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Osun 2026: Beyond the Ballots and the Battle Lines -By Ayo Gbotosho

First, his leadership guarantees an instant, frictionless alignment with the federal government. This positions Osun perfectly to attract key federal roads, ecological intervention funds, and strategic economic partnerships that are routinely closed off to governors who choose to operate on isolated, populist islands.

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Oyebamiji and Oyebanji

Every seasoned bricklayer knows you cannot build a straight, sturdy house on a shaky foundation. No matter how beautiful the coat of paint you apply to the walls later on, a flawed structural layout guarantees the building will eventually crack. The same truth governs politics. The development of our dear Osun State cannot happen by accident, nor can it be sustained by superficial showmanship and cosmetic updates. Real progress is always a direct function of the political and economic vehicle driving the state.

As Osun approaches the August 15, 2026, governorship election, every trader, farmer, mechanic, and civil servant stands at a critical crossroads. The choice before us transcends party logos or family affiliations. It goes far beyond a mere “festival of flyers or caps”, as a columnist once aptly put it. Instead, we face a definitive choice between two distinct paths: remaining trapped in stagnant, baseline governance, or leaping into genuine economic growth by plugging directly into the massive economic engine of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

To understand why this choice alters our daily realities, we must look squarely at the center. At the national level, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration is executing the grueling, necessary work of repairing Nigeria’s economic foundation. This is not governance designed around cheap populist theater or chasing temporary applause; it is a clinical restructuring aimed at breaking old, destructive fiscal habits. From sanitizing revenue streams to launching critical infrastructure projects, the progressive center is laying down a workable blueprint for long-term survival.

For Osun to truly thrive, we cannot afford the luxury of existing as an isolated island, cut off from this national movement of economic transformation. The cost of remaining disconnected is entirely too high. Whenever a state government operates in a vacuum – relying on superficial optics rather than forging deep institutional linkages with the federal government – the polity inevitably slows down into developmental inertia. Ultimately, it is the average citizen who bears the brunt.

​This brings the real choice into sharp focus. On one side stands the progressive promise of the APC; on the other lies the severe administrative deficit of the alternative platforms seeking our votes. A close look at the contemporary opposition reveals a telling lack of governance capacity. The legacy of the now-defunct Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Osun remains a stark warning of fractionalized leadership and uncoordinated spending – an era where long-term economic blueprints were visibly absent, and governance was reduced to immediate political patronage rather than building lasting social capital.

Even more risky is wagering the fate of the state on makeshift political experiments. To expect stable development from a structurally hollow alternative – like the rickety vehicle of the Accord Party – is to fundamentally misunderstand how real governance works. A reliable political party must be a stable institution capable of aggregating diverse interests and securing long-term dividends. A temporary, opportunistic vehicle simply lacks the institutional weight, national leverage, and ideological clarity needed to negotiate major benefits from the center or win the confidence of serious investors. It is simply too fragile to carry the weight of a complex economy like Osun’s.

​Breaking out of this cycle of low achievement demands a leader whose professional track record matches the tough economic realities of our time. This is where the carriage, competence, and unique suitability of Asiwaju Munirudeen Bola Oyebamiji, popularly known as AMBO, become entirely undeniable

​Oyebamiji’s professional journey was not built on political noise or empty rhetoric; it is a quiet, authoritative record of fiscal discipline and public service. His early years managing Omoluabi Holdings Limited proved his rare ability to turn struggling assets into profitable ventures. More importantly, his tenure as Commissioner for Finance under consecutive progressive administrations gave him an unmatched, hands-on mastery of Osun’s balance sheet. He knows exactly where leakages hide, how to organically expand internally generated revenue (IGR) without strangling market women and small businesses, and how to balance recurrent liabilities with vital capital projects.

Beyond the state, his recent national role as the Managing Director/CEO of the National Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA) – at the heart of the Federal Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy – demonstrates his broad administrative reach. Oyebamiji is a technocrat who understands modern public policy. He possesses the professional weight needed to transition Osun from a state that merely consumes monthly allocations into a business-friendly economy that generates real wealth. Returning AMBO as governor on August 15, 2026, will trigger immediate, tangible benefits for our communities.

First, his leadership guarantees an instant, frictionless alignment with the federal government. This positions Osun perfectly to attract key federal roads, ecological intervention funds, and strategic economic partnerships that are routinely closed off to governors who choose to operate on isolated, populist islands.

Furthermore, his return signals the restoration of financial sanity and rigorous economic planning. Moving completely away from an anti-intellectual approach to running a state, policy decisions under Oyebamiji will be driven by hard data, economic sustainability, and real efficiency. His administration has the unique capacity to turn taxation into a genuine tool for development that links directly to visible progress on the ground, ensuring that the commonwealth of the state is properly harnessed to benefit the overwhelming majority.

At its core, politics is about elevating the public debate and matching the people’s daily needs with genuine administrative competence. The APC has the institutional muscle, national leverage, and progressive vision required to unlock Osun’s hidden potential. Through Oyebamiji’s candidacy, the party offers the people of Osun a dignified future built on the solid bedrock of political willpower, administrative intellect, and self-sustaining growth.

Gbotosho writes from Iwo, Osun State.

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