“You and I know that there were some criminals in prison that we released during your election so they can help you win and after your elections, we returned them back to prison. Have you forgotten?”
Oriyomi queries Makinde
This is a clip of his last media chat. Did he answer the correctly?
The Tax Bill was passed
Everything he said about the Tax Bill being Pro-Poor turned out to be true. People testified to reduction in their taxes this year.
I know you weren’t talking to me but I just felt to help your miserable brain.
In 2013, Peter Obi built 6 bedroom duplexes apartments for judges in Anambra State, worth ₦242 million in 2013.
Today his Obingos are accusing Wike of bribing the judiciary for building houses for judges.
Was Peter Obi not doing the same thing?
I pity the low IQ folks here.
You guys are too daft.
- PBAT has signed the Electricity Act to allow states generate, transmit and distribute power.
- PBAT has transferred full regulatory powers to State Electricity Agencies to regulate and create their laws that fit their electricity market.
- PBAT is completing 2 major gas pipeline to pipe gas across the country for thermal plants - AKK and OB3. The last major pipeline Escravos - Lagos, was built in 1989.
- PBAT has floated a bond to pay N4trn legacy debts owed to Gencos for 13 years. This is will help restore investor confidence in the sector.
- PBAT has unbundled the TCN to create a Nigerian Independent System Operator stripping TCN of regulatory powers and allowing it to focus on physical infrastructure.
- The $2.3bn Siemens transmission expansion project is ongoing
- The Presidential Metering Initiative is ongoing.
You guys have zero ideas on how nations are built.
@gentlemanway007 Peter Obi is a dullard and a mediocre. Anything less than this basic explanations as to how he would generate 10k MW of electricity makes him worst of Nigeria's presidential candidate that shouldn't grace our political space.
@osazenoo Listen to a Kenyan using President Tinubu’s policies as a case study.
Oh my God. He’s not saying Bangladeshi, Singapore, Egypt bla bla bla.
This is what we mean by Make Nigeria Great again.
BAT2031 👏
Nigeria’s current account surplus rose by 255.71% to $4.98 billion in the first quarter of 2026, from $1.40 billion in the fourth quarter of 2025, according to provisional balance of payments statistics released by the Central Bank of Nigeria (BOP).
The surplus was also 46.04% higher than the $3.41 billion recorded in the corresponding period of 2025, indicating a stronger external position driven largely by higher export receipts, lower petroleum product imports and reduced primary income outflows.
The CBN’s Balance of Payments Highlights for Q1 2026 showed that the improvement was supported by a stronger goods account surplus, which rose to $5.95 billion from $1.77 billion in the preceding quarter
@FolushoxFolarin@timeshighered A single government policy of deciding to fund research is responsible for this immediate transformation! After all Nigerian universities are not bad, but funding was the major issue. @DrTunjiAlausa please double down, you’re doing extremely well. @officialABAT u do this one ☝🏼
For the first time in 🇳🇬 history,
51 Nigerian universities have broken into the 2026 @timeshighered World University Rankings,
with 2 universities now in the top 1,000.
Only 15 universities qualified to be ranked when this administration took over in 2023.
According to the rankings, the best universities in Nigeria for 2026 are the usual suspects:
1st – University of Ibadan (UI)
2nd – University of Lagos (UNILAG)
UNILAG was also recognised for having the highest quality of academic research.
Kudos to the Minister of Education, @DrTunjiAlausa, for his back-to-back reforms in the education sector.
10 THINGS PRESIDENT TINUBU IS FIXING THAT PREVIOUS PRESIDENTS DIDN’T:
1. State Finances: Instead of bailouts and unpaid salaries, states now have significantly higher revenues and greater fiscal stability.
2. Consumer Credit: Through CREDICORP, Nigeria is building a structured credit culture, giving workers access to affordable financing and opening the door to broader financial inclusion.
3. State Police: A long-discussed security reform that previous administrations couldn’t advance is finally gaining traction.
4. Local Government Autonomy: For the first time, grassroots governance is being treated as a priority, bringing governance closer to the people.
5. Electricity Decentralization: States can now generate, transmit and distribute electricity, ending decades of excessive centralization.
6. NELFUND: Students from low-income families can now access tertiary education funding without the traditional financial barriers.
7. Tax Reform: The tax system is being simplified, reducing the burden on low-income earners while improving compliance and accountability.
8. ASUU Stability: For the first time in many years, Nigerian students are completing academic sessions without prolonged nationwide ASUU disruptions.
9. Mega Infrastructure Projects: The Sokoto-Badagry Super Highway, Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, and Lagos-Abuja Super Highway represent infrastructure ambitions on a scale rarely seen in Nigeria’s history.
10. Food Inflation Reversal: Nigeria is witnessing a decline in food prices after a period of sharp increases; something many Nigerians thought would never happen once prices had risen.
Love him or hate him, these are major structural reforms and projects that previous administrations either could not or did not implement.