This is 2026 and they are still afraid of transparency. You cannot continue tweeting without taking any actions.
Enough talking, this nonsense will not be tolerated any longer. Every Nigerian should take this letter, go back to their constituency, and begin real action.
The Senators are working for you and the Constitution gives you the power to remind them. Start now!
Send this letter to all your Senators immediately.
Subject: Constitutional Accountability and Constituent Mobilization
Dear Senator,
This letter is written as a formal notice from a constituent and registered voter in your senatorial district. Your opposition to real time electronic transmission of election results represents a direct contradiction of the principles of transparency, accountability, and democratic integrity enshrined in the Nigerian Constitution.
Let this be clearly understood:
Constituents are being actively sensitized in real time about this decision, its implications, and how it reflects a failure to serve the public interest. This sensitization will be factual, constitutional, and constituency based.
Under Section 69 of the 1999 Nigerian Constitution, citizens reserve the lawful right to recall a senator who has lost the confidence of their constituents. If this position is not reconsidered, constituents will mobilize peacefully, lawfully, and in large numbers to begin recall processes within the senatorail district.
This is not a threat. It is a constitutional consequence. The Public office is not immunity from accountability, representation is not a personal entitlement and your service to the people is not optional. You are urged to reconsider any action that undermines electoral transparency and to realign your position with the democratic will and constitutional rights of the people you were elected to serve.
This matter should not be treated lightly.
Respectfully,
Put your name and your constituency below here.
Take the letter and mobilize your constituency. Nigeria’s future will not save itself, only Nigerians can.
Listen attentively, I am not interested in any opinion from any Nigerian who doesn’t understand their civil rights, civic responsibility, or the law.
A constituent asking an elected senator how he voted on a motion is the most basic form of democratic accountability. You framing a simple email inquiry as a litigation risk is either you are ignorant or you deliberately want to fear monger people. Nobody is interested again in people like you talking.
This culture of intimidation, telling Nigerians to be quiet, to be afraid, to stay in line is exactly what has kept bad leadership comfortable and the society stagnant. If your contribution to this conversation is to discourage a lawful civic engagement, then your opinion adds no value here.
Go away to where you can be having your fear mongering conversations. I have written some letters already and I already like the impact they are making.
How can a senator litigate a constituent for asking a simple question? What is the legal basis for that? This space is for action and accountability, not fear from people who don’t even understand what they’re afraid of.
As Lobistars Daughter, I've inherited the family hustle gene! If you're grinding for growth in 2026, drop your biggest win below—what's one habit that's leveled you up? Let's inspire each other! #LobistarsFamily#GrowthMindset@john322226
Seeing all these 'Lobistars family' accounts popping up is wild. But fr, the real family is the ones showing up for growth and support every day. Who's been consistent in your circle lately? Engage them, like and retweet their posts. It's the least we can do for each other! ♥️