How did Nigeria arrive at this troubling crossroads where power is sustained by deception and governance has, in many cases, been reduced to a vehicle for personal gain?
In today’s Nigeria, politics appears less about service and more about survival that is often driven by manipulation, patronage, and empty promises. Campaign assurances are delivered with confidence, yet too often lack the intention or structure for fulfillment. Elections are contested not on clear ideology or measurable vision, but on influence and rhetoric. What should be a democratic process increasingly feels like a carefully managed cycle of illusion.
Public office, ideally a platform for national development, has in many instances become a gateway to private enrichment. Resources meant for collective progress are diverted, while millions of Nigerians contend daily with economic hardship and limited access to basic services.
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The contrast is stark. While public officials seek advanced medical care abroad, ordinary citizens rely on under-resourced healthcare systems, sometimes with tragic consequences from preventable conditions. This is more than inequality, it reflects a deeper failure in leadership responsibility.
Equally concerning is how this dysfunction has become normalized. Deception is no longer hidden; it is often rationalized. Accountability is resisted, and dissenting voices are frequently dismissed or labelled as hostile. Yet, in any functioning democracy, scrutiny is not a threat, it is a necessity.
The political landscape today suggests a growing focus on acquiring and retaining power rather than using it for public good. Governance risks being overshadowed by control, and leadership by self-interest. The outcome is a nation abundant in resources but constrained by direction and purpose.
However, responsibility does not rest solely with leaders. Systems endure when they are tolerated. When short-term incentives are accepted in place of long-term progress, the cycle is reinforced. When votes are exchanged for immediate gain, the future is compromised.
Nigeria belongs to all its citizens and not just a privileged few. For meaningful change to occur, Nigerians must begin to assert that ownership through active participation, informed decision-making, and a refusal to accept mediocrity.
This is a defining moment, one that calls for a rejection of politics built on deception and a demand for accountability. It is a time to insist on leadership grounded in integrity, competence, and a genuine commitment to public service.
The path forward requires courage from those who lead and from those who choose their leaders. Nigeria must rise above apathy, resist manipulation, and reclaim the true essence of its democracy.
Enough, indeed, must be enough.
By Festus Edovia, ANIPR, FICM











