AGBADO SUPPORTER

4.5K posts

AGBADO SUPPORTER

AGBADO SUPPORTER

@Prince1262372

Katılım Mart 2025
235 Takip Edilen15 Takipçiler
SEYILAW
SEYILAW@seyilaw1·
Ladies and Gentlemen, It's the 22nd of June, and it is my birthday. Thank you for sticking with me all through the years. Special thanks to God Almighty for everything I am. HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME. SEYILAW.
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AGBADO SUPPORTER
AGBADO SUPPORTER@Prince1262372·
@officialABAT I thought these guys should have thanked Obi instead of these insults. Resigning would have helped the president conserve the little energy left to manage his old age. You are not doing well and you are forcing yourself on Nigerians to lead them. What kind of leadership is that?
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AGBADO SUPPORTER
AGBADO SUPPORTER@Prince1262372·
@SundayDareSD You are the one hailing and praising him. You have one vote. Nigerians will "pour" too.
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Sunday Dare,CON
Sunday Dare,CON@SundayDareSD·
Recently, I was on Channels TV Hard Copy. The questions rained in but the answers poured out. President Tinubu is unrivaled in his achievements placing the Nigerian economy on sound footing. Drowning the noise of the Opposition. Listen : Governance: 'Tinubu Has Done Well youtu.be/9f_wtUXnGGs?si… via @YouTube
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AGBADO SUPPORTER
AGBADO SUPPORTER@Prince1262372·
@RealQueenBee__ @abati1990 belongs to the corrupt establishment. You don't expect him to be happy with Obi. Evil and good have no company to keep. His bitterness will last a long time as long as Obi lives!
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Queen Bee 👑 🐝
Queen Bee 👑 🐝@RealQueenBee__·
Mr Ruben Abati called those supporting Peter Obi "Paid Propagandists." He also called out Ndi-Igbo and the Obidients. What's Peter Obi's crime???
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Nsima 💋
Nsima 💋@nsimacoaching·
Who is Obi deceiving?
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AGBADO SUPPORTER
AGBADO SUPPORTER@Prince1262372·
@tosino52 No, it is you and your family that need psychiatric evaluation for not being in touch with your brains.
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Oluwatosin Ronke
Oluwatosin Ronke@tosino52·
Obi calling for PBAT resignation is laughable and it means nothing but one thing, Obi is empty upstairs!
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AGBADO SUPPORTER
AGBADO SUPPORTER@Prince1262372·
@DailyPostNGR Every Dick and Tom, imbec:le ijiot want to farm fame with Obi. Imagine this smelly rat 😂
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AGBADO SUPPORTER
AGBADO SUPPORTER@Prince1262372·
@Onsogbu No need asking if your children did, just remembered lizards don't keep families.
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Senior Pastor Okezie James Atañi
Did any of Peter Obi's children wish him "HAPPY FATHER'S DAY" yesterday? Seems the trust they have for him as a father has dwindled to a point of no return He said it himself that the children don't trust him o.
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Àkànní
Àkànní@idofoi·
Peter Obi, you embarrassed yourself with this tweet about Sir Keir Starmer’s resignation. If you had taken the time to understand the real reasons, you would have been the last person to use it against President Tinubu. Starmer did not resign out of pure noble accountability. He was forced out by heavy internal rebellion after terrible local election losses and a strong by-election win by his rival Andy Burnham in Makerfield. Labour MPs lost confidence in him, the same way Labour Party in Nigeria lost confidence in you, Peter Obi. They feared a total defeat, with deep divisions over welfare cuts, immigration, and foreign policy. The UK’s parliamentary system simply allows quick removal of leaders under pressure; it was not the clean, honourable exit you tried to paint. The same pattern applies to your leadership of Nigeria’s Labour Party. Just as Starmer ran the British party into crisis with poor results and internal fights, you, Peter Obi’s style, contributed to fracturing the LP after its 2023 momentum. Leadership battles, defections, and allegations tore the party apart, leading you to abandon it for the ADC in 2025. While your supporters blame old-guard politicians, the truth is your handling left the party in ruins. Using Starmer’s forced resignation as a weapon reveals more about your selective criticism than real political wisdom. Reason why you will never be President...
Peter Obi@PeterObi

Owning Up to Leadership Failures and Political Responsibility This morning, I listened to the British Prime Minister’s speech announcing his planned resignation in July. As a keen observer of global politics, my primary interest lies in examining what successful nations do right and the structural factors that cause others to lag or struggle with governance and development. The Prime Minister’s planned resignation comes amid mounting public frustration over a stagnant economy, a worsening cost-of-living crisis, and a perceived failure to honour key campaign pledges. Looking inward in our dear country, we can recall our own situation. Before 2015, our President on several occasions championed the call for the then President Goodluck Jonathan to resign over economic hardship and insecurity affecting Nigerians. During the Chibok school kidnapping incident, he demanded the immediate resignation of President Jonathan, arguing that the government had failed in its most fundamental duty of protecting lives. During the 2023 election campaign, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu made several promises, including improved electricity supply. He also challenged the electorate not to vote for him for a second term if he failed to deliver on those commitments—particularly in providing stable power, fighting corruption, and improving the welfare of Nigerians. At present, however, these conditions have worsened. Electricity supply remains unreliable, insecurity has intensified in many areas, including kidnappings, and economic hardship has deepened rather than eased. Similar concerns are reflected across other critical sectors such as security, infrastructure, transportation, and anti-corruption efforts, all of which have regressed. We are in the worst possible condition. I, therefore, join Nigerians of goodwill in calling for the resignation of the President over monumental failure in governance. Such a gesture would help enthrone a political culture rooted in accountability and responsibility, rather than further entrenching impunity. It would also send a powerful message that public office is a sacred trust, not an entitlement, and help build a society in which future leaders understand that failure carries consequences. Only by ending the culture of impunity can we secure a better future for the society our children will inherit in a New Nigeria that is possible. -PO

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AGBADO SUPPORTER
AGBADO SUPPORTER@Prince1262372·
@DailyPostNGR 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 APCee wing of OHANEZE. We the true and sensible OHANEZE NDI IGBO dissociate ourselves from this. We are solidly behind OBI.
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Olatunde Isaac
Olatunde Isaac@Official_Isaaco·
Dear Mr. Peter Obi, Many of us were embarrassed and disappointed by your call for President Bola Tinubu's resignation following the resignation of the UK's Prime Minister. The United Kingdom operates a parliamentary system where a prime minister serves at the pleasure of Parliament and can be forced out after losing political support. Nigeria, however, operates a presidential system with a fixed constitutional tenure, separation of powers, and clearly defined mechanisms for removing a president. For someone who aspires to occupy Nigeria's highest office, this comparison is not merely flawed; it reflects either a troubling misunderstanding of the Nigerian constitutional order or a willingness to exploit public frustration with arguments that do not withstand even basic constitutional scrutiny. A presidential candidate should know the difference between Westminster and Abuja. A statesman should educate citizens on constitutional realities, not peddle misleading analogies for political applause. You goofed again, Peter!
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AGBADO SUPPORTER
AGBADO SUPPORTER@Prince1262372·
@SundayDareSD Assistants to political office holders like writing looooooong notes on very simple and short issues. This case is: "RESIGN because you have FAILED" . SIMPLE. Why the long note? You couldn't show why he shouldn't resign, rather you're busy dribbling yourself like Pedro NETO.
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Sunday Dare,CON
Sunday Dare,CON@SundayDareSD·
Call for Resignation: Peter Obi cuts a pitiable figure. Needs Schooling. His latest call for President Bola Tinubu to resign is not the intervention of a statesman. It is the outburst of a politician who appears increasingly unable to distinguish between political opposition and constitutional reality. For months, Nigerians have watched Obi drift steadily from the measured and restrained image that once earned him admiration across sections of the country. What we see today is something entirely different: a perpetual agitator whose politics now revolves around pessimism, alarmism and endless declarations of national collapse. His demand that President Tinubu should resign exposes a profound misunderstanding of the very office he seeks to occupy. Nigeria is not a parliamentary system where governments rise and fall on votes of confidence. Nigeria is a constitutional presidential democracy. Presidents are elected for fixed terms and leave office through elections, constitutional processes, incapacity or the expiration of their mandate. This is elementary civic knowledge. Yet Peter Obi, a former governor and presidential candidate, chose to ignore this basic reality in favour of cheap political theatre. It raises a troubling question: if a man seeking the presidency cannot demonstrate respect for the constitutional foundations of the office, why should Nigerians trust him with that office? Leadership is not measured by the frequency of complaints. It is measured by judgment, composure and the ability to offer solutions. On each of these counts, Obi's recent conduct has been disappointing. Every challenge facing Nigeria becomes, in Obi's telling, proof of total failure. Every difficulty becomes a national catastrophe. Every setback becomes an excuse for outrage. Yet when the economy records growth, when foreign reserves rise, when revenues improve, when infrastructure projects advance, or when security forces record successes, Obi suddenly loses his voice. His politics has become a politics of selective outrage. A serious national leader acknowledges both challenges and progress. A serious leader offers alternatives. A serious leader understands that governing a nation of over 200 million people requires more than tweets, soundbites and perpetual criticism. Increasingly, Peter Obi appears more comfortable leading online outrage than leading serious national conversations. There was a time when many Nigerians viewed him as a credible presidential contender. That perception is fading rapidly. With each reckless statement, he reinforces the impression that he is less interested in governing Nigeria than in constantly protesting Nigeria. The presidency is not an activist platform. It is not a protest movement. It is not a permanent grievance machine. It demands maturity, balance, perspective and constitutional discipline. By calling for President Tinubu's resignation, Peter Obi has done more damage to his own presidential credentials than any political opponent could have done. He has revealed a level of impatience, poor judgment and political desperation that should concern even his most loyal supporters. At some point, every politician must decide whether he wishes to be a serious contender for power or merely a professional critic of those who hold it. Peter Obi's latest outburst suggests he has made his choice. The tragedy is that he may not realise it. @officialABAT @OfficialAPCNg @DavidsOffor
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Nsima 💋
Nsima 💋@nsimacoaching·
Those behind the kidnapping business in Nigeria
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AGBADO SUPPORTER retweetledi
Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
Owning Up to Leadership Failures and Political Responsibility This morning, I listened to the British Prime Minister’s speech announcing his planned resignation in July. As a keen observer of global politics, my primary interest lies in examining what successful nations do right and the structural factors that cause others to lag or struggle with governance and development. The Prime Minister’s planned resignation comes amid mounting public frustration over a stagnant economy, a worsening cost-of-living crisis, and a perceived failure to honour key campaign pledges. Looking inward in our dear country, we can recall our own situation. Before 2015, our President on several occasions championed the call for the then President Goodluck Jonathan to resign over economic hardship and insecurity affecting Nigerians. During the Chibok school kidnapping incident, he demanded the immediate resignation of President Jonathan, arguing that the government had failed in its most fundamental duty of protecting lives. During the 2023 election campaign, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu made several promises, including improved electricity supply. He also challenged the electorate not to vote for him for a second term if he failed to deliver on those commitments—particularly in providing stable power, fighting corruption, and improving the welfare of Nigerians. At present, however, these conditions have worsened. Electricity supply remains unreliable, insecurity has intensified in many areas, including kidnappings, and economic hardship has deepened rather than eased. Similar concerns are reflected across other critical sectors such as security, infrastructure, transportation, and anti-corruption efforts, all of which have regressed. We are in the worst possible condition. I, therefore, join Nigerians of goodwill in calling for the resignation of the President over monumental failure in governance. Such a gesture would help enthrone a political culture rooted in accountability and responsibility, rather than further entrenching impunity. It would also send a powerful message that public office is a sacred trust, not an entitlement, and help build a society in which future leaders understand that failure carries consequences. Only by ending the culture of impunity can we secure a better future for the society our children will inherit in a New Nigeria that is possible. -PO
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Bayo Onanuga, OON, CON
Bayo Onanuga, OON, CON@aonanuga1956·
STATEHOUSE STATEMENT Obi’s call for President Tinubu’s resignation childish and an unwarranted distraction Peter Obi’s latest comments calling for President Bola Tinubu’s resignation, based on a comparison with the British prime minister's voluntary exit, are not only misplaced but also reflect a selective and distorted view of Nigeria’s realities since 2023.  His view is also simplistic, as is often the case anytime he opens his mouth. Obi forgets our country does not run a parliamentary system of government like the UK. We run a presidential system, with the president elected to a fixed 4-year term. The people of Ekiti State and the senatorial constituents in Nasarawa, Enugu, Ondo, and Rivers have just delivered a resounding victory for President Tinubu and his party. The election results, some early referendum of sorts, show that President Tinubu and his party are popular with Nigerians. This should be more concerning for Peter Obi and his new Special Purpose Vehicle, NDC, as we move towards the January 2027 election. Obi should wait until the presidential election to know what the people think of Tinubu’s government. Moving to use X to harangue the President out of office is off the mark and anti-democratic. It is important to note that President Tinubu did not inherit a country in perfect shape. The security challenges we face today are longstanding and deeply rooted. Yet under President Tinubu’s leadership, Nigeria has made significant, measurable progress. Hundreds of people have been rescued from captivity, including high-profile operations in Borno and the Northwest. Our gallant troops have neutralised terrorist kingpins, sometimes with the help of our foreign allies. Over 15,000 terrorists have been taken off the streets and forests, and security operations have intensified nationwide. President Tinubu has not only sustained but also expanded investments in security by deploying advanced technologies and drones, and by appointing a Special Adviser on Homeland Security to ensure a holistic approach. These actions demonstrate commitment, not failure. It is laughable that Obi, who, as governor, was a colossal failure, unable to secure lives and property in his small state of Anambra, as documented by his successor, Willie Obiano, is now the one calling for President Tinubu’s resignation over security breaches in some parts of the country. On the economic front, Obi’s depiction of decline and his verdict that “We are in the worst possible condition” ignore verifiable data and global plaudits for President Tinubu’s economic and social policies. President Tinubu inherited what another successor of Peter Obi described as ‘a dead horse economy’. When he came on board in May 2023, President Tinubu introduced bold, courageous policies that his predecessors had shied away from. Since then,  the Nigerian economy has posted positive GDP growth every quarter, surpassing the global average. Trade surpluses have been recorded consistently, and foreign reserves have hit new highs—over $50 billion. Oil production has risen from less than one million barrels per day to about 1.8 million, reversing years of decline. Federation revenue is projected to hit over N30 trillion this year, far above the 2022 level of N7.7 trillion. By May this year, N15.7 trillion has already been collected, more than twice the entire revenue collected in 2022. State governments now have more resources to pursue development projects in education, infrastructure, health care, housing, and so on. The stock market has soared, with the All-Share Index rising from 50,000 to over 250,000, creating wealth for about 6 million Nigerian investors. The Naira-to-dollar exchange rate has been stable. Foreign Direct and Portfolio Investments are at record highs, reflecting renewed investor confidence, especially in the oil and gas sector.  President Tinubu has also set records in infrastructure delivery, building concrete roads that will last 100 years or more across all the country's geopolitical zones and actualising the Lagos-Calabar and Sokoto-Badagry superhighways, roads dreamt of for decades.  Unlike leaders before him, President Tinubu has proven not only to be a reform-minded and courageous leader but also an innovator, for instance, replacing expensive petrol and diesel with CNG and offering close to two million Nigerian tertiary students interest-free loans to pursue their education. Are conditions worsening in our country when, in three years of Tinubu’s leadership, we have recorded no disruption of the academic calendar by trade unions such as ASUU or NASU? That is one of President Tinubu’s campaign promises to our students: a four-year programme will be a four-year programme. It has been a promise well kept, which Obi, in his penchant for bad news, has never sung about and will never acknowledge. Concerning President Tinubu’s campaign promises on power supply, it is misleading for Peter Obi to parrot the claim that candidate Tinubu guaranteed 24-hour electricity for all. What he actually said on that occasion in Lagos and which Obi and his followers have consistently misquoted, for the sake of mischief, was:  “Whichever way, by all means necessary, you will have electricity, and you will not pay for estimated bills anymore. A promise made will be a promise kept. If I don’t keep the promise and I come for a second term, don’t vote for me—unless I give you adequate reasons why I couldn’t deliver.”  The first policy President Tinubu implemented upon taking office was to sign the Electricity Act, which enables states to generate, transmit, and distribute electricity independently of the centralised grid system. To end the fraudulent estimated billing, his administration has rolled out millions of prepaid meters and plans to install seven million more. Power generation is increasing. The government has intensified its provision of off-grid solar power to schools, hospitals, and markets in many parts of the country. The real challenge remains transmission infrastructure and sustainable pricing, which are now being addressed, to attract fresh investment into the sector. No one denies that Nigeria has challenges, especially regarding the high cost of living. But any honest politician will agree this is a global problem resulting from the tensions in the Middle East. Just recently, as inflation was receding in Nigeria, a disruption to the global economy occurred when America and Israel attacked Iran, and Iran responded by closing the Strait of Hormuz, creating disruption in the global supply system and high prices of many commodities, including crude oil.  Peter Obi’s call for President Tinubu’s resignation is childish and hollow. It is not a call to hold the leader accountable. It is merely a political grandstand and an unworthy distraction just hours after President Tinubu's party recorded resounding victories in the weekend polls.  Leadership is about determination to confront the challenges facing our country and the economy. President Tinubu focuses on solutions, not rhetoric—investing in reforms, stabilising the economy, improving security, and laying the groundwork for a more prosperous Nigeria. He is not waiting to learn from Bangladesh, Rwanda or Egypt. He has a team of thinkers and doers. And Nigeria, under him, has been an exemplar for other nations to copy. True leadership means staying the course, learning, adapting, and delivering results. President Tinubu has shown he is up to the task, and Nigeria is on the path to progress.  With his puerile tweet on X, we are now convinced that Peter Obi lives in his self-constructed echo chambers, where he reels off lie after lie to himself and believes his self-created reality about the situation in Nigeria. We sympathise with him. That reality he fantasises about is mostly a figment of his imagination. Bayo Onanuga   Special Adviser to the President   (Information & Strategy) June 22, 2026
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Indiscov
Indiscov@Iamindiscov·
My forever love and I are tying the knot!🔥 Nyra Indiscov 4th July 2026 Our hearts are bursting with joy and we’d love for you to come celebrate this beautiful new chapter with us 💕 Save the date & join the love party! 🎉 #NyraWedsIndiscov #WeddingVibes #4July2026 #TyingTheKnot
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Indiscov
Indiscov@Iamindiscov·
I'm marrying my third wife on 4 July. I am the one who disvirgined her, she is one of loves of my life. My number #3 Love is a beautiful thing 😍❤️
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AGBADO SUPPORTER
AGBADO SUPPORTER@Prince1262372·
Why is OBI feared this much? 😂
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Oyindamola🙄
Oyindamola🙄@dammiedammie35·
Ivory Coast - Côte d’Ivoire Germany - Deutschland Spain - Espana Netherlands - Holland Cape Verde - Cabo Verde Nigeria - ??
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