African Democratic Congress (ADC) has described the speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas’s retraction over Nigeria’s rising debt profile is a missed opportunity for courageous leadership.
In a statement signed by its National Publicity Secretary, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, the party said the Speaker’s initial admission that the country’s debt has crossed critical levels was a rare moment of honesty from within the ruling party. However, the party lamented his quick withdrawal reflects the growing political cowardice and legislative complicity culture. The ADC warned that, with unchecked borrowing and a National Assembly it called “the most compliant in recent history,” Nigeria’s future is being dangerously mortgaged with the full complicity of this National Assembly.
The ADC said it had received with cautious optimism the recent remarks credited to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt Hon Tajudeen Abbas, regarding Nigeria’s ballooning debt.
It added that the Speaker’s admission that the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio has not only crossed the statutory threshold but now stands at a staggering 52 per cent was not only a rare moment of honesty but also a validation of what the ADC and many patriotic Nigerians have long warned against: this government is mortgaging our future.
“However, our optimism was short-lived by the Speaker’s sudden recant of a rare demonstration of candour by a ruling party leader. Like a flame in the wind, the Speaker’s statement offered a momentary flicker of the truth, only to be quickly doused by political expediency. Rather than standing by his remarks and on the side of the people, the lawmaker chose to play it safe and be politically correct.
This, to us, is not only disappointing but troubling. If those in power cannot summon the courage to stand by the truth, even when it screams all around them, how can we expect them to act in the people’s interest?
“Before proceeding on his vacation to Europe, President Bola Tinubu, just days ago, assured Nigerians that the era of borrowing was over. He claimed that revenue projections had been met and the nation would live within its means. But, in less than a week, this same government announced a fresh plan to borrow 1.75 billion dollars from the World Bank. Against this backdrop of contradictions, the Speaker’s initial statement carried weight, so his withdrawal rings louder than his words.
“What has stood out in the entire saga of unprecedented debt accumulation is the complicity of the 10th National Assembly, which, by every indication, has become the most compliant legislature in our recent history. The principle of checks and balances was not included in our Constitution for decoration; it exists to protect Nigerians from precisely this kind of unrestrained executive overreach. Yet today, what we witness is not legislative oversight, but legislative complicity. Instead of being a bulwark against excess, the National Assembly has become a conveyor belt for executive wishes.
“We wish to remind the Speaker and the APC-led administration that Nigeria’s debt crisis is not an abstract economic theory. It is a lived reality. Every naira borrowed without accountability translates into a child out of school and a hospital patient without care. The Speaker was right the first time — our debt is out of control, and our children’s future is written in red ink.
“The ADC believes Nigeria must return to fiscal discipline, transparency, and responsible governance. Our party will continue to demand full public disclosure and parliamentary debate before any new borrowing, measurable benchmarks for how loans are spent, and a long-term plan to reduce debt dependency through domestic resource mobilisation and job creation.
“Let the record reflect that, when the opportunity came to speak truth to power, some chose silence, some chose survival, but the ADC chose to stand with the Nigerian people,” the party said.