Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola led the ADC South-West Stakeholders Meeting in Ibadan, sending a clear signal: the party is unified, growing, and serious about national leadership.
The culture of leaders shapes the culture of a nation, even for the young.
If leaders fail to model integrity, society learns the wrong lessons.
Our leaders must lead by example: serving citizens with justice, truth, and accountability.
Are you paying less for food today?
Or more?
Is transportation cheaper today?
Or more expensive?
Are more people around you getting jobs?
Or losing them?
If the answer is NO, then you need to vote wisely in 2027
#AreYouBetterOff
Ask yourself one honest question:
Are you better off today than you were two years ago?
If not, then something isn’t working.
Don’t vote like everything is fine.
Think before the next election.
Your future depends on it.
#AreYouBetterOff
A nation moves forward when leaders measure success not only by projects completed but by lives improved through policies.
And policies work best when governments pay attention to the real experiences of the people they serve.
Economic growth means little if citizens are struggling harder than they did a few years ago.
The success of any government should be reflected in the lives of the people they lead, not just in reports or announcements.
Economic growth means little if citizens are struggling harder than they did a few years ago.
The success of any government should be reflected in the lives of the people they lead, not just in reports or announcements.
Many households now spend most of their income just trying to eat.
Savings, investments, and planning for the future have become luxuries for millions of families.
Survival has replaced stability.
Today, many Nigerians are simply trying to survive. Prices have skyrocketed, wages haven’t kept up, and everyday life feels heavier.
So we must ask: what progress can ordinary citizens actually point to?
What policies are easing the burden on the most vulnerable?
The government needs to understand that the time for half-measures is over. Citizens need policies that prioritize welfare, opportunity, and dignity. The government must act now.
Citizens can’t wait for goodwill or empty promises. It’s critical the government makes their welfare a priority, jobs, education, healthcare, and opportunity.
Two years ago, surviving Nigeria was tough. Today, it’s brutal. Prices soar, jobs vanish, and hope feels expensive. Where is the government actually working for the people?
The real truth? Nigerian is not better than it was 2 years ago. It is worse off.
Two years ago, surviving Nigeria was tough. Today, it’s brutal. Prices soar, jobs vanish, and hope feels expensive. Where is the government actually working for the people?
The real truth? Nigerian is not better than it was 2 years ago. It is worse off.
The progress often looks good on paper, but the average person can’t honestly say “dem dey try.” Everyday life keeps getting harder, and the welfare systems people rely on simply aren’t there. If the people it’s meant to help can’t feel it, is it really progress?
Democracy is not the government sitting in a room deciding what the solution is.
It is the government listening, consulting, and working with the people.
Because a real democracy is government of the people, by the people, for the people.
When the government alone decides what the “solution” should be, it raises a serious question: what exactly is democracy?
A true democracy listens first. It engages the people, understands their needs, and then builds solutions with them, not for them.
Who benefits when systems don’t work?
Who benefits when welfare is not being prioritized? How are the vulnerable being protected?
These are the questions we need to be asking.