Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu - Politics - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Politics › Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu (12803 Views)
| Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by SkytrendNewsNg(op): 10:52am On Jan 05 |
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vlVGPaksc9o?si=3vfxnC2OTQnNToY9 Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes to Win — He Needs INEC and Judges, Odinkalu Says Nigeria’s political space has erupted after a respected rights advocate, Professor Chidi Odinkalu made a blistering claim: President Bola Tinubu does not need the votes of Nigerians to hold power. Instead, he argues, he needs just INEC and judges to win elections in Nigeria.
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| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Och77(m): 10:56am On Jan 05 |
The pure and undiluted truth, reason for his arrogance. |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Ofunaofu: 10:58am On Jan 05 |
Tinubu is a criminal, notorious drug baron, fórgér, idéntity thiéf, buccaneering power grabber engaging in criminal state capture |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by helinues: 10:59am On Jan 05 |
Delulu talk..sebi The INEC and the judges are Mauritanians Eish |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by yarimo(m): 11:26am On Jan 05 |
Always speaking like a fool |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by OKOATA(m): 11:52am On Jan 05 |
But this time around the world radar is on him and the USA is also on him. He should try and rig 2027 and see. Hope you guys know whats on space lately. Trump and Neyanthu are cleansing the world of evil leaders so be warned. |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Streetinvestor2: 12:01pm On Jan 05 |
We know he is betting on rigging use apc governors. Then again trump is an inch close and watching |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Streetinvestor2: 12:02pm On Jan 05 |
yarimo:Lol.we know he is betting on rigging but it won't work. Trump is watching |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by DatNiggaDaz: 12:03pm On Jan 05 |
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| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by SeeWahala: 12:14pm On Jan 05 |
Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To WinWe already know all he knows is to snatch and grab then try to limp away with things that don't belong to him Drug baroning, certificate-less, serial picture robbing & manipulating, bribe giving, slave driving (Eko landlord) vampire 🦇 BAT and 🐀 RAT of the entity called 9ja ![]() Soo ugly he had to use AI makeup 💄 even after using SOFTWARE makeup and this was done sequel to their stylist doing PHYSICAL make-up for the fentanyl sniffing a*•×hole's and Kagame photo shoot ![]() |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Heffalump(m): 12:22pm On Jan 05*. Modified: 8:03am On Jan 06 |
That's the exact reason why we are calling on Trump to put him (Tinubu) in check. Trump can put him on his toes never to try shit. If you think America did not hold Goodluck Ebele Jonathan down, then you ain't know nothing. Obama made sure GEJ was acting straight. We heard everything. But, today Tinubu's supporters will not like the idea of Trump making sure things are done the appropriate way, even though they loved it when Obama stood for democracy in Nigeria. No rigging!! Let the electorates decide in an election. That's the tenet of democracy. |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by simpleseyi: 12:22pm On Jan 05 |
Bitter old man. Cry well well. Now we have 30 sitting state governors, 2/3 majority of the National Assembly, we have INEC and our home girl Small-Tiger is the head of the Supreme Court, so you will cry for long |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Ofunaofu: 12:30pm On Jan 05 |
yarimo:Insults are usually what people use when they can’t counter facts. |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by kaludestiny10(m): 12:35pm On Jan 05 |
This is not a news to the sound minds. This is the same thing that happened during the last general election. INEC is the most useless institution we have in Nigeria. |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by simpleseyi: 12:38pm On Jan 05 |
helinues:. The bitter old man wants Tinubu to appoint Peter Obi’s wife as INEC Chairperson and the gay son as head of Supreme Court |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Streetinvestor2: 12:42pm On Jan 05 |
simpleseyi:We have one guy which is most important..Trump. He is very close and watching. He can pick anyone like Eagle picks a lizard..lol |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by SixSeven: 2:18pm On Jan 05*. Modified: 2:34pm On Jan 05 |
This time around, the ministers and presidential aides will speak on behalf of the President during campaign [quoe author=sixseven post=137876394] I thought their Emilokan knew it was going to be him, he did not even need any prophesy that he even asked El Rufai to speak for him during his campaign. He knew his 'team' but to cover Nigeria's back in international space after getting there, he is showing confusion. Mr Teamship, the man who can spot talents. The joke is on you. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RtvPDLq2P3E[/quote]Even here where he wasn't debating with anyone, he still could not bring himself to answer questions. The world is watching Nigeria and they can see how we are making a full of ourselves. Since APC came to power, Presidential Media chats are a thing of the past. They don't believe that giving accountability is necessary. Wike has more media chats than the President and what is he usually talking about? Politics! Not governance. If they were in opposition and PDP did the same thing, they would have screamed 🤡 |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by zinaunreal(m): 2:26pm On Jan 05 |
Simple and short. Judiciary and inec have been paid |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by donleo92(m): 2:26pm On Jan 05 |
😂😂😂😂😂 And if you reason am, na true talk oooh. That's why all the governors are all decamping to APC, so they can rig with him. Mr President is taxing the poor for his election funds. You don't tax the poor, you rather create jobs for them |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Psalmistproject: 2:26pm On Jan 05 |
No problem I will still come out on the election day and vote against tinubu. Let inec and the court vote for him I don't care. |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by SixSeven: 2:27pm On Jan 05 |
Democracy is a scam if one country can decide how crazy another's democracy is crazy. Demonstration of craze... This is why it will not work in Africa because it's crazy how the demo works here. The rulers have figured out how to manipulate the system to benefit them without direct responsibility. In 1999 - 2003, the Executive did not like the Legislature and orchestrated the removal of the Senate and Reps different times. However you must be aware that the leaders of those houses were not 100% clean. Do you remember Salisu and Toronto Certificate? Within four years, the Senate alone had three presidents. Salisu Buhari’s removal over the Toronto certificate scandal was justified on ethical grounds, but the speed and coordination of the process revealed something deeper, the executive influence was never far away. Evan Enwerem and later Chuba Okadigbo fell amid allegations of misconduct, yet the pattern suggested that leadership crises were being managed politically, not institutionally. Accountability was selective, reactive, and often convenient for the power brokers. Nigeria began its democratic process on a faulty foundation. The Governors will learn after the 2003 tsunami by the PDP how to grab it in the next paragraph. In 2003–07, the major issue of this tenure was the attempt tamper with constitutional limits through political pressure. Even though Obasanjo denies it today, there is enough documentation on how the third-term agenda was not just about tenure elongation but it was a stress test of whether constitutional rules could withstand executive might. The Legislature was flooded with inducements and intimidation. That the amendment failed remains significant, but equally significant is how close it came to succeeding. Democracy survived this phase by a narrow margin, not by institutional strength but thank God it survived. Credit to Sen Ken Nnamani. In 2007–11, this tenure combined electoral legitimacy collapse, legislative scandal, and executive weakness. The 2007 elections severely damaged democratic credibility, yet governance proceeded without correction. Yar Adua's attempt to correct the anomaly of an election succeeded a bit when he set up an electoral panel to review our electoral system. Inside the Legislature, the Patricia Etteh crisis and later the Dimeji Bankole era exposed how leadership of the House became entangled with patronage and post-tenure criminalisation. The defining rupture, however, was Yar’Adua’s illness and death. The secrecy surrounding presidential incapacity paralysed governance and exposed a constitutional vacuum. The “Doctrine of Necessity” that elevated the Vice President was a timely fix but it also confirmed that Nigeria’s democracy often survives by improvisation rather than adherence to clear rules. Thank you Dora Akunyili and we can't forget the role of Mr Aondoaka and those who claimed that the President could rule from anywhere in the world. A pattern that will be repeated later under Buhari and now, Tinubu. This period was where the Governors started learning to cut their teeth. They became more influential in Nigerian politics. The Governors' Forum was influencing national politics. This was the period of one party state by PDP that made Ogbulafor boast that PDP will rule for 60 years. Obasanjo had taught the Governors lessons but Yar Adua and Jonathan's scholarly approach to democracy may have cost us a lesson on tight fisted executive. DORA AKUNYILI'S EXPLOSIVE MESSAGE TO YAR'ADUA https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47UulCINeuo In 2011–15, the main issue of this period was oversight without enforcement. The National Assembly appeared assertive, especially during the fuel subsidy probe, which revealed massive corruption. Yet the failure to secure decisive prosecutions weakened public trust. You must remember that Farouk Lawan was recently forgiven in the Tinubu's presidential pardon list but what he did at that time was a symbol of the corruption at the top. At the same time, electoral reforms under Attahiru Jega restored some credibility to elections, creating a contrast between improving electoral process and stagnant governance accountability. Democracy looked better at the ballot box than in outcomes. Change became possible but the Governors played a major role in redesigning how party politics was. The party was no longer the class captain, each Governor was now taking hold of the party structure at each state. AUDIO: The $3 million conversation between Farouk Lawan and Femi Otedola - Part 2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qUnWDgEMDa8 $3million bribery: Farouk Lawan request removal of Otedola's company from fuel subsidy report https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v7gzT5vd0vE In 2015–19, this tenure was dominated by open institutional confrontation. Bukola Saraki’s emergence as Senate President against party and executive preference triggered years of conflict. His trial at the Code of Conduct Tribunal placed the Judiciary squarely within political struggle. Simultaneously, the Executive openly disobeyed court orders in security-related cases, signalling impatience with judicial restraint. This was not just an executive–legislative problem, it was a systemic breakdown of respect among arms of government because APC was in power, so yih can't blame the opposition. Power was increasingly exercised as moral authority rather than constitutional obligation. The first attack on the judicial system began here with the Onnoghen trial by the Buhari government. The death of the media also started during this time. APC, which had oiled the machinery of the media to their advantage could not let the same machine take them out. They came out hard on critical thinking and through the Minister of Information, the Press review started here. In 2019–23, the tenure was defined by the open surrender of legislative independence. Unlike earlier Assemblies that at least struggled with the Executive, this one publicly embraced alignment as a governing principle. Legislative leaders openly described the National Assembly as a “partner” rather than a check. Oversight weakened noticeably. Budgets were passed with little resistance, confirmations sailed through, and major policy questions rarely produced institutional pushback. The loss of teeth was not accidental. Senate President Ahmed Lawan repeatedly framed the National Assembly as a “partner” of the Executive rather than a check on it. In public statements, he emphasized working “in harmony” with the presidency to pass legislation and implement national policies, warning against “unnecessary grandstanding” that could delay governance. Oversight weakened - bills, budgets, and ministerial confirmations proceeded with minimal scrutiny. A prominent example was Godswill Akpabio’s smooth confirmation as Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, which drew little interrogation despite prior controversies. Please off your mic. Committees that would normally probe ministers or government contracts rarely escalated findings, signaling a tacit decision that cooperation, not confrontation, was the guiding principle. The loss of teeth was not accidental, it was openly acknowledged, marking a clear departure from Assemblies that had previously struggled even contentiously to assert themselves. Democracy during this period functioned procedurally but hollowly, with elections and legislative processes intact but scrutiny and accountability diminished. From 2023–present, the current 10th National Assembly has intensified this pattern. It had easily won the worst National Assembly even before concluding its tenure. Senate and House leaders, including Akpabio, have publicly reinforced the idea that lawmakers are not elected “to fight the Executive” but to collaborate on national priorities. Akpabio stressed that legislators should support executive-led bills that serve the nation, even if critics label this a “rubber-stamp” legislature. Committees continue to exist, but oversight has become largely symbolic. Critical national issues, security challenges, rising inflation, and controversial economic policies see limited legislative pushback. What stands out is not conflict but its absence, making it clear that the Legislature now prioritizes alignment and on a mandate they wish to stand on with the executive over independent scrutiny. In practical terms, the National Assembly functions, but as a facilitator of executive priorities rather than a co-equal branch ensuring accountability. This Assembly has trashed any respect whatsoever you may have for the Legislature. Publicly singing on your mandate they shall stand, trying to praise the President's work and laughing over serious issues that affect Nigerians or completely ignoring them have made them weaker than the whisker of a cat. Looking at Nigeria’s National Assembly from 1999 to today, a clear pattern stands out. Each four-year tenure faced big challenges, but the Legislature often let itself be shaped by politicians and party leaders instead of standing up to protect the people’s interests. The 10th Assembly shows this clearly. Leaders openly put the President’s wishes above their constitutional duty. They approve bills and budgets without asking tough questions. Committees that should investigate government programs barely do their work. By choosing to cooperate instead of check power, the Legislature has weakened democracy from within. At the same time, the Judiciary has often compromised, bending under pressure or choosing caution, which has limited its ability to fully check government power. Go to court!!! ![]() This problem is not unique to Nigeria. In countries like Venezuela, democracy exists on paper but is erased by politicians who manipulate institutions for their own gain. We can see the same pattern here. But pointing out these failures does not give outsiders the right to lecture Venuezela. Even strong democracies like the United States struggle with their own political crises and institutional problems. True democracy only works when the people and their own institutions hold power accountable. No one else can do it for us. ©️ SixSeven https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qL6QgwDREmo |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Fearlez: 2:28pm On Jan 05 |
Seun didn't put the usual poll survey on this thread like he does others recently. |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by anonimi: 2:29pm On Jan 05 |
Och77:No wonder Wike is building houses for judges while owing teachers salaries. What kind of prioprity is that ![]() anonimi: |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by fredoooooo: 2:29pm On Jan 05 |
Win na win .. if you no like am ... do the needful... |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by jaxxy(m): 2:29pm On Jan 05 |
That will only lead to anarchy. it will backfire. |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Prenonjebose: 2:30pm On Jan 05 |
Nothing new here. It's an open secret. Go to court if aggrieved is a potent slogan |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by b0rn2fuck(m): 2:31pm On Jan 05 |
With some Agberos snatching bosses for evidence and replacing with already tomp printed ones , thank God MC oluomo now president to control Abuja agbero, while Wike take over River, him na official egbero and tafa sego dey Lagos, una mind no go rest |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Goke7: 2:32pm On Jan 05 |
yarimo:I don't usually respond to stuff like this, but you're right. It's disappointing to see educated men speak this way. If you can't win or contest in an election, it's foolish to admit that INEC and the judiciary will just award the winner. This is gaslighting, and the man, as you said, is indeed foolish |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by Jaga9ja: 2:32pm On Jan 05 |
Perfectly said. Just as I said on the other thread. Tinubu doesn't know what legality and legitimacy means, because he has never done anything legitimate all through his adult life. |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by gare(f): 2:32pm On Jan 05 |
SkytrendNewsNg:then if he goes that way, he should expect trump, I thought he is very popular 30 states for APC he does not need INEC and Judges. |
| Re: Tinubu Doesn’t Need Nigerians' Votes To Win — He Needs INEC And Judges- Odinkalu by johngwain: 2:32pm On Jan 05 |
We know tulumbu want to rig 2027 election, but let him come and rig nah make we see, the country go catch fire immediately starting from the north, nobody want him again |
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all he knows is to snatch and grab then try to limp away with things that don't belong to him 
