
Aare Amerijoye DOT.B
Nigeria has entered a season where the people are no longer impressed by press statements, propaganda, or dramatic speeches. Hunger is now louder than political explanations. Hardship has become too stubborn for cosmetic governance. And when a nation gets to this point, history begins to move with cold clarity.
That is why one conclusion is quietly forming across markets, campuses, mosques, churches, boardrooms, motor parks, and living rooms:
Atiku Abubakar is the next President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Not because it is a slogan, but because Nigeria is returning to common sense, and common sense is returning Nigeria to seriousness.
Eleanor Roosevelt once delivered a timeless truth that separates steady leadership from emotional performance:
“No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.” — Eleanor Roosevelt
Atiku has been attacked, mocked, misrepresented, and deliberately targeted for years, yet he has refused to shrink into bitterness or distraction. He has remained focused, disciplined, and politically structured. In a country where many collapse under pressure, Atiku has grown tougher under it. That kind of stability is not weakness, it is preparation.
Roosevelt also reminded the world:
“The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.” — Eleanor Roosevelt
But Nigeria has learnt the hard way that dreams without structure are noise. The difference between hope and rescue is organisation. Atiku’s strength is not only belief, it is architecture: alliances, reach, experience, negotiation capacity, and national spread.
Gertrude Stein offered a warning that now reads like a mirror for our national condition:
“Everybody gets so much information all day long that they lose their common sense.” — Gertrude Stein
Nigeria is drowning in arguments, distractions, and online drama, yet the average citizen grows poorer, businesses are collapsing, and families are breaking. We are overloaded with information but starved of results. The people are tired, and the nation is bleeding.
Nigeria is not looking for perfection. Nigeria is looking for rescue.
So the electorate is returning to the only weapon propaganda cannot defeat: common sense.
Common sense says Nigeria cannot afford trial-and-error again.
Common sense says the next President must have national acceptability and coalition strength.
Common sense says you don’t rebuild a battered nation with vibes, you rebuild with competence.
This is why the fear of Atiku is rising in certain quarters. Not because he is noisy, but because he is solid. Not because he is trendy, but because he is tested. Not because he seeks conflict, but because he can unite forces across North and South into a winning rescue coalition.
2027 will not be a beauty contest. It will be a referendum on suffering.
And in a country this exhausted, the people will not vote for entertainment. They will vote for relief. They will vote for capacity. They will vote for leadership that understands the weight of Nigeria and has the strength to carry it.
That leader is Atiku Abubakar.
2027 is settled. Atiku is Nigeria’s next President.
Aare Amerijoye DOT.B
Director General,
The Narrative Force
