President Bola Tinubu, Tuesday, hit at the political opposition, telling them that “elections are not conducted on social media platforms. Nigerians conduct elections.”
The President also urged the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, SGF, Senator George Akume, to reconcile with Governor Hyacinth Alia for the unity of Benue State.
The President also rallied governors, federal lawmakers and party leaders of the All Progressives Congress, APC, to intensify grassroots engagement, declaring that the administration is moving from economic stabilisation to full-scale growth acceleration in 2026.
Speaking through Vice President Kashim Shettima at the Progressive Governors’ Forum and Renewed Hope Ambassadors Strategic Summit at the Presidential Villa’s Old Banquet Hall, Tinubu stressed APC unity as the party shifts from economic stabilisation to growth.
He hailed Akume’s long service—from Benue’s director of protocol and permanent secretary, to two-term governor (1999-2007), senator, minister, and now SGF—before issuing a direct plea: “Let’s build the area together.”
The call drew applause amid tensions over Benue’s APC control.
Akume and Alia camps are in a fight of supremacy in Benue, which is reflected in parallel ward-level executives, nominations, parallel meetings, suspensions, appointments, and House of Assembly loyalties.
Framing the administration’s first phase as one of “difficult but necessary corrections,” the President said structural reforms introduced since 2023 had begun to restore fiscal credibility and stabilise key macroeconomic indicators.
According to him, inflationary pressures are easing, fuel supply disruptions have been addressed and the naira is showing stronger fundamentals, aided by interventions of the Central Bank of Nigeria.
He said: “Our economy is picking up. Major investment decisions across Africa increasingly favour Nigeria. That reflects renewed confidence in our direction.”
Tinubu disclosed that the proposed N58.18 trillion 2026 budget would mark a pivot “from stabilisation to acceleration,” with record capital expenditure, the largest security allocation in the country’s history and tax reforms aimed at protecting vulnerable citizens while broadening the revenue base.
He stressed that policy success would ultimately depend on public understanding, charging members of the Renewed Hope Ambassadors platform to take reform messages beyond conference halls into wards, markets and campuses.
“This mission is about presence, truth and trust. Elections are conducted by Nigerians, not on social media platforms,” he said, urging party faithful to counter misinformation with verifiable facts.
In his remarks, the SGF urged governors to institutionalise Central Results Delivery and Coordination Units at the state level.
“Governance must move from policy pronouncements to measurable outcomes,” Akume said, emphasising stronger federal-state alignment as critical to sustaining reform momentum.”
On the legislative front, Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, represented by Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abbas, reaffirmed the National Assembly’s backing for the administration’s reform architecture.
He described the fiscal consolidation measures, subsidy restructuring and tax reforms as foundational steps toward long-term prosperity, warning that policy gaps between government intent and public perception must be managed through transparency and sustained engagement.
Abbas proposed a quarterly reform interface between federal and APC-controlled state legislatures to harmonise laws and oversight priorities, alongside a “Renewed Hope Public Dashboard” to publish simplified data on revenues, capital projects and social interventions.
He also advocated structured youth and women participation in monitoring reform implementation, arguing that political ownership deepens when participation is genuine.




