We complain and wait for another four years to repeat the cycle. It is time to stop that nonsensical cycle. We have to press the RESET button. We must restart Nigeria and begin to build the country of our dreams. We stand now at an opportune time to press that RESET button.
40
875
12
2,719
We must do so by rejecting those who have failed us so woefully in the past. We will choose a New Nigeria. A major problem is that we cannot predict what our leaders will ACTUALLY do when in power, and we appear to have no way to force them to deliver once they are in office.
5
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1,693
They make promises during their campaigns, but they fail to deliver on them. The problem is one of accountability. We need a way to hold leaders accountable when they are in office.
11
552
1
1,856
How? If we ask ourselves, what is the greatest fear that a politician really has? The answer is: removal from office. Our politicians hold on tenaciously to power, because the stakes are so high.
9
567
6
1,930
Any leader who knows that he or she can be removed from office will have no choice but to listen to the people and at least try to deliver good government. Therefore,
11
561
2
2,050
we can conclude that a major aspect of the leadership problem we have in Nigeria is because the leaders are not really afraid of being removed from office once they are voted in. They see the electorate as timid and docile.
5
527
4
1,872
Citizens have to use their constitutionally given and recognised powers to hold leaders accountable; whether it is by asking them to resign or by putting pressure on our elected representatives to proceed with impeachment processes against them.
6
523
3
1,769
These provisions are not there for decoration; they are tools to be used effectively in holding the feet of elected officials to the fire, all in the interest of good governance and a better life for the people.
6
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1
1,948
I wish to state that Nigeria’s rebirth trajectory is clear: it is anchored and driven by Nigerian youths. Seizing the Moment to Shape the Future should be your mantra and mission.
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2,289
Let me end these remarks by borrowing from The New York Times of July 12, 2015, advert placed by Josh Tetrick, the CEO and Founder of Hampton Creek, in the United States. Josh Tetrick’s letter was addressed to “Dear 23-year-old.”
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The second paragraph was an eye opener for me as a parent, politician, policy maker and mentor. It said:

Nov 25, 2022 · 7:17 PM UTC

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“And more than any generation before, you have a commitment to common good over individual gain – an ethos that reaches across traditional divisions such as race, ideology, partisanship”.
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You will agree with me those observations relate well to our gathering here today. In the mission to rescue Nigeria, there is no tribe, religion, or class. Indeed, there can be no conscientious objector. I thank you all. - PO
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Replying to @PeterObi
Oga rest
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Replying to @PeterObi
God bless u Mr President
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Replying to @PeterObi
We are behind you okwute
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Replying to @PeterObi
You are right sir
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Replying to @PeterObi
#BiafraExit and the release of @MaziNnamdiKanu is the only solution
Replying to @PeterObi
I believe in you even if I’m Yoruba, I think we need these pplc to believe they’re serving us not the other way round if you’re not good at your post you get kick out.. imagine the new naira note change, how much they use change color 🤦🏻‍♂️🤦🏻‍♂️
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Replying to @PeterObi
Some people want a Yoruba president others want an Hausa president while another say an Igbo president is what dey want another school of thought is on religious ground....Let's all vote a Nigerian I mean someone to represent humanity in Nigeria...NIB