Nigeria is heading deeper into election season, and the big conversation is shifting from campaign noise to the real issue people live with every day: broken infrastructure. Recent coverage shows political parties are already repositioning for the 2027 polls, while INEC has adjusted its election timetable and parties are racing to meet new deadlines. At the same time, fresh reporting keeps pointing to Nigeria’s infrastructure gap, including roads, power, ports, and digital access.
That is why this election should not be about slogans alone. The next leader must treat infrastructure as an emergency, not a talking point. Nigeria needs reliable electricity, better roads, stronger rail links, modern ports, and serious investment in schools and skills if the economy is going to move forward. Without those basics, businesses struggle, transport costs stay high, and young people keep losing faith in the future.
The next candidate should also be judged on one thing: can they turn promises into delivery? Voters should demand clear plans, timelines, and accountability. No more vague manifestos. No more endless blame games. Nigeria needs a leader who can build, not just campaign.
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That is why this election should not be about slogans alone. The next leader must treat infrastructure as an emergency, not a talking point. Nigeria needs reliable electricity, better roads, stronger rail links, modern ports, and serious investment in schools and skills if the economy is going to move forward. Without those basics, businesses struggle, transport costs stay high, and young people keep losing faith in the future.
The next candidate should also be judged on one thing: can they turn promises into delivery? Voters should demand clear plans, timelines, and accountability. No more vague manifestos. No more endless blame games. Nigeria needs a leader who can build, not just campaign.