corridors of power for decades. David Mark was a military governor in the ‘80s, a minister in the ‘90s, and Senate President until 2015. Amaechi has been in politics longer than some voters have been alive. Aregbesola? From commissioner to governor to minister. Peter Obi? A well-known figure who served as governor for eight years. The list goes on.

But if longevity in public life is a disqualifier, then why are we not applying the same standard to those currently at the helm?

This is the elephant in the room: the people shouting “recycled politicians” the loudest are themselves veterans of Nigeria’s political recycling plant. Many in the ruling party today were members of the PDP at some point. Some served under the Military. Others defected and re-defected so often, one wonders if their loyalty lies with the party or simply proximity to power.

So let’s stop pretending. Nigeria is not governed by a new political generation. We are governed by political survivors. And if we’re being brutally honest, survival, not performance, has been the main currency of our politics.

 

A Nation of Coalitions and Compromises

Let’s not act like coalitions are new, either. The very party that rules Nigeria today was formed in 2013 as a coalition of strange bedfellows: a patchwork of the ACN, CPC, ANPP, and a faction of the PDP. It was hailed then as a genius move – strategic, patriotic, revolutionary. So why is it that when another group of political actors comes together to challenge the incumbents, it suddenly becomes treasonous?

The answer is simple: it’s not about principle. It’s about possession. Once in power, every political class in Nigeria seeks to delegitimize opposition – not by out-performing them, but by out-shouting them.

Yet coalition-building, in and of itself, is not the problem. As Mancur Olson outlines in The Logic of Collective Action, political actors, even in “functioning democracies”, organize based on incentives. Coalitions form because individuals recognize that together they have a better chance at achieving their goals. In a pluralistic democracy, this is not sabotage, it’s strategy.

The real question is not whether coalitions are good or bad. It’s whether they are principled, purposeful, and people-centered.

 

The Real Hunger Nigeria Should Worry About

Now, let’s talk about the real hunger.

Not the hunger for power in abstract terms, but the hunger on the streets. The kind where a litre of petrol now costs more than a gallon of milk in some countries. Where rice is a luxury and stable electricity remains a rumour. Where the naira is doing backflips, while inflation turns every salary into play money. Where businesses are closing and young people are either unemployed, underpaid, or trying to “japa.”

This is the hunger Nigerians feel, not the theatrical power struggles of old men in agbadas.

And this is why the dismissive tone of those attacking the coalition feels both tone-deaf and arrogant. Because while they gloat about holding power, millions are holding empty wallets and hollow dreams. If anything, these economic realities have made the public far more skeptical of those in power than those seeking it.

 

A Crisis of Performance, Not Personnel

It is tempting to blame Nigeria’s woes on personalities. But our problem runs deeper. We have built a political system where institutions are weak, and loyalty to party is stronger than loyalty to country. A system where elections are won with stomach infrastructure, not structural reform. Where manifestos are afterthoughts and campaign promise evaporate faster than rainfall on Lagos asphalt.

 

We don’t just need fresh faces. We need fresh thinking.

So, whether it’s the ADC coalition or the ruling party or whatever Frankenstein alliance emerges in 2026, the question must shift from who is in the race to what they represent. What are their plans? What is their track record on transparency, governance, and reform? Have they demonstrated the resilience and discipline necessary for leadership, or are they simply back for another round at the table?

 

Last Word: Let the People Judge

Thus, let’s not insult the intelligence of Nigerians. The average voter today is far more politically literate than a decade ago. Social media, civic movements, economic hardship, and a more conscious youth demographic have all contributed to a more engaged public. They can tell the difference between noise and substance. Between propaganda and principle.

So instead of mocking opposition groups with playground insults, the ruling party should focus on delivering results. The same energy used in attacking the coalition could be better spent fixing electricity, reducing inflation, securing lives, and ensuring policy coherence.

In the end, Nigerians are not loyal to any coalition or party, they are loyal to survival. If you deliver, they will reward you. If you fail, they will remind you that political power is a loan, not a birthright.

And if both the ruling party and the coalition fail to rise above their usual theatrics?

Well, then they could both find themselves on the wrong side of history, labelled not as leaders or saviours, but as footnotes in Nigeria’s long, painful search for real governance.


We’ve got the edge. Get real-time reports, breaking scoops, and exclusive angles delivered straight to your phone. Don’t settle for stale news. Join LEADERSHIP NEWS on WhatsApp for 24/7 updates →

Join Our WhatsApp Channel




Tags: African Democratic Congress (ADC)All Progressives Congress (APC)
SendShareTweetShare
Previous Post

Kwara NMA Rejects Reviewed Medical Allowances

Next Post

Ohanaeze Tasks Igbo Youths On Leadership

Abdulrauf  Aliyu

Abdulrauf Aliyu

You May Like

Entry Permit: Gatekeepers, Emperors, And The Politics Of Control
Backpage

Entry Permit: Gatekeepers, Emperors, And The Politics Of Control

2025/07/30
Power, Pretence, And Precipice: Nigeria’s Unbroken Pattern
Backpage

Power, Pretence, And Precipice: Nigeria’s Unbroken Pattern

2025/07/29
New Wave Of Malnutrition And The Road To 2027
Backpage

New Wave Of Malnutrition And The Road To 2027

2025/07/28
tinubu
Columns

“Wet the Grass”: Tinubu’s Warning and APC’s Big Grassroots Test

2025/07/27
Christ’s Compassionate  Healing And Provision Of Food
Columns

Possessing True Holiness And Love Beyond Human Hospitality

2025/07/27
Breaking The Power Of Obscurity
Columns

Connecting To The God Of Wonders (Part 2)

2025/07/27
Leadership Conference advertisement

LATEST

IAWPA Appoints VP Shettima As Lifetime Patron Of Africa Food Club

Super Falcons: Tinubu’s Rewards Boost D’Tigress’ Morale At Afrobasket Contest

Lekki Port Moves 40,000TEUs Transhipment Cargoes Across West African Seaports

World Bank Advocates Strong Policies, Action To End Gas Flaring

Customs Introduce 4% Levy, Scrap 7% Collection, 1% CISS Fees At Seaports

Stock Market Surges By N1.736trn On Strong Earnings Reports

Whistleblowers Petition Tinubu Over MSC’s Alleged Unfair Shipping Practices

Chams Holding Rebrands, Restructures For Future Growth

Ecobank Group Reports $398m Pre-tax Profit, $1.1bn Net Revenue In H1

Oil and Gas Content law helping cable business – CAMAN

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.