By Sa’adiyyah Adebisi Hassan
President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu inherited a nation weighed down by years of postponed decisions and structural weaknesses. Instead of preserving a broken status quo, he chose to confront difficult realities head-on.
He ended the fuel subsidy regime that had drained national resources for decades, a reform every government feared but Nigeria desperately needed. That single decision freed up funds for states, strengthened fiscal transparency, and ended a system that enriched a few while impoverishing the many.
He unified the foreign exchange market, restoring credibility to Nigeria’s monetary framework and sending a clear signal that the era of artificial pricing and economic distortion was over. Investors respond to clarity, not illusions.
Under his leadership, states now receive increased allocations, giving subnational governments more capacity and responsibility to deliver governance at the grassroots. Power is gradually shifting from the centre to where development truly happens.
His administration has placed serious focus on infrastructure, security coordination, and economic reform, choosing long-term stability over short-term applause. These are not populist moves, they are foundational ones.
Tinubu has shown that leadership is not about comfort or applause, but about making hard choices in the national interest. Reform is never painless, but stagnation is fatal.
History does not reward those who delay necessary change. It rewards those who act.
Nigeria is being reset, not entertained.
And that distinction matters.
God bless the President.
God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria. 🇳🇬












