₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,327,271 members, 8,430,126 topics. Date: Friday, 19 June 2026 at 10:26 PM

Toggle theme

List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan - Politics (3) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsList Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan (19975 Views)

1 2 3 4 5 6 Reply (Go Down)

Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by asgold: 5:50am On Jan 02
Making Abuja a modern city, invest in our health sector heavly, making international passport easy to obtain. Improved our marine industry rating internationally. No more borrowing to pay salary again for all tier of government except for critical infractures. Re developping our international airport.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by hatchy: 5:52am On Jan 02
AqualinaXYZ:
Old national anthem an achievement?
Jesus
That is to tell you that they usually don't have brain, once you start supporting Tinubu and a member of APC.

Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by naijanaso: 5:54am On Jan 02
Pls what's the impact of these on the Nigerian citizens? I'm asking for the Nigerian citizens not political citizens.
What has gone from good to better for the masses?
These policies may be good but it doesn't affect the populace in a positive way.
Removal of subsidy for sure will return more money to the government but what's the state governors doing other than wait for every month to collect huge billions from FAAC?
They now have so much to be worshipped by the people who elected or selected them. Meanwhile, the citizens are dying of inflation resulting from the subsidy removal.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by LilX2: 6:02am On Jan 02
akingangan:
1. Removed fuel subsidy and unified exchange rates, leading to long-term economic stability because it eliminates fiscal distortions and attracts genuine investments.

2. Doubled government revenues in some periods, reaching over ₦31.9 trillion in 2024, because this provides more funds for infrastructure and social programs without excessive borrowing.

3. Reduced fiscal deficit from 5.4% of GDP in 2023 to 3.0% in 2024 because a lower deficit promotes fiscal discipline and reduces debt burden on future generations.

4. Increased foreign reserves from around $4 billion in 2023 to over $23 billion (some reports up to $46 billion) by late 2024 because higher reserves strengthen the naira and protect against external shocks.

5. Achieved trade surpluses for multiple consecutive quarters because this improves the balance of payments and supports currency stability.

6. Boosted non-oil exports to nearly 48% of total exports because diversifying exports reduces over-reliance on oil and builds economic resilience.

7. Nigerian Stock Exchange gained around 48% in 2025 because a strong stock market reflects growing investor confidence and creates wealth for citizens.

8. Upgraded credit ratings and attracted increased foreign direct investment, especially in the digital economy, because better ratings lower borrowing costs and drive job-creating investments.

9. Projected GDP growth exceeding 4% annualized because sustained growth expands the economy, creates jobs, and improves living standards.

10. Launched the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND), benefiting hundreds of thousands of students (over 300,000–788,000 disbursements for tuition and upkeep) because it removes financial barriers to higher education and builds a skilled workforce.

11. Provided presidential grants and loans to over 900,000 Nigerians for entrepreneurship and skills development because this empowers youth to start businesses and reduces unemployment.

12. Implemented a ₦70,000 national minimum wage to improve living standards because higher wages boost workers' purchasing power and stimulate economic activity.

13. Allocated N80 billion for infrastructure upgrades in 100 federal unity schools because modern facilities enhance learning quality and promote national unity through diverse student interactions.

14. Reopened all 47 federal unity secondary schools after temporary closure due to insecurity because ensuring safe access to education supports continuous learning and student development.

15. Established 119 learning centers nationwide for almajiri education because integrating vulnerable children into formal education reduces street begging and builds future productivity.

16. Approved a new National Policy on Almajiri Education because a structured policy addresses root causes of out-of-school children and promotes inclusive development.

17. Began re-establishment of 157 model almajiri schools, integrating out-of-school children, because this brings millions back into education and curbs social vulnerabilities.

18. Appointed new leadership for the National Commission for Almajiri and Out-of-School Children Education because strong leadership ensures effective implementation of reforms.

19. Unveiled comprehensive almajiri education reforms with international support because modernized education for almajiri children fosters social integration and long-term national progress.

20. Initiated major highway projects, including Lagos-Calabar Coastal Road, Sokoto-Badagry Superhighway, Abuja-Kaduna-Kano Road, and Lagos-Ibadan Expressway because better roads reduce travel time, lower transportation costs, and boost trade.

21. Invested over ₦2 trillion in road infrastructure because massive investment creates jobs during construction and supports economic growth long-term.

22. Modernized ports (e.g., Tin Can Island, Lekki Deep Sea Port integration) and expanded rail networks because efficient ports and rail improve logistics, reduce import costs, and enhance export competitiveness.

23. Signed the Electricity Act 2023 to decentralize power generation and encourage private investment because reliable electricity is essential for industrial growth and household convenience.

24. Launched a diaspora mortgage scheme offering low-interest loans up to N50 million for Nigerians abroad to build or buy homes because it channels diaspora remittances into productive housing investment.

25. Unveiled a new housing platform for diaspora Nigerians to purchase properties across all 36 states and the FCT because easy access encourages diaspora contribution to the economy and reduces housing deficit.

26. Implemented Renewed Hope Housing Programme with nationwide construction and diaspora-inclusive financing because increasing housing supply makes homeownership affordable for more Nigerians.

27. Groundbreaking for 3,500 housing units in Renewed Hope City, Abuja because large-scale projects create construction jobs and provide modern living spaces.

28. Eliminated over 13,500 terrorists and enhanced military operations in troubled regions because improved security restores peace, enables farming and business, and protects lives.

29. Rolled out Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) program to lower transportation costs because cheaper fuel alternatives reduce public transport fares and ease inflation pressures.

30. Introduced consumer credit schemes because accessible credit helps families afford essentials and stimulates local consumption.

31. Provided agricultural funds leading to increased food production (e.g., 20% rise in rice output in some reports) because boosting local farming lowers food prices and enhances food security.

32. Distributed cash transfers and subsidies to vulnerable groups because direct support alleviates poverty and improves quality of life for the most needy.

33. Rewarded Super Falcons players (after 10th WAFCON title in 2025) with $100,000 equivalent each, a three-bedroom apartment, and national honour (OON) because generous rewards motivate excellence and inspire young girls to pursue sports.

34. Awarded Super Falcons technical crew $50,000 equivalent each, housing, and honours because recognizing support staff ensures sustained team performance.

35. Rewarded D’Tigress players (after fifth consecutive AfroBasket title in 2025) with $100,000 equivalent each, an apartment, and OON honour because such incentives promote women's basketball dominance and national pride.

36. Awarded D’Tigress coaching staff $50,000 each, housing, and honours because valuing coaches encourages professional development in sports.

37. Used these rewards to motivate athletes, inspire youth (especially girls), and promote women's sports and national unity because celebrating female champions advances gender equality and unites the country through shared success.

38. Increased oil production to around 1.68 million barrels per day because higher output boosts government revenue for public spending.

39. Expanded digital identity enrollment (over 126 million in NIMC database) because comprehensive identity coverage improves service delivery, reduces fraud, and enables targeted welfare programs.

40. Re-adopted the old national anthem because it restores cultural heritage and fosters a sense of historical continuity and patriotism.
Only your number 2, made your case look so bad! Reduces which excess borrowing? Someone that has borrowed more than buhari did in 8years
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by LilX2: 6:05am On Jan 02
aswani:
And my favourite

41) Put Obidients in sifia pains.

That Stock exchange one is incredible, I know friends that have done ok as a result.
You always know friends 😂 , it’s never you
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by zinaunreal(m): 6:07am On Jan 02
Story of the God's.

Value of the naira depreciated to record level
Cost of living extremely disastrous
If the ordinary man sees no difference in his lifestyle, oga you have failed bastardly
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by ceejay80s(m): 6:09am On Jan 02
Person wey destroy Nigeria in 3 years
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by tete7000(m): 6:09am On Jan 02
Babanla nonsense!
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by olutops(m): 6:15am On Jan 02
Tinubu and his supporters are toxic, dangerous, soulless and senseless
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by Diligence: 6:15am On Jan 02
As HR Consultant, there's a huge difference between a CV & Actual Performance

CV has what you claimed to hv achieved or done or what you are capable of doing

On the other hand, Actual Performance/Outcome is a different ballgame.

What hv millions of Nigerians seen under apc:

Insecurity
Senseless borrowings
Health system collapse
Education standard collapse
Hyperinflation
Reduced standard of living
Padded budget
Padded tax system
Ostentatious living by govt officials
Multiple tax burdens
Collapse of federal road network across the nation
White elephant projects
Bribery & Corruption
Thuggery, snatching & burning & stabbing people, disenfranchising Nigerians from voting
& Many ...

Abeg kick out APC/Bat yesterday already!
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by 7arrows: 6:16am On Jan 02
tollyboy5:
Where demonic minded criminals benefitting from our common wealth pay mugus to come online to defend ₦70k minimum wages.

Very anyhow people. No shame in their dictionary.
Useless people that the blood of those they have killed will judge them. They think they can buy the entire Nigeria. Shameless people that have destroyed the name APC.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by ceejay80s(m): 6:17am On Jan 02
AqualinaXYZ:
Old national anthem an achievement?




Jesus
Some people don't even know the meaning of achievement,
To dash some people money is now an achievement
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by Irony1: 6:28am On Jan 02
akingangan:
So you agree 1 to 39

Bonus
Removed police Escorts from VIP and redeployed them to protect everyone.
Local governments now get direct FG allocation and they can do more for their people without state government interference.

... We don't need to experiment with Atiku or Obi
Even you that is typing don't believe the lies you wrote. In your street no be OPC una dey pay to guard una? Even LG autonomy is still a myth states still hold on to their budget.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by Solution0707(m): 6:30am On Jan 02
You forgot to put hunger o
akingangan:
1. Removed fuel subsidy and unified exchange rates, leading to long-term economic stability because it eliminates fiscal distortions and attracts genuine investments.

2. Doubled government revenues in some periods, reaching over ₦31.9 trillion in 2024, because this provides more funds for infrastructure and social programs without excessive borrowing.

3. Reduced fiscal deficit from 5.4% of GDP in 2023 to 3.0% in 2024 because a lower deficit promotes fiscal discipline and reduces debt burden on future generations.

4. Increased foreign reserves from around $4 billion in 2023 to over $23 billion (some reports up to $46 billion) by late 2024 because higher reserves strengthen the naira and protect against external shocks.

5. Achieved trade surpluses for multiple consecutive quarters because this improves the balance of payments and supports currency stability.

6. Boosted non-oil exports to nearly 48% of total exports because diversifying exports reduces over-reliance on oil and builds economic resilience.

7. Nigerian Stock Exchange gained around 48% in 2025 because a strong stock market reflects growing investor confidence and creates wealth for citizens.

8. Upgraded credit ratings and attracted increased foreign direct investment, especially in the digital economy, because better ratings lower borrowing costs and drive job-creating investments.

9. Projected GDP growth exceeding 4% annualized because sustained growth expands the economy, creates jobs, and improves living standards.

10. Launched the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND), benefiting hundreds of thousands of students (over 300,000–788,000 disbursements for tuition and upkeep) because it removes financial barriers to higher education and builds a skilled workforce.

11. Provided presidential grants and loans to over 900,000 Nigerians for entrepreneurship and skills development because this empowers youth to start businesses and reduces unemployment.

12. Implemented a ₦70,000 national minimum wage to improve living standards because higher wages boost workers' purchasing power and stimulate economic activity.

13. Allocated N80 billion for infrastructure upgrades in 100 federal unity schools because modern facilities enhance learning quality and promote national unity through diverse student interactions.

14. Reopened all 47 federal unity secondary schools after temporary closure due to insecurity because ensuring safe access to education supports continuous learning and student development.

15. Established 119 learning centers nationwide for almajiri education because integrating vulnerable children into formal education reduces street begging and builds future productivity.

16. Approved a new National Policy on Almajiri Education because a structured policy addresses root causes of out-of-school children and promotes inclusive development.

17. Began re-establishment of 157 model almajiri schools, integrating out-of-school children, because this brings millions back into education and curbs social vulnerabilities.

18. Appointed new leadership for the National Commission for Almajiri and Out-of-School Children Education because strong leadership ensures effective implementation of reforms.

19. Unveiled comprehensive almajiri education reforms with international support because modernized education for almajiri children fosters social integration and long-term national progress.

20. Initiated major highway projects, including Lagos-Calabar Coastal Road, Sokoto-Badagry Superhighway, Abuja-Kaduna-Kano Road, and Lagos-Ibadan Expressway because better roads reduce travel time, lower transportation costs, and boost trade.

21. Invested over ₦2 trillion in road infrastructure because massive investment creates jobs during construction and supports economic growth long-term.

22. Modernized ports (e.g., Tin Can Island, Lekki Deep Sea Port integration) and expanded rail networks because efficient ports and rail improve logistics, reduce import costs, and enhance export competitiveness.

23. Signed the Electricity Act 2023 to decentralize power generation and encourage private investment because reliable electricity is essential for industrial growth and household convenience.

24. Launched a diaspora mortgage scheme offering low-interest loans up to N50 million for Nigerians abroad to build or buy homes because it channels diaspora remittances into productive housing investment.

25. Unveiled a new housing platform for diaspora Nigerians to purchase properties across all 36 states and the FCT because easy access encourages diaspora contribution to the economy and reduces housing deficit.

26. Implemented Renewed Hope Housing Programme with nationwide construction and diaspora-inclusive financing because increasing housing supply makes homeownership affordable for more Nigerians.

27. Groundbreaking for 3,500 housing units in Renewed Hope City, Abuja because large-scale projects create construction jobs and provide modern living spaces.

28. Eliminated over 13,500 terrorists and enhanced military operations in troubled regions because improved security restores peace, enables farming and business, and protects lives.

29. Rolled out Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) program to lower transportation costs because cheaper fuel alternatives reduce public transport fares and ease inflation pressures.

30. Introduced consumer credit schemes because accessible credit helps families afford essentials and stimulates local consumption.

31. Provided agricultural funds leading to increased food production (e.g., 20% rise in rice output in some reports) because boosting local farming lowers food prices and enhances food security.

32. Distributed cash transfers and subsidies to vulnerable groups because direct support alleviates poverty and improves quality of life for the most needy.

33. Rewarded Super Falcons players (after 10th WAFCON title in 2025) with $100,000 equivalent each, a three-bedroom apartment, and national honour (OON) because generous rewards motivate excellence and inspire young girls to pursue sports.

34. Awarded Super Falcons technical crew $50,000 equivalent each, housing, and honours because recognizing support staff ensures sustained team performance.

35. Rewarded D’Tigress players (after fifth consecutive AfroBasket title in 2025) with $100,000 equivalent each, an apartment, and OON honour because such incentives promote women's basketball dominance and national pride.

36. Awarded D’Tigress coaching staff $50,000 each, housing, and honours because valuing coaches encourages professional development in sports.

37. Used these rewards to motivate athletes, inspire youth (especially girls), and promote women's sports and national unity because celebrating female champions advances gender equality and unites the country through shared success.

38. Increased oil production to around 1.68 million barrels per day because higher output boosts government revenue for public spending.

39. Expanded digital identity enrollment (over 126 million in NIMC database) because comprehensive identity coverage improves service delivery, reduces fraud, and enables targeted welfare programs.

40. Re-adopted the old national anthem because it restores cultural heritage and fosters a sense of historical continuity and patriotism.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by watchindelta(m): 6:31am On Jan 02
Nigeria suffer more than before. So oga tinubu boy all this list are not working 😕 in the life of the citizens 😢 oh abi now ghost they made all this policies for not the living.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by jimyos: 6:34am On Jan 02
Is that viable achievement? Besides, which one has benefited the citizens of this great country
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by blackgold2018(m): 6:42am On Jan 02
Putinofrussia:
Why would you and your likes hear about it when you are busy with your chronic wailings.
my question is, does Alex Otti of Abia State need to or even have the strength of listing his achievements when it’s already visible to the people of Abians?

Does abians even have the time to demand his achievements when it’s already visible to them. They never had to ask.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by Mubiola360: 6:43am On Jan 02
akingangan:
1. Removed fuel subsidy and unified exchange rates, leading to long-term economic stability because it eliminates fiscal distortions and attracts genuine investments.

2. Doubled government revenues in some periods, reaching over ₦31.9 trillion in 2024, because this provides more funds for infrastructure and social programs without excessive borrowing.

3. Reduced fiscal deficit from 5.4% of GDP in 2023 to 3.0% in 2024 because a lower deficit promotes fiscal discipline and reduces debt burden on future generations.

4. Increased foreign reserves from around $4 billion in 2023 to over $23 billion (some reports up to $46 billion) by late 2024 because higher reserves strengthen the naira and protect against external shocks.

5. Achieved trade surpluses for multiple consecutive quarters because this improves the balance of payments and supports currency stability.

6. Boosted non-oil exports to nearly 48% of total exports because diversifying exports reduces over-reliance on oil and builds economic resilience.

7. Nigerian Stock Exchange gained around 48% in 2025 because a strong stock market reflects growing investor confidence and creates wealth for citizens.

8. Upgraded credit ratings and attracted increased foreign direct investment, especially in the digital economy, because better ratings lower borrowing costs and drive job-creating investments.

9. Projected GDP growth exceeding 4% annualized because sustained growth expands the economy, creates jobs, and improves living standards.

10. Launched the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND), benefiting hundreds of thousands of students (over 300,000–788,000 disbursements for tuition and upkeep) because it removes financial barriers to higher education and builds a skilled workforce.

11. Provided presidential grants and loans to over 900,000 Nigerians for entrepreneurship and skills development because this empowers youth to start businesses and reduces unemployment.

12. Implemented a ₦70,000 national minimum wage to improve living standards because higher wages boost workers' purchasing power and stimulate economic activity.

13. Allocated N80 billion for infrastructure upgrades in 100 federal unity schools because modern facilities enhance learning quality and promote national unity through diverse student interactions.

14. Reopened all 47 federal unity secondary schools after temporary closure due to insecurity because ensuring safe access to education supports continuous learning and student development.

15. Established 119 learning centers nationwide for almajiri education because integrating vulnerable children into formal education reduces street begging and builds future productivity.

16. Approved a new National Policy on Almajiri Education because a structured policy addresses root causes of out-of-school children and promotes inclusive development.

17. Began re-establishment of 157 model almajiri schools, integrating out-of-school children, because this brings millions back into education and curbs social vulnerabilities.

18. Appointed new leadership for the National Commission for Almajiri and Out-of-School Children Education because strong leadership ensures effective implementation of reforms.

19. Unveiled comprehensive almajiri education reforms with international support because modernized education for almajiri children fosters social integration and long-term national progress.

20. Initiated major highway projects, including Lagos-Calabar Coastal Road, Sokoto-Badagry Superhighway, Abuja-Kaduna-Kano Road, and Lagos-Ibadan Expressway because better roads reduce travel time, lower transportation costs, and boost trade.

21. Invested over ₦2 trillion in road infrastructure because massive investment creates jobs during construction and supports economic growth long-term.

22. Modernized ports (e.g., Tin Can Island, Lekki Deep Sea Port integration) and expanded rail networks because efficient ports and rail improve logistics, reduce import costs, and enhance export competitiveness.

23. Signed the Electricity Act 2023 to decentralize power generation and encourage private investment because reliable electricity is essential for industrial growth and household convenience.

24. Launched a diaspora mortgage scheme offering low-interest loans up to N50 million for Nigerians abroad to build or buy homes because it channels diaspora remittances into productive housing investment.

25. Unveiled a new housing platform for diaspora Nigerians to purchase properties across all 36 states and the FCT because easy access encourages diaspora contribution to the economy and reduces housing deficit.

26. Implemented Renewed Hope Housing Programme with nationwide construction and diaspora-inclusive financing because increasing housing supply makes homeownership affordable for more Nigerians.

27. Groundbreaking for 3,500 housing units in Renewed Hope City, Abuja because large-scale projects create construction jobs and provide modern living spaces.

28. Eliminated over 13,500 terrorists and enhanced military operations in troubled regions because improved security restores peace, enables farming and business, and protects lives.

29. Rolled out Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) program to lower transportation costs because cheaper fuel alternatives reduce public transport fares and ease inflation pressures.

30. Introduced consumer credit schemes because accessible credit helps families afford essentials and stimulates local consumption.

31. Provided agricultural funds leading to increased food production (e.g., 20% rise in rice output in some reports) because boosting local farming lowers food prices and enhances food security.

32. Distributed cash transfers and subsidies to vulnerable groups because direct support alleviates poverty and improves quality of life for the most needy.

33. Rewarded Super Falcons players (after 10th WAFCON title in 2025) with $100,000 equivalent each, a three-bedroom apartment, and national honour (OON) because generous rewards motivate excellence and inspire young girls to pursue sports.

34. Awarded Super Falcons technical crew $50,000 equivalent each, housing, and honours because recognizing support staff ensures sustained team performance.

35. Rewarded D’Tigress players (after fifth consecutive AfroBasket title in 2025) with $100,000 equivalent each, an apartment, and OON honour because such incentives promote women's basketball dominance and national pride.

36. Awarded D’Tigress coaching staff $50,000 each, housing, and honours because valuing coaches encourages professional development in sports.

37. Used these rewards to motivate athletes, inspire youth (especially girls), and promote women's sports and national unity because celebrating female champions advances gender equality and unites the country through shared success.

38. Increased oil production to around 1.68 million barrels per day because higher output boosts government revenue for public spending.

39. Expanded digital identity enrollment (over 126 million in NIMC database) because comprehensive identity coverage improves service delivery, reduces fraud, and enables targeted welfare programs.

40. Re-adopted the old national anthem because it restores cultural heritage and fosters a sense of historical continuity and patriotism.
16 years of PDP can't stand this and that is the fact.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by anonimi: 6:45am On Jan 02
akingangan:
So you agree 1 to 39

Bonus
Removed police Escorts from VIP and redeployed them to protect everyone.
Local governments now get direct FG allocation and they can do more for their people without state government interference.

... We don't need to experiment with Atiku or Obi
The title should be changed to LIES about Tinubu’s wasted three years.


Why has he failed to stabilise the dollar at N300 in the short term as he promised despite subsidy savings of $84 billion that has skyrocketed petrol price instead of the promised crash huh

200 million Nigerians, who have suffered APC’s extreme poverty shege since 2015 instead of promised positive change, want a return to PDP’s deregulation and privatisation policies that gave us 16 years of widespread prosperity, less corruption and low insecurity.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by blackgold2018(m): 6:47am On Jan 02
my question is, does Alex Otti of Abia State need to or even have the strength of listing his achievements when it’s already visible to the people of Abians?

Does abians even have the time to demand his achievements when it’s already visible to them. They never had to ask.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by Lovenorth: 6:49am On Jan 02
Closing and opening secondary schools is also an achievement lipsrsealed. All these so-called achievements you have mentioned I have never seen one that directly or indirectly benefits the poor Nigerians
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by NewHe: 6:51am On Jan 02
AqualinaXYZ:
Old national anthem an achievement?




Jesus
You picked the one that doesn't suits your narratives! Why ignore others?
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by Nwaiyoo: 6:54am On Jan 02
Paid propagandists everywhere just to sell the unsalable to the gullible public come 2027. If Una want no shine Una eyes come 2027. Nobody go follow Una cry.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by Julius1995(m): 6:57am On Jan 02
He also called Anthony Joshua to wish him well. Celebrated Reuben Abati on his Birthday.
Went to the Pope's ordination.
Spoke one time without stuttering.
Came to Lagod to Celebrate Christmas.
There are many other things that the best president in human history has done, abi don't you think, you primitive human?
akingangan:
1. Removed fuel subsidy and unified exchange rates, leading to long-term economic stability because it eliminates fiscal distortions and attracts genuine investments.

2. Doubled government revenues in some periods, reaching over ₦31.9 trillion in 2024, because this provides more funds for infrastructure and social programs without excessive borrowing.

3. Reduced fiscal deficit from 5.4% of GDP in 2023 to 3.0% in 2024 because a lower deficit promotes fiscal discipline and reduces debt burden on future generations.

4. Increased foreign reserves from around $4 billion in 2023 to over $23 billion (some reports up to $46 billion) by late 2024 because higher reserves strengthen the naira and protect against external shocks.

5. Achieved trade surpluses for multiple consecutive quarters because this improves the balance of payments and supports currency stability.

6. Boosted non-oil exports to nearly 48% of total exports because diversifying exports reduces over-reliance on oil and builds economic resilience.

7. Nigerian Stock Exchange gained around 48% in 2025 because a strong stock market reflects growing investor confidence and creates wealth for citizens.

8. Upgraded credit ratings and attracted increased foreign direct investment, especially in the digital economy, because better ratings lower borrowing costs and drive job-creating investments.

9. Projected GDP growth exceeding 4% annualized because sustained growth expands the economy, creates jobs, and improves living standards.

10. Launched the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND), benefiting hundreds of thousands of students (over 300,000–788,000 disbursements for tuition and upkeep) because it removes financial barriers to higher education and builds a skilled workforce.

11. Provided presidential grants and loans to over 900,000 Nigerians for entrepreneurship and skills development because this empowers youth to start businesses and reduces unemployment.

12. Implemented a ₦70,000 national minimum wage to improve living standards because higher wages boost workers' purchasing power and stimulate economic activity.

13. Allocated N80 billion for infrastructure upgrades in 100 federal unity schools because modern facilities enhance learning quality and promote national unity through diverse student interactions.

14. Reopened all 47 federal unity secondary schools after temporary closure due to insecurity because ensuring safe access to education supports continuous learning and student development.

15. Established 119 learning centers nationwide for almajiri education because integrating vulnerable children into formal education reduces street begging and builds future productivity.

16. Approved a new National Policy on Almajiri Education because a structured policy addresses root causes of out-of-school children and promotes inclusive development.

17. Began re-establishment of 157 model almajiri schools, integrating out-of-school children, because this brings millions back into education and curbs social vulnerabilities.

18. Appointed new leadership for the National Commission for Almajiri and Out-of-School Children Education because strong leadership ensures effective implementation of reforms.

19. Unveiled comprehensive almajiri education reforms with international support because modernized education for almajiri children fosters social integration and long-term national progress.

20. Initiated major highway projects, including Lagos-Calabar Coastal Road, Sokoto-Badagry Superhighway, Abuja-Kaduna-Kano Road, and Lagos-Ibadan Expressway because better roads reduce travel time, lower transportation costs, and boost trade.

21. Invested over ₦2 trillion in road infrastructure because massive investment creates jobs during construction and supports economic growth long-term.

22. Modernized ports (e.g., Tin Can Island, Lekki Deep Sea Port integration) and expanded rail networks because efficient ports and rail improve logistics, reduce import costs, and enhance export competitiveness.

23. Signed the Electricity Act 2023 to decentralize power generation and encourage private investment because reliable electricity is essential for industrial growth and household convenience.

24. Launched a diaspora mortgage scheme offering low-interest loans up to N50 million for Nigerians abroad to build or buy homes because it channels diaspora remittances into productive housing investment.

25. Unveiled a new housing platform for diaspora Nigerians to purchase properties across all 36 states and the FCT because easy access encourages diaspora contribution to the economy and reduces housing deficit.

26. Implemented Renewed Hope Housing Programme with nationwide construction and diaspora-inclusive financing because increasing housing supply makes homeownership affordable for more Nigerians.

27. Groundbreaking for 3,500 housing units in Renewed Hope City, Abuja because large-scale projects create construction jobs and provide modern living spaces.

28. Eliminated over 13,500 terrorists and enhanced military operations in troubled regions because improved security restores peace, enables farming and business, and protects lives.

29. Rolled out Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) program to lower transportation costs because cheaper fuel alternatives reduce public transport fares and ease inflation pressures.

30. Introduced consumer credit schemes because accessible credit helps families afford essentials and stimulates local consumption.

31. Provided agricultural funds leading to increased food production (e.g., 20% rise in rice output in some reports) because boosting local farming lowers food prices and enhances food security.

32. Distributed cash transfers and subsidies to vulnerable groups because direct support alleviates poverty and improves quality of life for the most needy.

33. Rewarded Super Falcons players (after 10th WAFCON title in 2025) with $100,000 equivalent each, a three-bedroom apartment, and national honour (OON) because generous rewards motivate excellence and inspire young girls to pursue sports.

34. Awarded Super Falcons technical crew $50,000 equivalent each, housing, and honours because recognizing support staff ensures sustained team performance.

35. Rewarded D’Tigress players (after fifth consecutive AfroBasket title in 2025) with $100,000 equivalent each, an apartment, and OON honour because such incentives promote women's basketball dominance and national pride.

36. Awarded D’Tigress coaching staff $50,000 each, housing, and honours because valuing coaches encourages professional development in sports.

37. Used these rewards to motivate athletes, inspire youth (especially girls), and promote women's sports and national unity because celebrating female champions advances gender equality and unites the country through shared success.

38. Increased oil production to around 1.68 million barrels per day because higher output boosts government revenue for public spending.

39. Expanded digital identity enrollment (over 126 million in NIMC database) because comprehensive identity coverage improves service delivery, reduces fraud, and enables targeted welfare programs.

40. Re-adopted the old national anthem because it restores cultural heritage and fosters a sense of historical continuity and patriotism.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by thomas2024: 6:58am On Jan 02
AqualinaXYZ:
Old national anthem an achievement?




Jesus
I tire ooo😂
Don’t mind them clowns. Dem just dey write what they like for there😂😂😂
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by jojothaiv(m): 6:59am On Jan 02
WhizdomXX:
Some things there are unnecessary. How do these measures translate to improved standard of living for most Nigerians?
Exactly, if you see the way 'Mutie, Efe and some of my guys for here burst laugh as one abobi dey read this things loud ehnnnnn, some of us dey con dey imagine say all this achievements no too much like this...
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by Achor1111(m): 6:59am On Jan 02
Only a fuul will type/agree to these gibberish!
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by Pjoe238: 6:59am On Jan 02
)

10 Metrics That Makes President Tinubu's Administration Bad - Ogunleye by Newton2024: 8:49pm On Jan 01
TEN (10) Metrics to Evaluate President Bola Ahmed Tinubu as the worst President, At Least from May 29, 2023, to. December 31, 2025

By Olalekan Samuel Ogunleye
To judge a president by the results that affect ordinary people (cost of living, security, governance quality, and trust), one can argue very strongly that President Tinubu has been one of the worst presidents Nigeria has had in recent times. Below, I will highlight 10 Evaluation metrics to support this claim.

1) He launched reforms that caused a severe cost-of-living shock, without adequate cushioning.

Removing petrol subsidy and related changes may sound “economically correct,” but the speed and intensity of the hardship were tremendous.
Before anyone tells me “reforms are necessary,” my response is simple: reform without protection becomes punishment.

2) Inflation became a headline tragedy for households

When inflation climbed as high as 34.19% in June 2024, it wasn’t just statistics. Instead, it was hunger, rent pressure, and families cutting meals. Even now that inflation has slowed down, the question is: how many lives were broken before the policy benefits arrived?

3) The naira and Forex environment punished businesses and salaries

Forex fluctuations and naira volatility resulted in higher prices for imported inputs, increased operating costs for SMEs, and reduced real wages. His supporters will say, “It’s a needed adjustment,” but I keep asking: Why was the transition managed so shakily that citizens had to bear the cost?

4) Minimum wage increase exposed how badly wages fell behind reality
Yes, the minimum wage moved from ₦30,000 to ₦70,000 (signed July 29, 2024). However, that moment itself proves the pressure Nigerians were under. A wage hike is not a victory if inflation and prices have already run far ahead; it can still feel like a late patch on a deep wound.

5) Social protection felt too slow or too small for the scale of suffering

Government palliatives and support programs existed on paper, but many people experienced them as inconsistent, delayed, or insufficient.
In leadership, perception matters: when people feel abandoned, trust collapses.

6) The Nigerian Electricity became “pay more, suffer the same.”

The Band A tariff jump in April 2024 is a significant example: higher costs without a fast, visible improvement in reliability for many citizens.
And even the government’s own narrative admits the sector still struggles with grid problems and limited generation, so why should citizens accept higher bills as “progress”?

7) Food insecurity worsened to alarming projections.

If tens of millions are projected to face severe food insecurity, including projections of over 33 million in 2025, that constitutes a governance failure. Full stop. You can blame climate and global factors, but a serious government reduces shocks by protecting farming, transport, and purchasing power. How has Tinubu handled this?

cool Insecurity remained a defining failure in the country. Kidnapping, terror attacks, fear, etc. A president’s first job is to make citizens feel safe. When mass kidnappings continue, including major school abductions, it tells investors, parents, and farmers that the state can’t protect them, and everything else suffers.

9) The handling of protests and dissent damaged legitimacy

When protesters were charged with treason after cost-of-living demonstrations, it sent a dangerous signal about civic space.
Even if the government claims it’s “maintaining order,” the burden is on the state to prove proportionality, accountability, and respect for rights. When you keep arresting peaceful protesters or harassing them with police, it clearly shows how you value human rights. Human rights under Tinubu are worse than those of the previous two governments.

10) Governance trust: Corruption, controversial policy processes, and oil-sector credibility issues
When major tax laws face public controversy about content and enforcement powers, people lose trust in the process. Especially when implementation goes ahead amid disputes. A government that manipulates tax laws passed by parliament without informing parliament and then gazettes a different law is nothing but corrupt and fraudulent.

And when oil-sector financial decisions, such as significant debt write-offs, occur while historic remittance disputes remain unresolved, it reinforces the belief that Nigeria’s system still prioritizes protecting institutions over citizens. A government that issues contracts without following due process, as in the case of the Lagos-Calabar Highway, which was given to the President's friend. This is a clear case of nepotism and corruption.

In conclusion, my argument is not that “Tinubu did not carry out reforms.” My argument is that the reforms were experienced as hardship without adequate protection; insecurity persisted; and trust in governance suffered. Corruption remains prevalent mainly under this government, and media propaganda is the prevailing order of the day. If someone wants to argue that Tinubu is doing well, I’m open, but I must see measurable improvements that ordinary Nigerians have felt since he resumed in 2023. Improvements such as stable prices, safer communities, reliable power, and transparent governance. Not just media statistics that have no positive impact on the lives of the masses.

Nigeria is currently on sickbed and the doctored hired to carry out healing reforms on her seems to be incapable for now.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by nedekid: 7:01am On Jan 02
Who wrote this rubbish should consider being called stupid and foolish a compliment.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by bizzibodi(m): 7:02am On Jan 02
Fear who no fear APC this sycophant has to repeat almajiri education nonsense 5times to enter two pages grin grin grin ;Dhe forget to add d government forged new tax law.
Re: List Of What Tinubu Has Done In 3 Years - Akingangan by bewla(m): 7:04am On Jan 02
WhizdomXX:
Some things there are unnecessary. How do these measures translate to improved standard of living for most Nigerians?
That number 32 was something I want to talk about

Government is trying
But what about does in charge

My wife was call to come to ikeja local council
Last week to come for this grant on getting there her NIN was check SNAP and they where ask to sign that they will be calling them later for the money

From my finding this same place have call some people before my wife was call
And there where given atm card same day they where called

Not that they say go and will call you
My point is we are to corrupt so many things like this go on while some use this to enrich there pocket


Imagine FG give 75k to support the less privileged families some of this staff will remove 3k before telling you the pin to operate the card

On my wife case all the money gone as they where to to sign and there nin writing and snap for record

75x 200 people that's about 14 millon

I don't just no who cursed us
Corruption everywhere
1 2 3 4 5 6 Reply

Unemployment: What Tinubu’s Recommendation Tells Us About Him - Oke UmurhohwoYahaya Bello: Tinubu Has Paid His Dues, Nobody Is Undermining HimShehu Sani: Asiwaju Tinubu Has Jumped Off The Fence234

Inuwa Abdul-Kadir: "El-rufai Threatened To Beat Me Up" APC Vice Chairman SaysYouths Hold Thanksgiving Rally For President Buhari In Daura, Kastina (Photos)"Don't Buy Into The Senseless Propaganda On Secession" - President Buhari