Forgotten Dairies
Osun 2026: What Does AMBO Even Want? -By Adebola Anifowose
In this race, the momentum behind AMBO reflects a population weary of the shallow, theatrical politics that have defined us for too long. If he secures the lead, it will be a victory for meritocracy. He isn’t asking for power for its own sake; he is offering a partnership for progress. He wants to lead a transformation that replaces hollow performance with measurable, data-backed outcomes.
In the theatre of Nigerian politics, where performance often eclipses policy and personality smothers pragmatism, the candidacy of Asiwaju Munirudeen Bola Oyebamiji (AMBO) is a focused case study. As Osun State approaches the August 15, 2026, election, the question “What does AMBO even want?” reaches beyond personal ambition. It interrogates the collision between cold, technocratic experience and our state’s volatile political landscape.
Oyebamiji is a rare breed in our current climate. He is a career administrator attempting the difficult bridge between institutional integrity and electoral victory. His record – from leading Omoluabi Holdings to his two terms as Commissioner for Finance and his leadership at the National Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA) – is built on integrity and stability.
While others lean on populist theatrics, AMBO leans on the mechanics of governance. He is not a product of the fleeting, personality-driven cycles of the past. Rather, he is a product of long-term administrative discipline, further sharpened by his credentials as a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Bankers and an expert in enterprise risk management.
AMBO’s objective is the restoration of administrative dignity. He operates on the belief that Osun’s potential remains locked because we favour optics-driven, temporary interventions over fiscal discipline. By championing the need to boost state exports and modernize infrastructure, he is diagnosing the systemic hurdles that have throttled us for generations. He aims to shift the state away from the fluctuating tides of populism towards the solid ground of economic reality.
Without being economical with the truth, our political atmosphere is currently suffocated by an obsession with flashy commissioning ceremonies – superficial wins that leave the socioeconomic fabric of the state unchanged. In this light, AMBO’s campaign promises are serving as a necessary intervention. They are offering a vision anchored in the unglamorous business of state-building.
Oyebamiji’s call for robust voter mobilization isn’t just about padding numbers; it is a profound argument that our electorate deserves better than the status quo. He is challenging citizens to stop rewarding the superficial and start engaging with the granular, difficult work of planning. Given that Osun has struggled to maintain even 50% voter turnout in recent cycles, AMBO’s focus is a strategic attempt to drag us back into the democratic process.
The Osun All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate wants to prove that administrative competence can be a winning brand. His candidacy forces the electorate to confront the fact that their long-term interests – quality education, infrastructure and an export-driven economy – are tethered to the quality of their leadership. He understands that managing a state’s fiscal health requires more than just spending power; it requires a framework that prevents capital flight and ensures every naira works for the citizen. This is the “want” of a man who views governance as a fiduciary duty, not a stage for theatrics. With his background in risk management, he is positioned to audit our state’s liabilities and steer us toward sustainable growth.
Furthermore, AMBO recognizes that Osun’s economic philosophy is long overdue for a shift. While current discourse remains trapped in the loop of surface-level road projects, AMBO advocates for an integrated approach that links infrastructure directly to industrialization. He envisions an Osun where the “ease of doing business” is a reality that attracts private capital, reduces our stifling dependency on federal allocations, and empowers local entrepreneurs. Our true prosperity depends on leveraging our unique geography and human capital, not on waiting for the next round of handouts.
In this race, the momentum behind AMBO reflects a population weary of the shallow, theatrical politics that have defined us for too long. If he secures the lead, it will be a victory for meritocracy. He isn’t asking for power for its own sake; he is offering a partnership for progress. He wants to lead a transformation that replaces hollow performance with measurable, data-backed outcomes.
The choice facing the people of Osun is stark: continue with the fleeting, hollow echoes of political theatre, or choose the steady, proven hand of a leader whose professional life has been defined by the excellence our state now requires. AMBO doesn’t just want the governorship; he wants, quite simply, to make Osun work again. His campaign is an invitation to reclaim our future: one policy, one reform, and one rigorous debate at a time. It is a bold, necessary vision to restore the dignity of our political culture and finally control the tempo of our development beyond the reach of the incumbent Governor Ademola Adeleke of the PDAccord.
▪Anifowose from Ijebu-Jesa, Osun State.
