Connect with us

Africa

If Tinubu’s Reward For Criticism Continues, We Will Soon Be Governed, Not By Best Minds, But By Loudest Mouths -By Isaac Asabor

In fact, if this government is truly serious about transformation, it must abandon this politics of reward for criticism and return to a politics of merit, transparency, and accountability. Otherwise, we will soon be governed, not by the best minds, but by the loudest mouths.

Published

on

ISAAC ASABOR

In a country where leadership ought to be anchored on competence, integrity, and patriotism, Nigeria under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is sadly leaning towards a dangerous playbook: reward your loudest critics with plum positions, not for merit, but to silence them. It is politics of pacification masquerading as inclusion, and it is slowly eroding what little is left of the moral fabric in public service.

For instance, on March 30, 2025, during an Iftar dinner to mark his 73rd birthday, President Tinubu attempted to justify the controversial appointment of Dr. Bosun Tijani as Minister of Communications, Innovation, and Digital Economy. The president proudly claimed it was evidence of his open-mindedness, that he values “talent even in those who may have once been critics.”

But this is more than generous leadership. It is political optics, particularly as Tijani’s criticisms weren’t offhand comments, but cutting and calculated. Yet, today, he is saddled with one of the most strategic portfolios in the administration.

Where’s the proof that Tijani’s appointment was based on measurable competence or a vision for digital transformation? Nigerians are still waiting.

Another classic example is Dr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, formerly the spokesman of the Northern Elders Forum (NEF), and a fire-breathing critic of both the Buhari and Tinubu administrations. His appointment last year as Political Adviser to the President in the Office of the Vice President shocked many.

Advertisement

Many believed the appointment was not about tapping into Baba-Ahmed’s experience, but rather a strategic attempt to shut him up and mute the persistent criticisms emanating from the North.

As of now, sources report that Baba-Ahmed has tendered his resignation, though it is yet to be approved by the president. The silence surrounding his exit only raises suspicion. Was he disappointed by what he met in office? Or was his voice no longer useful now that the northern backlash against Tinubu is intensifying?

Indeed, prominent northern political and traditional leaders continue to lash out at Tinubu’s government over the worsening economy, political instability, and raging insecurity. Clearly, the “buy-the-critic” strategy has failed.

But perhaps the most astonishing twist is the reported nomination of Reno Omokri, the same man who relentlessly campaigned against Tinubu from the diaspora, at one point accusing him of links to drug crimes and organizing physical protests in the UK.

Reno’s nomination to a diplomatic role is not just ironic, it is utterly shameful. If his allegations were taken seriously, how does he now represent Nigeria on the global stage under the same administration he described as “tainted”?

Advertisement

This is not about forgiveness. This is about political transactionalism at its peak, critics being rewarded, not because they have changed their views or added value, but because their voices are too loud to ignore.

Without a doubt, it is rotten pattern of political pacification. The pattern is now predictable: Criticise, get noticed, get appeased, then go quiet.

What President Tinubu’s government is doing is weaponizing appointments as hush money, handing plum positions to critics in a bid to muffle dissent. It is a perversion of democracy, an insult to genuine loyalists, and a blow to qualified professionals who don’t play dirty politics.

It also creates mutual suspicion rather than national unity. Those who supported the president from day one now feel used and sidelined. Professionals who have served with diligence now believe noise, not merit, brings promotion. And the masses, watching from the sidelines, are reminded that this government rewards volume, not values.

In fact, appointments should be national assets, not political settlement tools. Nigerians are living in desperate times. The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) confirms inflation has soared to over 33%, while the naira has been battered beyond recognition. Youth unemployment remains at alarming levels, and the spate of kidnapping and banditry is getting worse.

Advertisement

At a time like this, what the country needs is a government of reformers, not rebranded critics. Appointments should be engines of development, not political settlements for those who scream the loudest.

The long-term danger of this approach is clear: it encourages performative opposition. Aspiring appointees will begin to attack the government, not from a place of patriotic concern, but as a strategy to gain visibility and eventual favor. It breeds opportunism, not activism. It incentivizes hypocrisy, not truth.

Since this unarguable retrogressive mode of appointment came to the realization of this writer, the question has been “When did noise becomes a qualification?”

History will not be kind to a leadership that chooses to pacify rather than perform. As things stand, Tinubu’s appointment style suggests that you don’t need to be competent, just be controversial. Don’t show loyalty, just show up on the trending list.

However, to put it advisedly in this context, it is not out of place to opine that Nigeria deserves better.

Advertisement

In fact, if this government is truly serious about transformation, it must abandon this politics of reward for criticism and return to a politics of merit, transparency, and accountability. Otherwise, we will soon be governed, not by the best minds, but by the loudest mouths.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

PDP PDP
Breaking News15 hours ago

PDP Headquarters Unsealed as Police Enforce Court Order, Wike Allies Reclaim Control

Nigeria Police unsealed the PDP headquarters in Abuja, restoring control to Wike-aligned leaders after days of internal crisis.

Osun-Decides Osun-Decides
Forgotten Dairies22 hours ago

As Osun Decides This August -By Kola Odepeju

However, the APC must not be lured into a false sense of security by its current popularity. This election will...

Belarus-Ghana Business Talks in Minsk, April 9, 2026. Belarus-Ghana Business Talks in Minsk, April 9, 2026.
Africa1 day ago

Belarus, Ghana Exchange Views on Bilateral Economic Cooperation -By Kestér Kenn Klomegâh

Belarus and Ghana aim for a transparent and mutually beneficial partnership. If the current dynamics are maintained, Belarusian products may...

Gadaka Gadaka
Politics1 day ago

From Ogbuluafor’s PDP’s 60 Years To Gadaka’s APC’s 100 Years: Man Proposes, God Disposes -By Isaac Asabor

In the end, the contrast between the 60-year projection of the past and the 100-year vision of the present serves...

Igbo Igbo
National Issues1 day ago

Policing Igbo Identity While Cheerleading for Tinubu: Ohanaeze’s Moral Collapse -By Vitus Ozoke, PhD

The Igbo are not a people easily governed by decree, least of all by an unelected cultural organization seeking to...

Peter Obi, Atiku and Tinubu Peter Obi, Atiku and Tinubu
Forgotten Dairies1 day ago

₦5 Billion to Run for President? The Dangerous Misconception Nigerians Must Reject -By Daniel Nduka Okonkwo

A Nigerian who is not a billionaire can still contest for the presidency. The law allows it. Democracy demands it....

Fulani-herdsmen-bandits-kidnappers-terrorists Fulani-herdsmen-bandits-kidnappers-terrorists
Forgotten Dairies1 day ago

Rising Insurgency In Borno: A War Far From Over -By Ochim Angela Odije

As the conflict continues, the people of Borno remain caught in a cycle of violence and uncertainty. Their plight underscores...

Abba Kabir Yusuf Abba Kabir Yusuf
Politics1 day ago

Open Memo to Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf -By Abba Dukawa

You need to adopt political rewards, whether tangible or symbolic, help sustain loyalty, reinforce party structures, and encourage participation. When...

Iran-Gaza-Hamas-Israel-missile-attack Iran-Gaza-Hamas-Israel-missile-attack
Forgotten Dairies1 day ago

A World on Fire, A World Paying: War, Inflation, and the Systemic Betrayal of Global Justice -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

The world is now on fire, but alas not everyone bears such a heavy cost. Some are setting the blaze...

Lake Chad-climate-change Lake Chad-climate-change
Global Issues1 day ago

Climate Collapse Is Not a Natural Disaster: It Is a Humanitarian Failure of International Law -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

The world treating breakdown of the climate as a natural disaster is a world that refuses to look at itself....