I speak truth without apology. Governance. Power. Accountability. Alpha in thinking, ruthless in clarity. Philanthropist. The voice they'd rather silence. ๐ฅ
This account has one mission.
Not clout. Not engagement farming. Not to entertain you.
To make sure Peter Obi becomes Nigeria's President on January 16, 2027.
With facts. With records. With data. Every. Single. Day.
๐ Naira down 850% since 2014 ๐ Inflation averaged 20.5% over last 5 years
๐ 86.6% of homes get 6.6 hrs electricity/day
๐ Peter Obi left Anambra with $150M in savings
Counter any of those facts. I'll wait.
#TruthNaked#ObiKwankwaso2027
Thursday night. Open floor.
This account posts facts.
Some of you disagree.
That is fine.
If you think Nigeria's economy is on the right path โ come and argue it with data.
Not insults. Not tribe.
DATA.
Because my data tonight says:
NOT through constituency allocations.
NOT through oil bloc allocations.
The man asking to manage Nigeria's economy already built his own.
That is not a small thing.
Source: SaharaReporters Profile / Wikipedia / BiographyNiche
#ObiKwankwaso2027#TheRecordSpeaks
People say: "Peter Obi has never managed Nigeria's complex economy."
Let me tell you what he managed BEFORE becoming governor.
Private Sector Record:
โ Youngest-ever Chairman of Fidelity Bank Plc
โ Chairman/Director: Guardian Express Bank
โ Director: Future View Securities
โ Director: Chams Nigeria Ltd
โ Director: Data Corp Ltd
โ Director: Next International Nigeria Ltd
He was a dollar millionaire before he entered government.
He built that wealth through banking, investment and commerce.
NOT through government contracts.
Do you have your PVC?
Is your polling unit correct?
Is your name still on the register?
Check in 60 seconds:
๐ https://t.co/V2OULVxPXA
CVR closes: August 30, 2026
Election: January 16, 2027
80 days left to register.
Count them.
#GetYourPVC#ObiKwankwaso2027
You just read the numbers.
Now here is the only number that actually changes those numbers:
Your voter turnout.
2023 turnout: 26.71%
Votes needed to win at 60% turnout: ~30 million minimum
That gap between 27% and 60% is not a political problem.
It is a logistics problem.
The Nigerian Economic Scorecard Nobody Will Show You
I'm not going to insult anyone.
I'm not going to be emotional.
I'm going to give you numbers.
You decide what they mean. (1/6)
The Exchange Rate:
2014: โฆ160/$1
2024 peak: โฆ1,675/$1
June 2026: ~โฆ1,360/$1
We know what the current path produces.
We have seen it.
We are living it.
We also know what a different path produced.
We can read the records.
January 16, 2027 is a choice between two documented outcomes.
This is not an accident. This is a decade of decisions made by people who did not care.
Source: CBN / FocusEconomics Nigeria Exchange Rate Data
#ObiKwankwaso2027#TruthNaked
Good morning Nigeria.
Here is your Friday fact.
When Peter Obi became governor of Anambra in 2006:
$1 = โฆ128
When he left in 2014:
$1 = โฆ160
Today, June 2026:
$1 = โฆ1,360+
That is an 850% collapse of the naira since he left office.
Your salary did not increase 850%.
Your rent did not decrease 850%.
Your children's school fees did not drop 850%.
But the naira did.
And 177 traditional rulers named him "The Rock."
Is there ONE thing about his background or character that you respect?
Drop it below.
No politics. No tribe. No party.
Just answer as a Nigerian who wants better.
#ObiKwankwaso2027
Tonight I want to ask you something personal.
Peter Obi grew up in a trading family in Onitsha.
He studied Philosophy.
He built a business career before entering government.
He left office poorer than a typical Nigerian politician.
This is not bad luck.
This is a policy outcome.
And policy outcomes change when leadership changes.
Source: NBS Nigeria Residential Energy Survey 2024 / NERC
#ObiKwankwaso2027#TheRecordSpeaks
This evening, as the lights go out in your home โ
Here is today's fact.
Nigeria โ a country of 220 million people โ generates on average approximately 4,700 MWh/hr of electricity.
South Africa โ population 62 million โ generates ~40,000+ MWh/hr.
The National Bureau of Statistics confirmed in 2024:
86.6% of Nigerian households receive an average of 6.6 hours of electricity per day.
You're reading this on a phone charged by a generator.
Running on fuel that costs what it used to cost to feed your family.