Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar on Sunday threw down a gauntlet before delegates of the African Democratic Congress ADC, urging the party to prioritize competence and national reach over sentiments and social media popularity as it prepares to pick a presidential candidate ahead of the 2027 general election.
Atiku dismissed social media enthusiasm as insufficient test
for presidency, insisting they the party must field its strongest candidate to
defeat President Bola Tinubu.
In a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Public
Communication, Phrank Shaibu, Atiku argued that with Nigeria mired in economic
hardship, mounting debts, insecurity and institutional decay, the ADC cannot
afford the luxury of fielding an untested candidate.
“This is not a season for political experimentation. Nigeria
cannot afford a learning-on-the-job presidency,” he declared.
Without naming any rival, the former vice president took a
pointed swipe at the wave of enthusiasm surrounding certain contenders,
insisting that presidential contests are decided by structures, strategy, and
governance capacity — not digital noise.
“Elections are not won on social media enthusiasm alone.
Governance is not performance art. The presidency is not a platform for
improvisation. The ADC must present to Nigerians its strongest, most credible,
most prepared candidate — not merely its loudest,” he said.
Atiku described the choice before ADC delegates as one that
transcends ordinary political calculation, describing it as a historic
responsibility given the scale of Nigeria’s current crisis.
He said; “At a time when Nigeria is bleeding from every pore
— crippled by economic hardship, insecurity, rising debt, institutional
failure, and deepening hopelessness — the question before the ADC is simple:
who has the capacity not merely to campaign, but to govern effectively from day
one?”
Atiku argued that the moment calls for a leader who has
“negotiated globally, created jobs through enterprise, managed national crises,
built coalitions, and consistently articulated a practical roadmap for economic
recovery and national renewal.”
Pointing to his own records, he cited the economic reforms
of the Obasanjo-Atiku administration as evidence of his readiness, including
the privatisation drive that liberalised key sectors, the fiscal discipline
that contributed to Nigeria securing debt relief, and the broader governance
overhaul of that era.
“The economic reforms that helped reposition Nigeria, the
privatization drive that opened sectors, the fiscal discipline that contributed
to debt relief, and the governance reforms of that era were not accidents. They
were products of leadership, competence, and courage,” he said.
Posing what he called a “simple but profound question” to
delegates, Atiku drew a sharp distinction between symbolism and electoral
viability.
“ADC delegates must ask themselves: do we want to make a
statement, or do we want to make a president?”
He stressed that defeating an entrenched incumbent in 2027
would demand far more than emotional momentum, insisting the party must think
strategically about which candidate can build a winning coalition across
Nigeria’s diverse regions, faiths, and demographics.
“The ADC must think beyond sentiment. It must think about
victory. It must think about governance. It must think about Nigeria. This is a
defining election. The party needs a candidate with national acceptability,
political resilience, tested structures, and the capacity to unify disparate
interests into one winning coalition,” he said.
Atiku urged delegates to rise above narrow ambitions and
honour what he said is a date with national destiny.
“History will remember this moment. The choice before ADC
delegates is not merely about ambition. It is about destiny. Nigeria deserves
rescue, not rhetoric”, he declared
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