WHEN A NATION BLEEDS, THE PEOPLE MUST CHOOSE

Why Tinubu Has Failed, Atiku Is the Answer, and ADC Is the Vehicle

Aare Amerijoye DOT.B

There is a stark truth that no amount of presidential media handlers can wish away: Nigeria is bleeding. Not metaphorically. Not rhetorically. Nigeria is bleeding in the literal, daily, devastating sense of the word.

Citizens are being murdered on highways. Armed robbers operate with impunity near police checkpoint. Farmers cannot return to their lands. Families cannot bury their dead in peace. And in Abuja, the handlers of power argue about optics.

The failure of the Tinubu administration is not incidental. It is structural. It is ideological. And it is, above all, a failure of character.

Every government exists for one fundamental purpose: to integrate the social, political and economic systems of a nation in a plan that serves all its citizens. By this elementary standard, the APC has failed comprehensively, catastrophically and without remorse.

“Tinubu’s APC has had nearly three years to govern. What it has delivered is not reform. It is organised suffering imposed on a people who deserved better.”

What has nearly three years of APC federal governance delivered? Fuel subsidy removal without a safety net. An exchange rate that has reduced the purchasing power of ordinary Nigerians to near zero. Electricity tariffs that have strangled small businesses across every state.

In Lagos alone ,Tinubu’s own political base, the city he governed for eight years and claims as his greatest achievement , traders in Balogun and Alaba confirm turnover collapses of over 60 per cent since the subsidy removal. The city that was supposed to be his monument has become his indictment. A security architecture so compromised that bandits negotiate with state governments while soldiers die without adequate equipment. And a presidency that responds to mass suffering with photoshoots and foreign junkets.

The figures are not fiction. Nigeria’s inflation remained above 30 per cent for consecutive months. The naira, once trading at under 500 to the dollar, collapsed past 1,500 before any meaningful intervention.

More than 133 million Nigerians live in multidimensional poverty, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. These are not opposition numbers. These are the government’s own numbers. The APC cannot escape them by attacking those who quote them.

“More than 133 million Nigerians live in multidimensional poverty. These are not opposition numbers. These are the government’s own numbers.”

Into this crisis walks a man who has spent decades preparing for the moment Nigeria now desperately needs him. Atiku Abubakar is not merely a candidate. He is a correction. A course change. A return to the foundational idea that government must serve the governed rather than the other way around.

His economic vision is not borrowed from textbooks. It is drawn from lived engagement with markets, enterprise and the practical science of job creation. As Vice President between 1999 and 2007, he championed privatisation reforms that attracted over 2 billion dollars in foreign direct investment into the telecommunications and energy sectors alone, laying the infrastructure upon which Nigeria’s modern economy was built.”As Vice President, Atiku attracted over 2 billion dollars in foreign direct investment. He did not just talk about development. He delivered it.”

As a private citizen, he built the American University of Nigeria in Yola , an institution that has trained over 10,000 graduates. He understands, in the way that only builders understand, that governance is not a ceremony. It is a delivery contract between leaders and the led.

Critics will ask: why the African Democratic Congress? The answer is simple and it is historical. The ADC represents what the two dominant parties have catastrophically failed to offer , a clean slate, a fresh covenant, and a structure not yet corrupted by the recycled patronage networks that have hollowed out the PDP and turned the APC into a vehicle for elite self-enrichment.

Registering with the ADC is not an act of desperation. It is an act of deliberate political intelligence. It is the choice of Nigerians who refuse to keep doing the same thing and expecting a different result. The platform is clean. The candidate is tested. The mission is national rescue

Registering with the ADC is not desperation. It is deliberate political intelligence ,the choice of Nigerians who refuse to keep repeating the same costly mistake.”

The APC’s governance has been one of sustained division: North against South, elite against masses, the connected against the vulnerable. Atiku’s entire political philosophy, by contrast, has been anchored on unity as infrastructure.

He has said, consistently and credibly, that no zone of Nigeria is his enemy. That no tribe is beneath his governance. That no religion disqualifies a citizen from the full benefit of federal power. That is not a slogan. That is a governing principle forged across decades of national engagement.

The 2027 election will be decided not by those who remain comfortable in their political silos, but by those who make the harder, braver, more consequential choice to step into unfamiliar territory for the sake of national survival.

We are motivated by evidence. And the evidence is unambiguous: Tinubu’s APC has had its chance, and it has squandered it at the expense of every Nigerian family.

Democracy is not a philosophy seminar. Democracy means getting things done — for the well-being and security of citizens, in every community, in every ramification.

The APC has had its season. It has produced suffering on an industrial scale. The obligation now falls on every patriotic Nigerian to make a different choice, register under a different banner and fight for a different future.

Nigeria deserves a government that gets things done. Nigeria deserves Atiku. Nigeria deserves the ADC.

Aare Amerijoye DOT.B
Director General,
The Narrative Force
Aare Atayese of Odo Oro Ekiti

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.

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