Forgotten Dairies
Mr. President, Why Should Nigerians Vote for You Again? A Nation Still Waiting for the Promises of Renewed Hope -By Daniel Nduka Okonkwo
It is being asked by market traders struggling with rising prices, by workers burdened by transportation costs, by young Nigerians searching for opportunity, by communities demanding security, and by millions of citizens who believed the promise of renewed hope would bring visible change.
Campaign promises are not ceremonial slogans. They are commitments made directly to voters. They are standards that citizens have every right to measure against reality.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu rose to power on the strength of bold promises: economic revival, sweeping security reforms, a modernized national grid, and transparent governance. Yet three years into his tenure, Nigerians are confronted not with broad relief but with deepening hardship. Inflation continues to strain households, insecurity remains entrenched, and the distance between campaign rhetoric and daily reality appears wider than many expected. The narrative of Lagos as a transformed megacity, once central to his campaign message, now collides with a growing national mood of frustration and uncertainty. Citizens are asking why they should continue to believe in promises that have yet to produce visible change.
Mr. President, Nigerians deserve an answer: why should citizens place their trust in you again when so many of the commitments that brought you into office remain unfulfilled?
When Bola Ahmed Tinubu campaigned for Nigeria’s presidency in 2023, he asked Nigerians to trust him with the country’s future under the banner of “Renewed Hope.” He presented himself as a tested political strategist and experienced administrator, promising economic recovery, stronger security, and a decisive turnaround in Nigeria’s long-troubled electricity sector.
One campaign promise stood out and has continued to echo in political conversations across the country: if he failed to deliver stable electricity within his first four years in office, Nigerians should not vote for him for a second term.
It was a bold statement. It was direct. Most importantly, it was measurable.
More than halfway into the administration’s first term, many Nigerians believe the country remains far from the transformation they were promised.
The question growing louder in homes, marketplaces, businesses, and public debate is no longer simply whether reforms have begun. It is whether the results that ordinary Nigerians were promised are being felt at all.
For decades Nigerians have endured an unreliable power system, but expectations were especially high after Tinubu’s campaign commitments. Instead, businesses and households continue to face prolonged blackouts and unstable supply. National grid failures have repeatedly disrupted economic activity and daily life. Small businesses that depend on electricity continue to rely on costly generators. Families already battling inflation spend even more each month trying to keep the lights on and preserve food.
At the same time, electricity tariffs have increased, deepening frustration among citizens who argue that many distribution companies still fail to provide the hours of electricity customers are being billed for.
For many Nigerians, the issue is no longer only about infrastructure. It is about trust between the government and citizens.
Economic hardship has intensified public concern even further, and the administration defended major reforms, including fuel subsidy removal and exchange-rate liberalization, as painful but necessary steps toward rebuilding the economy. Government officials argued that Nigeria could no longer sustain long-standing distortions and that temporary sacrifice would lead to long-term recovery.
But for millions of Nigerians, the immediate pain has been severe, and food prices have surged. Transportation costs have multiplied. Inflation has significantly weakened purchasing power. Families that once managed modestly now struggle to afford necessities. Across urban and rural communities alike, survival is increasingly described as a daily calculation.
The naira has remained volatile against the dollar, raising import costs and putting further pressure on manufacturers, businesses, and households already burdened by inflation.
Security remains another major source of public anxiety. During the campaign, Tinubu promised stronger action against banditry, kidnappings, terrorism, and rural violence. Yet in many parts of the country, communities continue to face persistent insecurity. In several regions, attacks on villages, kidnappings for ransom, and threats to farmers continue to undermine public confidence and disrupt agricultural production.
The economic consequences are equally serious. When farmers cannot safely access their land, the food supply weakens. When roads become unsafe, trade slows. When citizens fear violence, confidence in government protection begins to erode.
For many Nigerians, the national conversation has become painfully simple: how much longer should citizens wait for visible relief?
The Tinubu administration has repeatedly argued that Nigeria’s challenges were decades in the making and cannot be reversed within one presidential term.
Government officials point to reforms already underway. The federal government has approved major payments aimed at settling long-standing debts owed to electricity generation and gas companies. The recently amended electricity framework has also expanded the authority of states to generate and distribute power independently, a move officials believe could reduce pressure on the national grid and improve supply at the local level.
Supporters argue these reforms require time and that judging the administration too early overlooks the scale of structural damage inherited over decades.
That argument might deserve some consideration, but democracy also demands accountability.
Nigerians are not asking for miracles, they are asking whether the promises they were given still matter before the next election.
They are asking whether the hardship many families feel every day reflects temporary reform or a government struggling to deliver at the scale it promised.
They are asking whether rising debt, inflation, fuel prices, and insecurity represent an unavoidable national transition or a failure to convert political promises into measurable progress.
And above all, they are asking the question every democratic leader eventually faces:
If trust were the foundation of political victory, what would happen when citizens begin to feel that trust has not been rewarded?
President Tinubu came into office promising renewed hope.
Hope matters.
But hope without visible results becomes increasingly difficult to sustain.
As Nigerians look ahead politically and economically, the central issue may no longer be campaign rhetoric or political loyalty.
It may come down to one simple question:
Mr. President, why should Nigerians trust you again?
That question is no longer coming only from political opponents.
It is being asked by market traders struggling with rising prices, by workers burdened by transportation costs, by young Nigerians searching for opportunity, by communities demanding security, and by millions of citizens who believed the promise of renewed hope would bring visible change.
Nigeria is still waiting.
And in a democracy, waiting always comes with accountability.
Daniel Nduka Okonkwo is an investigative journalist, human rights advocate, and policy analyst based in Abuja, Nigeria. He is the publisher of Profiles International, a platform dedicated to accountability journalism, governance reporting, and the documentation of human rights issues across Africa. His work examines the intersection of political power, institutional failure, and the human cost of corruption, with a particular focus on Nigeria and the broader African continent. Okonkwo’s reporting and analysis have appeared in Sahara Reporters, African Defence Forum, Daily Trust, Vanguard, Daily Intel, Opinion Nigeria, African Angle, Local Newsbreak, and several international outlets. He is a committed advocate for transparency, democratic principles, and justice, and collaborates with Daniels Entertainment on human rights initiatives that extend his work beyond the written word. He writes from Abuja and can be reached at dan.okonkwo.73@gmail.com.