ATIKU ABUBAKAR: GIVE HIM A PLACE TO STAND, SUPPORT HIM, AND NIGERIA WILL RISE.

Archimedes once startled antiquity with a sentence so simple yet so subversive that it still unsettles power centuries later: “Give me a place to stand, and I will move the world.” To any student of science, his name is not strange. Archimedes of Syracuse was the mind that bent nature to reason, the thinker who decoded buoyancy in a bath, calculated the value of pi with astonishing precision, and designed machines that held invading empires at bay. He did not ask for applause. He asked for a fulcrum. He understood leverage, balance, and the tyranny of wrong placement.

History remembered Archimedes not because he ruled men, but because he understood systems.

Nigeria today groans under weight. Not the absence of resources, but the misplacement of priorities. Not the lack of intelligence, but the poverty of policy empathy. Not the shortage of talent, but the exhaustion that comes when governance becomes an experiment conducted on a hungry population. The nation does not lack strength; it lacks leverage. It lacks a place to stand.

That is precisely the question Atiku Abubakar is determined to answer.

Each time I listen to Atiku, I see a man settled in his mind and sure-footed in his conviction that Nigeria can be made great if the right things are rightly done. There is a calm that accompanies clarity. He does not speak like someone auditioning for applause; he speaks like someone who has already measured the load and located the fulcrum. His confidence is not theatrical. It is architectural.

Like Archimedes, Atiku is not obsessed with shouting at the weight. He is concerned with positioning the lever.

Set this against the present order under the APC and Bola Tinubu, and the contrast is stark. What Nigerians have endured is governance by pressure, not by principle. Policies rolled out without compassion. Reforms announced without buffers. Citizens instructed to endure pain today for relief that never arrives tomorrow. Subsidy removal without social protection. Currency upheaval without production revival. A government fluent in macroeconomic jargon while households drown in microeconomic despair.

Here the Socratic questions insist on answers. For whom is governance designed? For spreadsheets or for people? For markets or for mothers? For theories or for traders? When reform becomes an endurance contest for the poor, it ceases to be reform. It becomes cruelty wearing the mask of courage.

Atiku’s worldview stands in moral opposition to this emptiness. His politics is shaped by empathy refined through experience. He has governed at the centre, built enterprises across sectors, negotiated Nigeria’s diversity, and learned that reform without human consideration is merely punishment in policy clothing. His manifesto is not a pamphlet of promises; it is a systems document. Jobs through production, not propaganda. Federal restructuring to unlock local energy. Education as investment, not charity. Social protection as duty, not afterthought.

Where APC programmes have multiplied anguish, Atiku’s agenda seeks relief. Where Tinubu’s reforms demand sacrifice without consent, Atiku insists on reform with inclusion. One governs as if citizens are expendable variables. The other governs as if citizens are the very reason government exists.

This is not a contest of personalities. It is a contest of philosophies. Do we continue with governance that treats suffering as collateral damage, or do we choose leadership that recognises suffering as a failure requiring urgent correction? Socrates warned that an unexamined life is not worth living; an unexamined policy is not worth enforcing.

Atiku Abubakar is not flawless. No serious leader is. But he is prepared. He has absorbed betrayal without bitterness, defeat without despair, and distortion without retreat. His persistence is not obsession; it is responsibility. It is the discipline of a man who understands that nations are not rescued in moments, but rebuilt through sustained clarity.

Nigeria today is like a stalled engine with immense power locked inside it. What is required is not more shouting, not more slogans, not more sermons delivered to empty stomachs. What is required is the right place to stand.

History rewards societies that recognise the lever when it appears. But it is unforgiving to those who recognise clarity and still choose hesitation. Moments like this demand more than observation; they demand alignment. They require citizens to lend their weight to ideas capable of lifting the nation.

Atiku Abubakar is asking Nigerians not for blind loyalty, but for thoughtful support. Support grounded in reason, empathy, and the shared conviction that Nigeria can be governed better than it is today. To support him is to stand with the belief that poverty is not destiny, that suffering is not policy, and that leadership can once again mean responsibility rather than rhetoric. Nigeria must recognise the fulcrum, give him the place to stand, and support the man prepared to move the nation.

Aare Amerijoye DOT.B
Director General,
The Narrative Force

Aare Amerijoye Donald Olalekan Temitope Bowofade (DOT.B) is a Nigerian political strategist, public intellectual, and writer. He serves as the Director-General of The Narrative Force (TNF), a strategic communication and political-education organisation committed to shaping ideas, narratives, and democratic consciousness in Nigeria.An indigene of Ekiti State, he was born in Osogbo, then Oyo State, now Osun State, and currently resides in Ekiti State. His political and civic engagement spans several decades. In the 1990s, he was actively involved in Nigeria’s human-rights and pro-democracy struggles, participating in organisations such as Human Rights Africa and the Nigerianity Movement among many others, where he worked under the leadership of Dr. Tunji Abayomi during the nation’s fight for democratic restoration.Between 2000 and 2002, he served as Assistant Organising Secretary of Ekiti Progressives and the Femi Falana Front, under Barrister Femi Falana (SAN), playing a key role in grassroots mobilisation, civic education, and progressive political advocacy.He has since served in government and party politics in various capacities, including Senior Special Assistant to the Ekiti State Governor on Political Matters and Inter-Party Relations, Secretary to the Local Government, and Special Assistant on Youth Mobilisation and Strategy. At the national level, he has been a member of various nationally constituted party and electoral committees, including the PDP Presidential Campaign Council Security Committee (2022) and the Ondo State 2024 election committee.Currently, he is a member of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) and serves as Secretary of the Ekiti State ADC Strategic Committee, where he plays a central role in party structuring, strategy, and grassroots coordination.Aare Amerijoye writes extensively on governance, leadership ethics, party politics, and national renewal. His essays and commentaries have been published in Nigerian Tribune, Punch, The Guardian, THISDAY, TheCable, and leading digital platforms. His work blends philosophical depth with strategic clarity, advancing principled politics anchored on truth, justice, and moral courage.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent News

Trending News

Editor's Picks

THE AUTOPSY WE MUST NEVER CONDUCT

Aare Amerijoye DOT.B. If we will not like gathering in 2027 to conduct a political postmortem, dissecting how victory slipped through our fingers, how history brushed past us but refused to embrace us, then the time for lamentation must give way to mobilisation. Reflection without reorganisation is self-deception. Memory without structure is ritual mourning. Politics,...

ATIKU ABUBAKAR: A BEACON OF NIGERIAN LEADERSHIP EXCELLENCE

Aare Amerijoye DOT.B Nigeria stands at a defining hour. Inflation has thinned household tables. Youth unemployment has dimmed once-bright ambitions. The naira has endured turbulence. Businesses strain under policy uncertainty. In such a moment, leadership cannot be experimental. It cannot be rhetorical. It must be competent, courageous and economically literate. In this charged national atmosphere,...

Nigeria’s Democracy at Risk: Senate’s Rejection of Mandatory Electronic Transmission Reopens Door to Electoral Manipulation

By Kunle Oshobi In what critics are calling a devastating blow to Nigeria’s electoral integrity, the Nigerian Senate has rejected proposals to make the electronic transmission of election results mandatory, opting instead to retain ambiguous language that leaves critical loopholes open for potential manipulation ahead of the 2027 general elections. During the clause-by-clause consideration of...

NIGERIANS MUST REJECT SENATE’S TECH ILLITERACY AS ELECTORAL POLICY

The Akpabio-led Senate is fast proving itself to be an anti-democratic contraption. I have listened carefully to the arguments advanced by the Senate President Godswill Akpabio and the Senate spokesperson and other proponents of retaining the discretionary provisions of 2022 Electoral Act on electronic transmission of results rather than upholding the mandatory provisions of the...

Must Read

©2026. The Narrative Force. All Rights Reserved