This may be one of the weakest political arguments ever.
Nigeria is not a family business where leadership is inherited or validated by children.
The qualifications for leading a country are competence, character, vision, integrity, and performance, not whether your children appear in campaign videos.
By this logic, every politician whose children avoid politics is unqualified for public office.
Many great leaders around the world kept their families away from politics. Others involved them heavily. Neither proves competence nor incompetence.
The real question is simple:
Can the candidate improve the lives of Nigerians?
Everything else is a distraction.
Nigeria has received executive orders for investors, tax reforms, and business reforms.
When will Nigerians receive one for their safety?
Investors need security.
Farmers need security.
Students need security.
Travellers need security.
Without security, every other reform is built on shaky ground.
Just asking.
As the World Cup Begins Without Nigeria
As the World Cup begins today across three nations, I identify with our teeming football followers and urge them not to be despondent that Nigeria is not participating, despite the abundant talent in our land.
Our failure to participate on the global stage is not due to a deficit of talent; it is a direct consequence of a deficit in leadership, planning, and institutional support.
The task of building a better Nigeria rests primarily on the shoulders of the younger generation. Do not watch the World Cup with despair; rather, see it as a reminder of where Nigeria ought to be. We must move our country from being a nation of mere consumers of global entertainment to a nation of proud producers and competitors.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
Despite Three Years of Tinubu's Food Emergency, Nigeria hungriest ranking index declined to among the worst nations globally.
In celebrating his supposed successful three years in office, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu listed some achievements in the agricultural sector, firstly, his declaration of emergency on food security in July 2023, followed by the acquisition of 2,000 tractors and 9,000 farming implements, stated as Nigeria's largest agricultural mechanisation programme.
Yet the outcome of this has been the opposite. Nigeria's hunger index has worsened significantly. Nigeria's hunger index ranking was 103rd out of 123 countries surveyed in 2022/2023, and this figure had since worsened to 115th out of 123 countries surveyed in 2025/2026. Consequently, Nigeria is now classified among the world's most hungry or food-insecure nations in the world, with the World Bank forecasting that 33 million Nigerians could experience severe hunger.
In fact, Nigeria has the highest number of hungry people in the world.
I have always maintained that Nigeria have no reason to be seen among the hungriest nations in the world when we have fast, uncultivated land in the north, which is our greatest asset today.
We must transparently invest in Agricultural production, which will guarantee food security, but create huge employment.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
An intentional president should produce intentional results.
If the policies are intentional, then the inflation is intentional.
If the nairaโs collapse is intentional, then the hardship is intentional.
If the rising cost of living is intentional, then Nigerians are intentionally bearing the consequences.
The real question is not whether a president is intentional.
The real question is whether his intentions are translating into a better quality of life for ordinary Nigerians.
Citizens donโt eat intentions.
They live with outcomes.