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How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game - Politics - Nairaland

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How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by DrMB(op):
How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game
To understand Nigerian politics is to accept that governance is theatre — and elections are the script.

At first, it seems like magic. How does someone become president in a country of over 200 million people, scattered across 36 states and over 250 ethnic groups?

We imagine it’s merit, charisma, or some divine prophecy. But no — it’s a formula. And like all formulas, those who crack it, win. Consistently.

Let me walk you through what the public doesn’t see, but every kingmaker understands.

Step One: Control the Seven

Forget the ballot box. First, win the seven — then you can talk votes.

There are seven power centers you must win or neutralize before you dare dream of Aso Rock:

Lagos – The economic nerve. Control Lagos, and you control perception, media, and diaspora wallets.

Bayelsa – Not for votes, but for pipelines and upstream oil politics.

Delta – Petro-wealth. It funds silent battles.

Rivers – The most important swing state. Control Rivers, and you control the Niger Delta narrative.

Kano – Population + religion. Win here, and you look legitimate.

Kaduna – Military remnants, northern elite, and intelligence service roots.

The CBN Governor – Yes, you heard right. Control the apex bank, and you can discreetly fund an empire.

It’s not about legality. It’s about liquidity.

And what is politics if not controlled liquidity?

Step Two: Win the Senate Before the Ballot

Power isn't taken during elections. It’s acquired quietly, in senatorial lounges and negotiation tables.

To seal the deal:

Secure 44 of the most influential senatorial districts.

These are the zones that control state assemblies, federal appointments, and — most crucially — party delegates.

How?

It’s contracts. Not all. Just ten in your first year as president.

If 15% of those contracts are redirected as political investments — not bribes, investments — they fund the loyalty ecosystem.

Real-life example:

In 2007, a power plant a state had 32 sub-contractors. Only 4 ever delivered. The rest? Loyalty payments. Their real job was to run zones and mobilize wards. The plant? Still incomplete. But the president got a second term.

Step Three: Lock the Appointments

Here’s your appointment cheat code — get these five, and the rest will follow:

Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) – For legal stability. Your immunity starts here.

Inspector General of Police (IGP) – For suppressing chaos, enforcing order.

Comptroller-General of Customs – Revenue gatekeeper. Handle contraband, fund your political logistics.

The head of The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited – oil, gas, subsidy flows, and the heart of Nigeria’s real economy.

CBN Governor – Again, money is policy. He controls the valves.

Step Four: Suspend the Wolves

To win, you must dine with wolves — and let them lick their wounds later.

You’ll need to suspend pending corruption cases against former governors.

Here’s why:

These men still control war chests — massive funds from IGR (Internally Generated Revenue).

States like Lagos or Rivers generate ₦6-₦7 for every ₦3 they receive from Abuja.

When they leave office, the EFCC knocks. But many already offshored their money or buried it in businesses.

Example:

A former governor of an oil-rich state, despite multiple corruption probes, flew delegates to Dubai for a "leadership retreat." He didn't pay a dime from his salary. You already know what he was spending.

Step Five: External Blessings

He who pays the ambassador decides the speech at the UN.

Get U.S. or Chinese backing. Why?

These nations have investments they need to protect — oil, tech, logistics.

If your candidacy looks like policy continuity, they’ll throw quiet support.

Throwback:

In 2015, a key leak revealed how Buhari’s candidacy was backed by multiple foreign lobbies to unseat Jonathan. Why? Contracts, transparency pledges, and access.

You don’t need public endorsement. Just absence of interference is enough.

Step Six: Muzzle the Masses — Quietly

Stakeholders to monitor:

NANS (Students)

NURTW (Transport)

Market Women Unions

Organized Labour

Should we settle or unsettle them?

Answer: Unsettle.

Give them just enough confusion so they can’t organize. Buy leaders, infiltrate protests, create infighting.

A general strike can ruin a campaign. But an uncoordinated one just fades.

Step Seven: Elite Capture

Buy 10 billionaires, and you’ve bought silence.

Get the top ten wealthiest Nigerians to back you — or at least not back your opposition.

Offer federal contracts.

Give board appointments.

Let them fund their interests — and yours.

Step Eight: Inside the Opposition

Infiltrate. Sabotage. Defect. Repeat.

You don’t need to beat the opposition at the ballot — beat them from the inside.

Send operatives to defect to their party a year before primaries.

Let them run the campaign — badly.

Leak data, fracture leadership, ruin alliances.

When the job’s done, they return — or disappear.

It’s happened. One major contender’s campaign director sabotaged logistics, then jumped ship to a rival mid-race. That rival? Won.

Step Nine: Buy Time — Early

Don’t wait for the primaries to buy votes.

Instead:

Sponsor pilgrimages for delegate families.

Offer federal jobs to their relatives.

Fund small businesses for their spouses.

By the time dollars fly at the primaries, their loyalty is already purchased. It’s no longer transactional. It’s emotional.

Step Ten: Control All Parties — Not Just Yours

Power isn’t partisan. It’s parasitic. It lives where it feeds.

Have a hand in appointing party chairmen — even in opposition camps.

Fund opposition candidates who are secretly loyal to you. Help them win local primaries. Once elected, they’ll sabotage from within.

This is chess. Not checkers.

Step Eleven: Own the Ecosystem

Control these:

INEC

State IECs

Bloggers and Twitter influencers

Religious leaders

Traditional rulers

DGs and Board Chairmen

Then retain four of the best constitutional lawyers in the country. Their job?

Write the laws before the laws matter.

Find your technicalities.

Buy you time.

So… Why Haven’t I Gone Into Politics?
You asked. I smiled.


Because to play this game, you must first agree to be a villain — even if history later calls you a hero.

Power demands blood — not literally, but reputation, compromise, legacy.

And maybe, just maybe… I still believe in clean hands.

But you?

You now know how it’s done.

Because this isn’t theory.
It’s how it actually happens.

DR MELCHISEDEC BANKOLE

Related Topics

Bola Tinubu Vs Peter Obi: The Administrator And The Machiavellian Politician https://www.nairaland.com/8468311/bola-tinubu-vs-peter-obi

How Peter Obi Can Outmaneuver Nigeria’s Machiavellian Political System https://www.nairaland.com/8471570/how-peter-obi-outmaneuver-nigerias

Peter Obi’s Popularity Vs. Tinubu’s Machiavellian Power Play https://www.nairaland.com/8470766/peter-obis-popularity-vs-tinubus

DR MELCHISEDEC BANKOLE
Re: How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by RichBoy247: 6:06pm On Apr 06, 2025
DrMB:
Forget the ballot box. First, win the seven — then you can talk votes.

There are seven power centers you must win or neutralize before you dare dream of Aso Rock:

Lagos – The economic nerve. Control Lagos, and you control perception, media, and diaspora wallets.

Bayelsa – Not for votes, but for pipelines and upstream oil politics.

Delta – Petro-wealth. It funds silent battles.

Rivers – The most important swing state. Control Rivers, and you control the Niger Delta narrative.

Kano – Population + religion. Win here, and you look legitimate.

Kaduna – Military remnants, northern elite, and intelligence service roots.

DR MELCHISEDEC BANKOLE[/b

]
[b]Tinubu won only one out of the seven states that this clown listed, yet the JAGABAN is President. The god of Politics defy all odds
Re: How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by EmperorIsaac(m): 6:28pm On Apr 06, 2025
DrMB:
To understand Nigerian politics is to accept that governance is theatre — and elections are the script.

At first, it seems like magic. How does someone become president in a country of over 200 million people, scattered across 36 states and over 250 ethnic groups?

We imagine it’s merit, charisma, or some divine prophecy. But no — it’s a formula. And like all formulas, those who crack it, win. Consistently.

Let me walk you through what the public doesn’t see, but every kingmaker understands.

Step One: Control the Seven

Forget the ballot box. First, win the seven — then you can talk votes.

There are seven power centers you must win or neutralize before you dare dream of Aso Rock:

Lagos – The economic nerve. Control Lagos, and you control perception, media, and diaspora wallets.

Bayelsa – Not for votes, but for pipelines and upstream oil politics.

Delta – Petro-wealth. It funds silent battles.

Rivers – The most important swing state. Control Rivers, and you control the Niger Delta narrative.

Kano – Population + religion. Win here, and you look legitimate.

Kaduna – Military remnants, northern elite, and intelligence service roots.

The CBN Governor – Yes, you heard right. Control the apex bank, and you can discreetly fund an empire.

It’s not about legality. It’s about liquidity.

And what is politics if not controlled liquidity?

Step Two: Win the Senate Before the Ballot

Power isn't taken during elections. It’s acquired quietly, in senatorial lounges and negotiation tables.

To seal the deal:

Secure 44 of the most influential senatorial districts.

These are the zones that control state assemblies, federal appointments, and — most crucially — party delegates.

How?

It’s contracts. Not all. Just ten in your first year as president.

If 15% of those contracts are redirected as political investments — not bribes, investments — they fund the loyalty ecosystem.

Real-life example:

In 2007, a power plant a state had 32 sub-contractors. Only 4 ever delivered. The rest? Loyalty payments. Their real job was to run zones and mobilize wards. The plant? Still incomplete. But the president got a second term.

Step Three: Lock the Appointments

Here’s your appointment cheat code — get these five, and the rest will follow:

Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) – For legal stability. Your immunity starts here.

Inspector General of Police (IGP) – For suppressing chaos, enforcing order.

Comptroller-General of Customs – Revenue gatekeeper. Handle contraband, fund your political logistics.

The head of The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited – oil, gas, subsidy flows, and the heart of Nigeria’s real economy.

CBN Governor – Again, money is policy. He controls the valves.

Step Four: Suspend the Wolves

To win, you must dine with wolves — and let them lick their wounds later.

You’ll need to suspend pending corruption cases against former governors.

Here’s why:

These men still control war chests — massive funds from IGR (Internally Generated Revenue).

States like Lagos or Rivers generate ₦6-₦7 for every ₦3 they receive from Abuja.

When they leave office, the EFCC knocks. But many already offshored their money or buried it in businesses.

Example:

A former governor of an oil-rich state, despite multiple corruption probes, flew delegates to Dubai for a "leadership retreat." He didn't pay a dime from his salary. You already know what he was spending.

Step Five: External Blessings

He who pays the ambassador decides the speech at the UN.

Get U.S. or Chinese backing. Why?

These nations have investments they need to protect — oil, tech, logistics.

If your candidacy looks like policy continuity, they’ll throw quiet support.

Throwback:

In 2015, a key leak revealed how Buhari’s candidacy was backed by multiple foreign lobbies to unseat Jonathan. Why? Contracts, transparency pledges, and access.

You don’t need public endorsement. Just absence of interference is enough.

Step Six: Muzzle the Masses — Quietly

Stakeholders to monitor:

NANS (Students)

NURTW (Transport)

Market Women Unions

Organized Labour

Should we settle or unsettle them?

Answer: Unsettle.

Give them just enough confusion so they can’t organize. Buy leaders, infiltrate protests, create infighting.

A general strike can ruin a campaign. But an uncoordinated one just fades.

Step Seven: Elite Capture

Buy 10 billionaires, and you’ve bought silence.

Get the top ten wealthiest Nigerians to back you — or at least not back your opposition.

Offer federal contracts.

Give board appointments.

Let them fund their interests — and yours.

Step Eight: Inside the Opposition

Infiltrate. Sabotage. Defect. Repeat.

You don’t need to beat the opposition at the ballot — beat them from the inside.

Send operatives to defect to their party a year before primaries.

Let them run the campaign — badly.

Leak data, fracture leadership, ruin alliances.

When the job’s done, they return — or disappear.

It’s happened. One major contender’s campaign director sabotaged logistics, then jumped ship to a rival mid-race. That rival? Won.

Step Nine: Buy Time — Early

Don’t wait for the primaries to buy votes.

Instead:

Sponsor pilgrimages for delegate families.

Offer federal jobs to their relatives.

Fund small businesses for their spouses.

By the time dollars fly at the primaries, their loyalty is already purchased. It’s no longer transactional. It’s emotional.

Step Ten: Control All Parties — Not Just Yours

Power isn’t partisan. It’s parasitic. It lives where it feeds.

Have a hand in appointing party chairmen — even in opposition camps.

Fund opposition candidates who are secretly loyal to you. Help them win local primaries. Once elected, they’ll sabotage from within.

This is chess. Not checkers.

Step Eleven: Own the Ecosystem

Control these:

INEC

State IECs

Bloggers and Twitter influencers

Religious leaders

Traditional rulers

DGs and Board Chairmen

Then retain four of the best constitutional lawyers in the country. Their job?

Write the laws before the laws matter.

Find your technicalities.

Buy you time.

So… Why Haven’t I Gone Into Politics?
You asked. I smiled.


Because to play this game, you must first agree to be a villain — even if history later calls you a hero.

Power demands blood — not literally, but reputation, compromise, legacy.

And maybe, just maybe… I still believe in clean hands.

But you?

You now know how it’s done.

Let me know if you want this converted into:

A political strategy brief

A presentation deck

A confidential memo for inner-circle operatives

Or a fictional thriller adaptation (Netflix-level political series pilot)

Because this isn’t theory.
It’s how it actually happens.

DR MELCHISEDEC BANKOLE
You left out dinning with the devil himself....and belonging to the establishment!
Re: How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by SIRAO(m): 6:43pm On Apr 06, 2025
RichBoy247:
Tinubu won only one out of the seven states that this clown listed, yet the JAGABAN is President. The god of Politics defy all odds
So you can't even comprehend
Re: How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by GeneralPula: 7:07pm On Apr 06, 2025
Inconsequential states..

You no mention Ogun, you no mention Kwara... You know nothing..
Re: How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by AdesegunSanni89: 7:15pm On Apr 06, 2025
Buhari never won Bayelsa, Rivers and Delta.
Re: How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by Solsix(m): 9:33pm On Apr 06, 2025
Tinubu lost all those states
Re: How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by DrMB(op): 9:39pm On Apr 06, 2025
SIRAO:
So you can't even comprehend
Common sense is not common - Most people can't comprehend.
Re: How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by gistsnipper:
!

Re: How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by DrMB(op): 11:32am On Apr 07, 2025
EmperorIsaac:
You left out dinning with the devil himself....and belonging to the establishment!
Everything I outlined is akin to dining with the devil and aligning with the establishment.
Re: How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by EmperorIsaac(m): 11:54am On Apr 07, 2025
DrMB:
Everything I outlined is akin to dining with the devil and aligning with the establishment.
I meant to say becoming one of Satan's adopted child grin
Re: How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint Of Nigerian Power Game by wealthtrak: 11:02pm On Jun 28, 2025
DrMB:
To understand Nigerian politics is to accept that governance is theatre — and elections are the script.

At first, it seems like magic. How does someone become president in a country of over 200 million people, scattered across 36 states and over 250 ethnic groups?

We imagine it’s merit, charisma, or some divine prophecy. But no — it’s a formula. And like all formulas, those who crack it, win. Consistently.

Let me walk you through what the public doesn’t see, but every kingmaker understands.

Step One: Control the Seven

Forget the ballot box. First, win the seven — then you can talk votes.

There are seven power centers you must win or neutralize before you dare dream of Aso Rock:

Lagos – The economic nerve. Control Lagos, and you control perception, media, and diaspora wallets.

Bayelsa – Not for votes, but for pipelines and upstream oil politics.

Delta – Petro-wealth. It funds silent battles.

Rivers – The most important swing state. Control Rivers, and you control the Niger Delta narrative.

Kano – Population + religion. Win here, and you look legitimate.

Kaduna – Military remnants, northern elite, and intelligence service roots.

The CBN Governor – Yes, you heard right. Control the apex bank, and you can discreetly fund an empire.

It’s not about legality. It’s about liquidity.

And what is politics if not controlled liquidity?

Step Two: Win the Senate Before the Ballot

Power isn't taken during elections. It’s acquired quietly, in senatorial lounges and negotiation tables.

To seal the deal:

Secure 44 of the most influential senatorial districts.

These are the zones that control state assemblies, federal appointments, and — most crucially — party delegates.

How?

It’s contracts. Not all. Just ten in your first year as president.

If 15% of those contracts are redirected as political investments — not bribes, investments — they fund the loyalty ecosystem.

Real-life example:

In 2007, a power plant a state had 32 sub-contractors. Only 4 ever delivered. The rest? Loyalty payments. Their real job was to run zones and mobilize wards. The plant? Still incomplete. But the president got a second term.

Step Three: Lock the Appointments

Here’s your appointment cheat code — get these five, and the rest will follow:

Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) – For legal stability. Your immunity starts here.

Inspector General of Police (IGP) – For suppressing chaos, enforcing order.

Comptroller-General of Customs – Revenue gatekeeper. Handle contraband, fund your political logistics.

The head of The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited – oil, gas, subsidy flows, and the heart of Nigeria’s real economy.

CBN Governor – Again, money is policy. He controls the valves.

Step Four: Suspend the Wolves

To win, you must dine with wolves — and let them lick their wounds later.

You’ll need to suspend pending corruption cases against former governors.

Here’s why:

These men still control war chests — massive funds from IGR (Internally Generated Revenue).

States like Lagos or Rivers generate ₦6-₦7 for every ₦3 they receive from Abuja.

When they leave office, the EFCC knocks. But many already offshored their money or buried it in businesses.

Example:

A former governor of an oil-rich state, despite multiple corruption probes, flew delegates to Dubai for a "leadership retreat." He didn't pay a dime from his salary. You already know what he was spending.

Step Five: External Blessings

He who pays the ambassador decides the speech at the UN.

Get U.S. or Chinese backing. Why?

These nations have investments they need to protect — oil, tech, logistics.

If your candidacy looks like policy continuity, they’ll throw quiet support.

Throwback:

In 2015, a key leak revealed how Buhari’s candidacy was backed by multiple foreign lobbies to unseat Jonathan. Why? Contracts, transparency pledges, and access.

You don’t need public endorsement. Just absence of interference is enough.

Step Six: Muzzle the Masses — Quietly

Stakeholders to monitor:

NANS (Students)

NURTW (Transport)

Market Women Unions

Organized Labour

Should we settle or unsettle them?

Answer: Unsettle.

Give them just enough confusion so they can’t organize. Buy leaders, infiltrate protests, create infighting.

A general strike can ruin a campaign. But an uncoordinated one just fades.

Step Seven: Elite Capture

Buy 10 billionaires, and you’ve bought silence.

Get the top ten wealthiest Nigerians to back you — or at least not back your opposition.

Offer federal contracts.

Give board appointments.

Let them fund their interests — and yours.

Step Eight: Inside the Opposition

Infiltrate. Sabotage. Defect. Repeat.

You don’t need to beat the opposition at the ballot — beat them from the inside.

Send operatives to defect to their party a year before primaries.

Let them run the campaign — badly.

Leak data, fracture leadership, ruin alliances.

When the job’s done, they return — or disappear.

It’s happened. One major contender’s campaign director sabotaged logistics, then jumped ship to a rival mid-race. That rival? Won.

Step Nine: Buy Time — Early

Don’t wait for the primaries to buy votes.

Instead:

Sponsor pilgrimages for delegate families.

Offer federal jobs to their relatives.

Fund small businesses for their spouses.

By the time dollars fly at the primaries, their loyalty is already purchased. It’s no longer transactional. It’s emotional.

Step Ten: Control All Parties — Not Just Yours

Power isn’t partisan. It’s parasitic. It lives where it feeds.

Have a hand in appointing party chairmen — even in opposition camps.

Fund opposition candidates who are secretly loyal to you. Help them win local primaries. Once elected, they’ll sabotage from within.

This is chess. Not checkers.

Step Eleven: Own the Ecosystem

Control these:

INEC

State IECs

Bloggers and Twitter influencers

Religious leaders

Traditional rulers

DGs and Board Chairmen

Then retain four of the best constitutional lawyers in the country. Their job?

Write the laws before the laws matter.

Find your technicalities.

Buy you time.

So… Why Haven’t I Gone Into Politics?
You asked. I smiled.


Because to play this game, you must first agree to be a villain — even if history later calls you a hero.

Power demands blood — not literally, but reputation, compromise, legacy.

And maybe, just maybe… I still believe in clean hands.

But you?

You now know how it’s done.

Let me know if you want this converted into:

A political strategy brief

A presentation deck

A confidential memo for inner-circle operatives

Or a fictional thriller adaptation (Netflix-level political series pilot)

Because this isn’t theory.
It’s how it actually happens.

DR MELCHISEDEC BANKOLE
How Presidents Are Made: The Silent Blueprint of the Nigerian Power Game


Impressive takes.
1 Reply

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