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@WathaveIdone__
I like Portable Yansh 💯|Chelsea FC|| I annoy people for a living|| introvert || you are welcome 😊 Web Dev||
CORNrepublic Katılım Aralık 2012
351 Takip Edilen80 Takipçiler

@stats_feed Have you watched straw? Did you cry? Now imagine that her living condition is 1000% better than 95% of Nigeria population of over 220 million
That's how worse it is over here
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@ComrAbdulazeez @PeterObi Great not Geat, calm down and write properly, make Obi no give you BP 😭
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@PeterObi “You met with this, you met with that” so despicable of you.
Nigeria needs a a transparent and responsible leader not your type of leadership of nepotism.
Nigeria will be Geat Again.
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This morning, in Lagos, I met with the U.S. Consul General, Mr Rick Swart, where we discussed strengthening the bilateral relationship. We focused on promoting credible elections in Nigeria, ensuring they are free from interference, and fostering a space where all political parties, especially opposition parties can thrive, and contribute.
We also discussed trade and business opportunities between our countries. Accompanying me to the meeting was Dr Adefolaseye Adebomi Adebayo.
The discussion was very productive, and we are hopeful that, moving forward, Nigeria’s elections will be even more credible and transparent. -PO
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@obalola213 @UnkleAyo By then all your generation is gone cause after you are done serving tinubu you will serve his son seyi as slave that you are, ode oshi. You don't deserve Obi true true
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Datti said:
" Obi should have stayed to fix LP's problems"
What Obi knows (which Datti would admit, if he wasn't emotions driven) is that you can't fix problems designed by external plants.
When the problems you're facing are orchestrated by demonic infiltrations, your efforts to "fix" are dead on arrival.
This is the same reason the ADC exit was necessary. You will be so busy "fixing" party issues when the real work to be done is slipping away.
But I know better than to judge a Datti by a 4 mins interview.
He recommended Kwankwaso. When the decision was eventually made, he wasn't "carried along". He's human, he's allowed to feel.
Obi has had so much riding on him for the past months, political permutations - he's human and he's allowed to be unable to miss that notification.
There was no disrespect in that interview. Just a brutally opinionated Datti (a feature we've always admired) who still had respect for his principal.
Piling on Datti is unnecessary and is foolishly fuelling possible distractions. Cut him some slack.
Datti is one of us. Will always be.
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@CHULLY1010 After cleaning the place and you don't want people to dispose there again, why not put a sign or write something on the wall?
You guys are fucccccking retards
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@DrDanny2030 Who be this ode, Werey get out
Your mouth smells
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See, if Peter Obi leaves ADC because he can't win the primaries, I'm not going to follow y'all and do this waka waka
.why can't we stay one place?
I've stated that the main interest of every Nigerian now should be how to kick out APC from ASO Rock.
Whether it's Amechi that gets the ticket or Atiku or Peter Obi, or Kwankwaso, we need to support these people and have a collective goal and achieve it.
APC formed the same coalition in 2025, and none of them divided the party. Everyone sticked to it. Tinubu was one of the masterminders, but he was patient, and now he's the president.
If after forming this coalition and giving people hope and later we Radical obidients push Peter Obi to get the ticket in another party, I'm sorry, Tinubu will just be one side laughing at you guys while getting the second term and third term.
OTUNBA@ManLikeIcey
Peter Obi and Rabiu Kwankwaso have made up their minds to defect from ADC to NDC in the coming days. As mentioned earlier today, Peter Obi realized he has no chance to defeat Atiku in an open primaries in ADC. He’ll be handed over the Presidential ticket of NDC unanimously by stakeholders of the party and he’ll pick Kwankwanso as his running mate.
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@osazenoo You sound…. Make I no talk
Can Yemi spend what Tinubu spent to get the ticket?
Obi will not pay a single delegate to clinch the ADC ticket
You all should face the corn in your pocket
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Bola Ahmed Tinubu was originally positioned to be the vice-presidential candidate in 2015 but stepped aside, allowing Yemi Osinbajo to take the role. Osinbajo then served two full terms as Vice President; effectively occupying the political space Tinubu had conceded.
Despite that, Osinbajo chose to contest against Tinubu in the 2022 APC presidential primaries.
Tinubu’s supporters never demanded that Osinbajo step down. Tinubu himself didn’t call for it either.
Leadership isn’t about clearing the path by asking others to withdraw. If a candidate depends on others stepping aside to secure a ticket, it raises a fundamental question about their strength and suitability for the role.
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1. The opposition leaders met and decided to present a single candidate to challenge Bola Tinubu in 2027.
2. Peter Obi became frustrated with this decision.
3. Peter Obi ceased all engagement with coalition activities.
4. While opposition leaders were making efforts to rescue the ADC, Peter Obi's camp was busy discussing a "Plan B" and attacking the coalition leadership.
5. When the Supreme Court restored Senator David Mark’s leadership, Peter Obi and his supporters were left frustrated.
6. Why would Peter Obi oppose the opposition's strategy to rescue Nigeria from Bola Tinubu and the APC by fielding a single candidate in 2027?
7. Why does Peter Obi seem to enjoy the internal sabotage within the ADC, yet become frustrated when the party succeeds?
8. Why is Peter Obi against moves to remove Tinubu, and why is he working to divide the opposition in favor of Bola Tinubu for 2027?
9. How can Peter Obi convince Nigerians that he is not actually working for Bola Tinubu and the APC?

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@atiku No be today you don dey fall and you go continue dey fall Werey
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Tonight, I am proud to stand shoulder to shoulder with fellow leaders of our great party, the African Democratic Congress, in a decisive meeting to determine the next phase of our determined progress. Our mission is clear and our resolve unshakeable—to build the ADC into a formidable force that will not only unseat a failing ruling party but also rekindle hope, restore dignity, and bring Nigeria back to the path of purpose and prosperity. –AA
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#WorkersDay2026: Broken Promises, Shattered Hopes: The Nigerian Worker's Burden Under the Tinubu Administration.
Every first day of May, nations across the world pause to honour the dignity of labour and the men and women whose sweat and toil sustain civilisation. In Nigeria, Workers' Day has always carried a particular poignancy, a moment to celebrate the resilience of a workforce that endures much and receives little.
But as we mark this year's commemoration, I write not with celebration in my heart, but with grief. Grief for the Nigerian worker who was promised renewed hope and received instead renewed hardship.
A Slogan Betrayed.
"Renewed Hope" - those two words carried the dreams of millions of Nigerians who trooped to the polls in 2023. They were words that promised a departure from the suffering of previous years; a promise that the government would finally work for the people. Today, as we assess nearly three years of the Tinubu administration, it is painfully clear that what was renewed was not hope, but hardship. What was refreshed was not the fortunes of the Nigerian people, but the pockets of those in power.
The Nigerian worker, the teacher, the nurse, the factory hand, the civil servant, the artisan, has been the primary victim of an administration that, by all observable evidence, is far more interested in increasing the revenue at its disposal than in improving the lives of the citizens it governs.
Trillions Saved, But Nothing Felt.
The fuel subsidy removal was a necessary step, recklessly executed.
Let me be clear: the removal of the fuel subsidy was, in principle, a policy that many, including myself, had long advocated. The subsidy had become a fiscal haemorrhage that enriched cabal middlemen while denying the government of the resources needed for development. Its removal was necessary and overdue.
But the manner in which the Tinubu administration executed this policy was irresponsible and callous. On the day of inauguration, with no preparation, no safety nets, no cushioning mechanisms, and no transition plan for ordinary Nigerians, the President announced the end of the subsidy. The price of fuel skyrocketed. Transportation costs doubled and tripled overnight. The cost of food and basic goods hit the roof. The Nigerian worker, who was already struggling to survive on a salary eroded by years of inflation, was suddenly confronted with a cost of living that made mere survival feel like a luxury.
A responsible government would have spent the preceding months preparing Nigerians for this transition, establishing social safety nets, empowering the most vulnerable, and ensuring that the pain of reform was shared equitably. This administration did none of that. It simply removed the subsidy and left the Nigerian worker to drown.
Trillions were ostensibly saved, but nothing gained by the people. The fuel subsidy removal freed up enormous sums of money. Billions of dollars that had previously been committed to keeping pump prices artificially low were suddenly available. Nigerians, who had suffered the immediate consequences of the removal, were right to ask: Where has this saved money gone? What has been done with it to improve their lives? The answer is deeply troubling. Rather than being channelled into programmes that would directly benefit Nigerians, infrastructure that serves the people, healthcare, education, or an economic stimulus, these funds have been shared among the various tiers of government. The bulk of the federal government's share, disturbingly, appears to be financing the controversial $11 billion Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway project. As desirable as this project was, it was not subjected to competitive bidding or due process. It was awarded to a company owned by a man that President Tinubu himself has publicly acknowledged as his business partner. This is not governance, it is the brazen conversion of public resources for private enrichment.

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@Maven_writes @mummymoreni1 @EmagnetTim In the same way you are entitled to your opinion, the same way she is too
Why attacking her
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@mummymoreni1 @EmagnetTim And you’re a mother too?! Haba. Whether or not it’s IVF, how is it anyone’s business??
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Science will do the work una go thank God. Thank surrogacy, not God.
Congratulations to them anyways 👏🏾
DAMI FOREIGN🥶@TheDamiForeign
Lateef Adedimeji and Bimpe Adedimeji don finally born triplets! after years of people mocking them! Omo God is really good! I’m happy for them🎉🥳😫
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You no be Super Fan, na money you dey find, super fans love me for me not my money 🥲🥲🤕 x.com/callhimkachi/s…
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