@ruffydfire is a very good journalist. I enjoy his analysis because it's usually balanced and insightful. But he can't completely hide the fact that he supports Peter Obi. In my opinion, his preferred candidate has yet to present a clear plan for fixing Nigeria's major challenges. It often seems that Obi is more focused on becoming president than explaining how he would govern differently.
@ruffydfire is a very good journalist. I enjoy his analysis because it's usually balanced and insightful. But he can't completely hide the fact that he supports Peter Obi. In my opinion, his preferred candidate has yet to present a clear plan for fixing Nigeria's major challenges. It often seems that Obi is more focused on becoming president than explaining how he would govern differently.
@ruffydfire You are not this pained when Emilokan flogged ADC. Wondering why you Obidient have it in mind that koooooluu Emilokan can be removed by election. Lailai... koooooluu is a mafia..only revolution can help.
Most Obidients were celebrating the crisis in ADC and the last court order of ADC, Especially Mama Pee, who made a video mocking ADC and praising Obi's "smart move" to NDC. I commented on her post that Emilokan would serve all the candidates thier breakfast. 😂 Now she should make another video about NDC. 🤣🤣 Election alone won't remove Emilokan from office.
@ruffydfire Hummm, I can now see clearly that you are Obidient. Tinubu is the worst ever. Obi is not the solution. In fact, he can't even win a free and fair election. He's so unpopular in the North. Only social media hype
Peter Obi belongs to the same political class as Bola Tinubu, Atiku Abubakar, and many others Nigerians have trusted for decades. The political elites may belong to different parties, but most of them have moved within the same system for years without fundamentally changing the country.
If Muhammadu Buhari were alive and politically active today, he could easily align with another coalition like the African Democratic Congress, and politicians who once criticized him might still seek his endorsement for political advantage. That is how Nigerian politics has continued to operate, alliances change, but the same political class remains dominant.
What Nigeria truly needs is a leader willing to investigate and probe everyone who has held major political office since 1999, regardless of party affiliation or ethnic background. The country cannot move forward without accountability. Nigerians deserve to know how public funds were managed, and every looted fund recovered should be redirected into healthcare, education, infrastructure, electricity, and job creation.
Instead, many politicians continue to associate closely with former leaders and powerful political figures who were part of the same system Nigerians complain about today. Even Peter Obi himself has held several political positions over the years, which makes some Nigerians question whether he truly represents a complete break from the old order.
To some people, Omoyele Sowore remains one of the few politicians speaking consistently about radical reform, accountability, and dismantling the existing political structure. However, many Nigerians still prefer what they see as the “lesser evil” instead of demanding a complete transformation of the system.
Many once believed Muhammadu Buhari was the lesser evil and hoped he would fight corruption and improve governance. Yet, many Nigerians ended up disappointed with the outcome of his administration. Now, critics argue that Bola Tinubu simply continued from where that government stopped rather than delivering the major change people expected.
I wonder how a family with two children can survive on a ₦150,000 monthly salary in today’s Lagos, Nigeria. It seems almost impossible. Many people are already living in abject poverty across the country. The Bulaba government needs to step up its game and address the growing hardship Nigerians are facing.
An Obi/Kwankwaso ticket cannot win Nigeria’s top office. Instead, it would only make things easier for Tinubu and the APC. Whether people like it or not, Atiku remains a very strong political force in the North.
A three-horse race would simply repeat what happened in the last presidential election — too many permutations and calculations without a clear strategy for victory. You cannot be desperate to appear on the ballot and still expect to win.
For Kwankwaso, however, it could still be beneficial in the long run, as he may be positioning himself ahead of 2031 to gain support from Obi’s political base.
@DonAzag Nigerian politicians are switching parties for selfish interests, forgetting they’re up against APC under Bola Tinubu, who has appointed a loyalist as INEC chairman.