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Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner - Politics - Nairaland

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Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by dre11(op): 2:48pm On Dec 06, 2025
A Friday evening gathering at the Presidential Villa rewrote the rules of political engagement as First Lady Senator Remi Tinubu hosted the entire National Assembly in a historic push for women’s representation. JONATHAN NDA-ISAIAH writes

In the 65-year history of Nigeria’s independence, no First Lady had ever done it. Not in the heady days of independence, not during the turbulent military transitions, and not in the 25 years since the return to civilian rule. But 10 days ago and on a Friday evening, as lawmakers would typically be rushing to their constituencies, the entire National Assembly—from the Senate President to, as Godswill Akpabio would mischievously put it, “the youngest” member—gathered at the State House for dinner with Senator Remi Tinubu.

The unprecedented nature of the occasion wasn’t lost on anyone in the room. “A toad does not cross the road in the daytime for nothing,” Akpabio declared, invoking the ancient proverb with characteristic flair. “Something must be pursuing it.”

What was pursuing Nigeria’s lawmakers on this particular evening was history itself—and the possibility of becoming the generation that finally secured constitutional seats for women in the National Assembly.

For Senator Tinubu, the evening carried the warm nostalgia of homecoming. “This room is filled with familiar faces, colleagues and friends with whom I have debated, lobbied, disagreed at times, but ultimately, worked side by side to advance legislation that touches lives in all facets of our nation,” she told the assembled lawmakers, her voice carrying the authority of one who had sat where they now sit.

The First Lady’s invitation had created what Akpabio described as “excitement”—so much so that he had to announce daily that they would be meeting with her. “If your mother specially calls you to come, it simply means she has goodies for you,” he explained, triggering laughter across the room. His prediction of a “sumptuous meal” had even sparked social media commentary, which he addressed with good humour: “Even from the menu, you can see the food will be sumptuous to us. So I predicted it before coming here.”

But beneath the jokes and the anticipation of good food lay a more serious purpose. Nigeria was reeling from a week of devastating security challenges—kidnappings, killings, and the trauma of communities under siege. The juxtaposition of discussing legislative reform amid national crisis could have seemed tone-deaf. Instead, the speakers made it clear that the two issues were inextricably linked.

Senator Tinubu set the tone by addressing both challenges head-on. She spoke of the “assault” on the education of the girl child and the exploitation of boys through the Almajiri system—deprivations that left children vulnerable to extremist recruitment. “This is why we must prioritise reforms and restore dignity, provide safe learning environments and ensure every child has a fair chance to thrive,” she insisted.

The connection was clear: a nation that failed to secure half its population a seat at the decision-making table was also failing to protect its children.

Akpabio, despite his jovial opening, quickly pivoted to the gravity of the security situation. He recounted a 2012 visit to New York’s Bronx, where a single 24-hour period without a shooting was cause for celebration—a celebration cut short by gunfire just two minutes after midnight. “Whoever was planning the shooting missed it by two minutes because the person did not want them to have that record,” he noted, drawing a parallel to Nigeria’s current struggles.

But his message was ultimately one of defiance. “The devil you see today in Nigeria, you shall see them no more,” he declared, to resounding approval. The Senate, he announced, would designate kidnapping as terrorism, carrying a mandatory death sentence with no judicial discretion, no option of fine. “We must call a spade a spade.”

As the evening progressed, what emerged was not just a dinner but a master class in legislative lobbying and coalition-building. Vice President Kashim Shettima made explicit what everyone understood implicitly: “The entire architecture of the presidency today is anchored by proud alumni of the National Assembly.”

He rattled off the impressive list: President Bola Tinubu, a senator of the Third Republic; the First Lady herself; Chief of Staff Femi Gbajabiamila; Deputy Chief of Staff Senator Ibrahim Hassan Hadejia; Secretary to the Government Senator George Akume; and Shettima himself. “This is the best working relationship these two arms of government have enjoyed since our return to democracy 25 years ago,” he declared.

It was both recognition of shared institutional identity and a subtle reminder of political leverage.

When discussion turned to the mechanics of the reserved seats bill, the evening’s most revealing moment arrived. Akpabio suggested zonal rather than state-by-state representation, worrying aloud that state-by-state allocation might result in “more women than men”—a comment that inadvertently revealed lingering anxieties about the reform.

He turned to Speaker Abbas Tajudeen: “I don’t know what will happen in the House of Reps,” he said. The response was immediate and thunderous: “Carry!” the House members shouted.

Sensing he might be losing the room, Akpabio put it to a vote: “Is it the view of the entirety of the National Assembly that this consideration should come on zonal basis?” The “Nays” drowned out the “Ayes.”

Gbajabiamila, watching from his new perch as Chief of Staff, couldn’t resist the needle. “At least one thing we can take away from your remarks is that this bill will pass, but the form in which it will pass is what we are debating,” he said with evident satisfaction. “I heard a resounding no to the question that was placed by the Senate President. So it looks like we’re going to be having the bill originally as was intended—state by state basis.” The House, it seemed, remained “the House of the People.”

What made the evening work—what transformed it from political theatre into genuine engagement—was the repeated invocation of family. Not just the institutional family of the National Assembly, but the personal families represented in the room.

“I have four daughters, and I would like to see two or three of them in the National Assembly,” Akpabio confessed. “I was raised by my mother from the age of six months. My father was not there, so I’m not even happy that we have too many men in the National Assembly.”

Imo State governor, Hope Uzodinma, who is also the chairman of the APC Governors Forum, put it simply: “Either you are speaking for our mothers or our wives. And if that’s the case, I’m almost certain that we are in agreement that women should be supported.”

Shettima elevated the argument to principle: “The respect that society generates to the opposite sex is directly proportional to the advancement and development of that particular society.”

Perhaps the most intellectually compelling argument came from Gbajabiamila, who reframed the bill in constitutional terms. “In our Constitution, we have what we call federal character, but many of us have narrowed the meaning of federal character on the basis of ethnicity,” he observed. “Federal character goes beyond ethnicity. It’s talking about the character of Nigeria, the makeup of Nigeria, and the fundamental aspect of that makeup is gender.”

It was a brilliant piece of legal reasoning that transformed what critics might dismiss as identity politics into constitutional imperative.

Speaker Tajudeen reinforced the argument with global evidence: “When women take part in security policymaking, countries adopt more effective strategies for prevention, community engagement, victim protection and long-term peace building.”

National Chairman of the APC, Professor Nentawe Goshwe Yilwatda opened with self-deprecating humor that drew chuckles across the room. “I’m the odd one out among the dignitaries,” he confessed, gesturing at the sea of current and former lawmakers surrounding him. “I have never been a lawmaker.”

But the party chairman quickly pivoted from jest to a pointed economic argument for women’s representation—one grounded not in constitutional theory or international best practices, but in household reality. “When a man gets money, some will head to a joint to spend it,” he observed, the knowing laughter suggesting his audience recognised the truth in the caricature. “But a woman will use that money to take care of the house.”

As the evening drew to a close and attention turned to what Gbajabiamila called “the less important part of the business”—the actual meal—a curious tension lingered. This was a gathering suffused with optimism, with speakers declaring the bill all but passed. Yet everyone present knew that constitutional amendments require two-thirds majorities in both chambers and approval from two-thirds of state houses of assembly.

Gbajabiamila himself had tried to pass a similar bill in the Ninth Assembly. “We came so close,” he recalled, “but close doesn’t cut it. They say nearly does not kill a bird.”

The First Lady had posed the question earlier: “Is this bill indeed possible to scale through? Yes, if not today, someday and absolutely so.” Then she added the challenge that hung over the entire evening: “But if we do this now, the 10th Assembly will go down in the history of our legislature as the set that stood for women when it counted the most.”

As legislators finally turned to their sumptuous meal—the promise of which had, after all, helped fill the room—they carried with them the weight of that possibility. History, having come to dinner, was now waiting to see if they would invite it to stay.

Whether Friday’s gathering becomes remembered as the night gender parity came to Nigeria’s democracy or merely as an excellent dinner with eloquent speeches will depend on what happens when the bill reaches the floor. But one thing is certain: Senator Remi Tinubu has rewritten the playbook on how First Ladies engage with the legislature.

And in a nation hungry for both reform and good news, that itself is no small achievement.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​
https://leadership.ng/tinubus-food-diplomacy-night-first-lady-treated-lawmakers-to-sumptuous-dinner/

Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Racoon(m): 2:51pm On Dec 06, 2025
Meanwhile many citizens of this nation can't afford a decent meal because of the hardship inflicted by these same set of heartless people.
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by HgAkpobomeEr: 2:58pm On Dec 06, 2025
First Lady Remi Tinubu has set the pace for future First Ladies.
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by AqualinaXYZ: 3:05pm On Dec 06, 2025
HgAkpobomeEr:
First Lady Remi Tinubu has set the pace for future First Ladies.
Your own and your likes na to just dey mumu from thread to thread praising the drug lord on empty stomach




When he leaves office and the stipend stops una go tell am truth like una tell Buhari
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by trutharena: 3:27pm On Dec 06, 2025
This was an excellent piece, and I commend the writer for the valuable insights.
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by BlessedGift: 5:17pm On Dec 06, 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aGV87E8BhEU


dre11:
A Friday evening gathering at the Presidential Villa rewrote the rules of political engagement as First Lady Senator Remi Tinubu hosted the entire National Assembly in a historic push for women’s representation. JONATHAN NDA-ISAIAH writes



https://leadership.ng/tinubus-food-diplomacy-night-first-lady-treated-lawmakers-to-sumptuous-dinner/
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Tjra: 5:17pm On Dec 06, 2025
AqualinaXYZ:
Your own and your likes na to just dey mumu from thread to thread praising the drug lord on empty stomach




When he leaves office and the stipend stops una go tell am truth like una tell Buhari
Is Peter Obi paying you to mumu from thread to thread?
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Mrcashout247(m): 5:18pm On Dec 06, 2025
Igbo people when dey finally get biafra.oh that day they will be be lifting up their hands to heaven dancing and praising God grin

Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Tjra: 5:18pm On Dec 06, 2025
Racoon:
Meanwhile many citizens of this nation can't afford a decent meal because of the hardship inflicted by these same set of heartless people.
True. That is why government needs to use Nnamdi Kanu to boost the revenue of all states.

Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by babayega(m): 5:19pm On Dec 06, 2025
Nigeria is finished. Checks and balance sacrificed on the alter of personal gains and gluttony
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Pootle: 5:22pm On Dec 06, 2025
this senate president too like women see the closeness even tilumbu wont like that
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by marlow1962(m): 5:22pm On Dec 06, 2025
While her tribes men are being ravaged and savaged by hunger and poverty smiley
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by PheelzAlmighty: 5:23pm On Dec 06, 2025
Food is the bait... Eat and be initiated
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Bluntemperor: 5:24pm On Dec 06, 2025
dre11:
A Friday evening gathering at the Presidential Villa rewrote the rules of political engagement as First Lady Senator Remi Tinubu hosted the entire National Assembly in a historic push for women’s representation. JONATHAN NDA-ISAIAH writes

https://leadership.ng/tinubus-food-diplomacy-night-first-lady-treated-lawmakers-to-sumptuous-dinner/
Chief Remi Tinubu,now First Lady,was once A Senator Of The Federal Republic of Nigeria.
As she knows how to Take- Care of Her -Former- Colleagues,
So What the Fuss About?
She was a Successful Central Lagos- Senator- that knows her Onions!
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by snowball11(m): 5:25pm On Dec 06, 2025
HgAkpobomeEr:
First Lady Remi Tinubu has set the pace for future First Ladies.
And it was argued here that the thing behind this moniker is not AI! grin
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by aariwa(m):
Imagine the legislature that was meant to be an independent arm of government constitutionally…what kind of impunity have these people reduced us to?…..a country like Nigeria that could have easily become the giant of Africa with the right leadership? Anybody still expecting anything more than more retrogression from this illegitimate government that is only interested in playing politics but never about welfare of Nigerians…the person is deceiving themselves
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Image123(m): 5:25pm On Dec 06, 2025
The Jagaban is really giving opposition nightmares. You mean they're still having constipation over this dinner?
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Disenfranchised: 5:26pm On Dec 06, 2025
Heartless first Lady.

Bitch act.
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by tgmservice: 5:27pm On Dec 06, 2025
If you wish to destroy your economy
Just make Emilokan your president
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by omoredia: 5:28pm On Dec 06, 2025
Tinubu used free food get to the top for this Nigeria
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by CaptainFM1: 5:29pm On Dec 06, 2025
They dine on the grave of those killed by Fulani Herders. Their blood shall choke each and every one of them that's complicit in protecting the victims.
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by AWONEYAN(m): 5:31pm On Dec 06, 2025
Like Queen Esther in the bible.
When she wants the King to make important decision she invited the king and Haman to a dinner.

She knows the importance of making a man to relax and eat.. such man can say No to your request.

It's not that those Senators can't sponsor such feast in 100 folds... but they feel honor being invited.

I know PO, Atiku, Bolaji Abdullahi will soon write epistle on 'When Nigerians are dieing...Sinators are Dining
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by aariwa(m): 5:33pm On Dec 06, 2025
If you are still expecting anything good from tinubu as an ordinary citizen you are deceiving yourself
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Hightablevoice2: 5:36pm On Dec 06, 2025
Racoon:
Meanwhile many citizens of this nation can't afford a decent meal because of the hardship inflicted by these same set of heartless people.
Did you actually read this piece or you just wanted to voice an already made assumption by jumping into an unrelated conclusion regarding the topic. Because if you did, you'd understand better what the whole evening was all about. Mind you.. don't bother to respond. You can do away with further vague commentary and recklessness
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Jagabanfromcali: 5:39pm On Dec 06, 2025
HgAkpobomeEr:
First Lady Remi Tinubu has set the pace for future First Ladies.
BS and all that have occurred there is waste of money for people who are living large already
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Nteogwuija(m): 5:43pm On Dec 06, 2025
HgAkpobomeEr:
First Lady Remi Tinubu has set the pace for future First Ladies.
Setting what pace? To feed already fed law makers?

Omo, nothing sycophancÿ no fit do.

BTW, this talk about women representation, I don't get it. Women want equality yet they don't want to willfully involve in politics.

If women want to be represented, then they should also get their hands dirty.

After all Tinubu said power isn't served alacarte. You grab it, snatch it, and runaway with it
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by ebukal67x: 5:43pm On Dec 06, 2025
No First Lady had done it in 65 years, and that underscores the uniqueness of Senator Remi Tinubu.
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by opeldavid: 5:48pm On Dec 06, 2025
Shameless set of ppl.
This is ludicrous.
It's nauseating.
It's provocative.
It's disappointing.
It should be condemned in all ramifications.
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Hoelujohn: 5:55pm On Dec 06, 2025
snowball11:
And it was argued here that the thing behind this moniker is not AI! grin
Dem plenty oo. Salewa tooDey
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by SixSeven: 6:03pm On Dec 06, 2025
Renews hope of Ebinpawa politics
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by Atheistan: 6:18pm On Dec 06, 2025
Longer throat lawmakers.
Re: Tinubu’s Food Diplomacy: Night First Lady Treated Lawmakers To Sumptuous Dinner by walozanga(m): 6:23pm On Dec 06, 2025
Animals will call it achievement, useless people everywhere.
Person wey en house dey on fire dey chase rat?
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