@DavidEboh5@Uno_009 Complete removal of the petrol subsidy
Unification of foreign exchange windows (floating the Naira)
Implementation of the Electricity Act to decentralize the power grid
Passage of the 2025 Tax Reform Acts to overhaul the tax system
Establishment and funding of NELFUND
This is a very dull take.
If religious devide should be the sole deciding factor, Christians will never rule this country.
take your time to read the constitutional requirements to win an election in Nigeria don't be dumb
Living Faith Church has around 5 million members.
Redeemed Christian Church has around 10 million members.
Christ Embassy may have around 3 million members.
The entire Catholic church and Anglican combined have around 30 million members.
The Lord's chosen may have around 1 million members.
The rest of the Pentecostal churches may have members in excess of 10 million combined.
The Christian Association of Nigeria CAN which comprises all the churches, if it wills can easily mobilize 60 million voters towards voting not just the only Christian, but the youngest and most qualified and brilliant Christian in the race Peter Obi and deliver Nigeria to the promised land.
All the Pastors have the hearts and ears of their members and their members will vote anyone they decide.
Even if you minus the number of ineligible voters, such as underaged or those who aren't just predisposed to the trouble of registering, collecting PVC and turning up at the polling unit, you can still round up half that figure which is 30 million people to vote Peter Obi of the Labour Party.
Buhari "won" the 2015 and 2019 election with far less 30 million voters.
Let the Pastors and Christian clergy lead the campaign to install Peter Obi and nobody can stop them...this is the Gospel!
We must do everything possible to ensure Peter Obi becomes the next President of Nigeria for the sake of Nigerian people.
It contradicts the "New Nigeria" message you intended by emphasizing identity politics.
Instead of projecting a united movement, it looks like a political transaction between blocs.
it paint ideologycal dissonance.
Your campaign graphic misses the mark.
It puts Nigeria's divisions at the center: a green South and red North merging on one road.
The mosque imagery and red color scheme make the message feel more religious and regional than national.
A state of emergency should be declared in South East Nigeria not for security, politics, or infrastructure, but for eradicating the culture of victimhood.
Its getting embarrassing....
Dangote came to Liberia with plans to establish a cement manufacturing company. Do you know what reportedly happened? He informed the Liberian government that his investment would create more than 1,000 jobs for Liberians. However, it was reported that one of his conditions was that the existing cement companies operating in the country should no longer remain in the market, as he was willing and financially capable of acquiring them so that he could become the sole major operator.
The Liberian government reportedly rejected the idea, maintaining that competition is essential for a healthy economy and that no investor would be granted a monopoly, regardless of the size of the investment. Consequently, the proposal did not proceed.
I strongly believe that similar strategies have been used to weaken competitors in Nigeria such as Ibeto Cement. Business Competition benefits consumers and strengthens industries. The Igbo business culture, on the other hand, has long been known for embracing competition, innovation, and enterprise. An Igbo entrepreneur typically thrives in a competitive environment and succeeds through hard work and determination rather than seeking monopoly control.
Without monopoly Dangote may not be in this level today.
Since signing Mbappe for free, Real Madrid have turned getting the best players for free or peanuts into a habit.
Clubs beware: if your star player isn't renewing his contract, check if he's been taking Spanish lessons.
@FellyJay91364@nifemioguntoye You have no problem with documentation. Your real problem is seeing other Africans succeed where you have failed. That's what truly seems to bother you.
@tkkaule@nifemioguntoye You mean you have a problem with Black nationals? The issue is administrative lapses not nationality. Are all South Africans documented? This anti foreigner sentiment is a hangover from apartheid. directing frustration toward other Africans instead of confronting the real issues.
@PeaceChijioke2@mrlurvy It's a convenient way of defending the lack of it. Obi is vying for the number one public office in the country. If he seeks votes from educated voters, they would need to know his ideas and analyze them in order to make an informed decision. Ignoring that is a shameful stance
over the FRC code under Buhari he urged hismembers to register with political parties and collect voter cards, Buhari removed the FRC Secretary Jim Obazee and suspended the code within 48 hours. Why? buhari clearly interpreted it as a threat to his second term reelection
The argument using Kwara and Benue to dismiss the political influence of Bishop Oyedepo and Pastor Paul Enenche is flawed . These men lead massive national ministries that extend far beyond their states of origin, where they don’t even reside.
Bishop Oyedepo is from Kwara State. Pastor Paul Enenche is from Benue. Both men were critics of the APC led government under Buhari. Despite this, APC won in Benue and Kwara State. Asides that Living Faith is one of the largest churches in Nigeria with its members predominantly Yoruba. If we are to base your logic on what you wrote, then APC isn’t supposed to win the southwest. Both Oyedepo and Enenche were Obi supporters.
SW is a mixture of both Christians, Muslims and Traditionalists and the Muslims got the numbers too. If you think that Adeboye’s opposition to Tinubu will make Tinubu lose 20% of the SW votes, then your argument again is poorly reasoned because it ignores the religious demographics of the voters.
So your argument that religious leaders control their members is flawed. Pastors influence their members based on religious doctrines but not politics.
Adeboye’s RCCG has even wider national reach.
Pastors don’t control members like robots, but claiming they only influence doctrine, not politics, is unrealistic. Adeboye clearly understands the power he wields. In 2017, after announcing his resignation as RCCG head