• Home
  • Agric
  • Sci & Tech
  • Health
  • Environment
  • Hausa News
  • More
    • Business/Banking & Finance
    • Politics/Elections
    • Entertainments & Sports
    • International
    • Investigation
    • Law & Human Rights
    • Africa
    • ACCOUNTABILITY/CORRUPTION
    • Hassan Gimba
    • Column
    • Prof. Jibrin Ibrahim
    • Prof. M.K. Othman
    • Defense/Security
    • Education
    • Energy/Electricity
    • Entertainment/Arts & Sports
    • Society and Lifestyle
    • Food & Agriculture
    • Health & Healthy Living
    • International News
    • Interviews
    • Investigation/Fact-Check
    • Judiciary/Legislature/Law & Human Rights
    • Oil & Gas/Mineral Resources
    • Press Freedom/Media/PR/Journalism
    • General News
    • Presidency
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Board Of Advisory
    • Privacy Policy
    • Ethics Policy
    • Teamwork And Collaboration Policy
    • Fact-Checking Policy
    • Advertising
  • Media OutReach Newswire
    • Wire News
  • The Stories
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • UN women screens film on women’s inclusion
  • NYSC urges corps members to uphold values
  • LCCI urges govt to sustain economic reforms
  • Ooni speaks on years of pressure over children
  • Edo media practitioners receive peace reporting training
  • Tinubu confirms killing of ISIS leader Abu-Bilal Al-Manuki in joint Nigeria-U.S. operation
  • Naira slips to N1,372/$ ahead of CBN MPC meeting
  • CBN revises PTA, BTA policy, permits 25% cash disbursement
Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube
AsheNewsAsheNews
  • Home
  • Agric

    LIFE-ND trains farmers in basic bookkeeping

    May 15, 2026

    Lagos to launch food security hub in 2026

    May 15, 2026

    FG to use microchips for nationwide livestock identification

    May 15, 2026

    Aquaculture experts urge fish farmers to reduce middlemen dependence

    May 14, 2026

    Oyo completes 88.92km rural roads, builds 3 markets under RAAMP

    May 14, 2026
  • Sci & Tech

    Association commits to bridging tech gap, strengthening STEM partnerships

    May 14, 2026

    Lagos to establish cybersecurity operations centre

    May 13, 2026

    ECOWAS pushes information integrity

    May 13, 2026

    NSE urges engineers to join politics

    May 13, 2026

    Moniepoint deepens investment in women’s tech talent development

    May 11, 2026
  • Health

    UN women screens film on women’s inclusion

    May 16, 2026

    NAPTIP secures life imprisonment for 2 guards over serial rape of 6-year-old

    May 16, 2026

    NNPC foundation donates 1.5 Tesla MRI to NAUTH

    May 16, 2026

    Association calls for action to empower boys

    May 16, 2026

    COOUTH to deploy more doctors, nurses to Ezinifite hospital

    May 15, 2026
  • Environment

    Association denies approving 40% peculiar allowance for civil servants

    May 14, 2026

    NEMA launches 2026 national disaster preparedness campaign

    May 13, 2026

    Adamawa warns against farming, building on waterways ahead of 2026 rains

    May 13, 2026

    West Africa’s blue economy must balance growth, security and climate resilience — BOAD Director

    May 13, 2026

    FG backs national tourism compendium

    May 13, 2026
  • Hausa News

    Otti plans 250-room 5-star hotel in Umuahia

    April 11, 2026

    Anti-quackery task force seals 4 fake hospitals in Rivers

    August 29, 2025

    [BIDIYO] Yadda na lashe gasa ta duniya a fannin Ingilishi – Rukayya ‘yar shekara 17

    August 6, 2025

    A Saka Baki, A Sasanta Saɓani Tsakanin ‘Yanjarida Da Liman, Daga Muhammad Sajo

    May 21, 2025

    Dan majalisa ya raba kayan miliyoyi a Funtuwa da Dandume

    March 18, 2025
  • More
    1. Business/Banking & Finance
    2. Politics/Elections
    3. Entertainments & Sports
    4. International
    5. Investigation
    6. Law & Human Rights
    7. Africa
    8. ACCOUNTABILITY/CORRUPTION
    9. Hassan Gimba
    10. Column
    11. Prof. Jibrin Ibrahim
    12. Prof. M.K. Othman
    13. Defense/Security
    14. Education
    15. Energy/Electricity
    16. Entertainment/Arts & Sports
    17. Society and Lifestyle
    18. Food & Agriculture
    19. Health & Healthy Living
    20. International News
    21. Interviews
    22. Investigation/Fact-Check
    23. Judiciary/Legislature/Law & Human Rights
    24. Oil & Gas/Mineral Resources
    25. Press Freedom/Media/PR/Journalism
    26. General News
    27. Presidency
    Featured
    Recent

    UN women screens film on women’s inclusion

    May 16, 2026

    NYSC urges corps members to uphold values

    May 16, 2026

    LCCI urges govt to sustain economic reforms

    May 16, 2026
  • About Us
    1. Contact Us
    2. Board Of Advisory
    3. Privacy Policy
    4. Ethics Policy
    5. Teamwork And Collaboration Policy
    6. Fact-Checking Policy
    7. Advertising
    Featured
    Recent

    UN women screens film on women’s inclusion

    May 16, 2026

    NYSC urges corps members to uphold values

    May 16, 2026

    LCCI urges govt to sustain economic reforms

    May 16, 2026
  • Media OutReach Newswire
    • Wire News
  • The Stories
AsheNewsAsheNews
Home»Viewpoint»Tinubu’s baffling Northern exclusion strategy, by Farooq A. Kperogi
Viewpoint

Tinubu’s baffling Northern exclusion strategy, by Farooq A. Kperogi

EditorBy EditorMay 16, 2026Updated:May 16, 2026No Comments8 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The late Muhammadu Buhari wrested power from Goodluck Jonathan in a never-before-seen political upset of an incumbent in Nigeria precisely because of the northern establishment’s strategic coalition with the Southwest political establishment led by Bola Ahmed Tinubu. And Tinubu is president today because of the North’s requital, sort of, for Tinubu’s gesture.

I qualify the requital with “sort of” because Muhammadu Buhari, the chief beneficiary of the coalition, along with a significant number of the cabal that puppeteered him, didn’t want Tinubu to be president. That was the spark for Tinubu’s famously impassioned “Emi lo kan” speech in Abeokuta.

However, northern governors’ collective, full-throated, unambiguous support for Tinubu and denunciation of Buhari and his cabal with the slogan “The North remembers” compensated for Buhari’s treachery. Plus, 63.6 percent of Tinubu’s 8,805,420 votes came from the North.

That is now beside the point. Since becoming president, Tinubu has governed as if only the Southwest voted him into power, or as if the 25.9 percent of the votes he got from there is more significant than the 63.6 percent he got from the North.

I have pointed out in several past columns that Tinubu hasn’t been able to transcend his Lagos-centric and Yoruba provincialism. That’s why he still rules as if he were the governor of Lagos and not the president of Nigeria.

Tinubu is, in many ways, worse than Muhammadu Buhari, who held the record as the most narrow-minded and provincial president Nigeria ever had. In spite of Buhari’s manifest preference for northern Muslims across different ethnic groups, which I characterized in past columns as “undisguised Arewacentricity,” he ceded some power to Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and left control of the economy to the Southwest.

Buhari formally transferred presidential powers to Osinbajo at least five times in his first term, if we count every Section 145 handover in which Osinbajo was to perform presidential functions or serve in an acting capacity while Buhari was outside Nigeria.

I am aware that some people count only three because they focus on the longer or more politically consequential acting-presidency periods, especially June 2016, January-March 2017 and May-August 2017, but the wider point is that Buhari trusted a Yoruba man enough to transfer power to him on many occasions.

By contrast, Vice President Kashim Shettima appears to have been marginalized in Tinubu’s presidency. Despite Tinubu’s frequent health-related trips to France, he has never transferred power to Shettima, even for a day. Instead, he seems to time his returns to Nigeria just early enough to avoid the constitutional requirement to hand over power, only to leave for France again a few days later.

Major economic and financial levers of government were held by southern figures, including Southwesterners. Osinbajo coordinated the economic team, Godwin Emefiele controlled monetary policy, Kemi Adeosun headed Finance until she resigned over the NYSC certificate forgery scandal, Babatunde Fowler ran FIRS, Udo Udoma led Budget and National Planning, Okechukwu Enelamah ran Trade and Investment and Ben Akabueze ran the Budget Office.

By contrast, under Tinubu, even the constitutionally recognized economic role of the vice president appears to have been hollowed out. Kashim Shettima may chair the National Economic Council on paper, but the commanding heights of economic policy are firmly in the hands of Tinubu’s Southwestern circle, leading to the increasingly plausible joke that Nigeria’s economic fate can now be decided entirely in Yoruba.

It used to be said that the only truly powerful and influential northerner in Tinubu’s administration was National Security Adviser Nuhu Ribadu. He appeared to enjoy Tinubu’s confidence to a degree that went beyond the normal.

But with the duplicative appointment of retired Major General Adeyinka Famadewa, from Osun State, as Special Adviser to the President on Home Security, there is a widespread feeling in the North that Tinubu has finally purged the last vestige of northern influence in his government.
There are many reasons for this perception. First, home security is a subset of national security, and no past government has ever seen the need to establish a separate office for a Special Adviser on Home Security.

In any case, the National Security Adviser is a constitutionally recognized office in the presidency and is part of the National Security Council, which advises the president on public security and agencies created for the security of the federation. It is responsible for the “leadership, management and capacity development” of Nigeria’s security architecture.

It’s hard to justify the creation of the office of SA on Home Security to focus on terrorism inside Nigeria, banditry, border vulnerabilities, intelligence coordination, critical infrastructure protection and inter-agency response when Nigeria already has the NSA, the Ministry of Interior, the DSS, the police, the military, the NSCDC, the Immigration Service and the National Counter-Terrorism Centre under ONSA.

The Ministry of Interior’s own mandate includes internal security and related services, while the NCTC is already housed in ONSA to coordinate counterterrorism efforts.

Second, Famadewa worked as the principal general staff officer to the NSA during the Buhari administration from 2015 to 2021, where he established the Intelligence Fusion Centre. The skills, experience and associational capital he is bringing to his new job as SA on Home Security are all derived from ONSA.

In other words, without being clearly subordinate to, or carefully coordinated with, the NSA and limited to domestic-security implementation, he is merely a Yoruba NSA. At least that’s what it comes across as.

Third, Famadewa is said to be a Hausa-speaking Yoruba man, and this fact is being read as a signal that Tinubu wants a Yoruba ear in the defense sector headed by northerners, which demonstrates a deep distrust of the people from the region he put there.

These speculations may have no basis in fact. For one, Ribadu is still the international face of the Tinubu administration. You don’t send someone you distrust to negotiate on your behalf with a government as crucial as the United States government.

Vice President Shettima also seems to get along just fine with Tinubu in spite of what seems to us outsiders like the diminished influence of the office of the vice president, especially in comparison with the outsized influence of Osinbajo in Buhari’s first term.

It is also possible that what comes across as Tinubu’s inexplicable animosity toward a region that gave him more than 60 percent of his electoral mandate actually comes not from him but from his ethnocentric kitchen cabinet that people have called his greedy, ignorant, shortsighted “Lagos boys.”

But it doesn’t matter. The buck stops at his desk. His studied representational exclusion of the Southeast is already well established. Apart from Nyesom Wike, there is no other notable southern minority in a key position in his government. Yes, he has made noteworthy symbolic overtures to northern Christians, particularly through his wife, Remi.

Nonetheless, for a president seeking a second term, he has an awfully perplexing electoral tactic. To dispense with a region that gave you more than 60 percent of your vote, you need several emblematic motions. First, don’t be seen to be undermining, relegating or ignoring your vice president from the region. It may not be true, but perception is the currency of reality in politics.

Second, don’t be seen to be calculatedly surveilling the second most important appointment given to the region, that is, the office of the NSA, by appointing a kinsman from your natal state, no less, to reduplicate his position.

If you have decided to initiate a political divorce with the region, which is perfectly legitimate even if it is treacherous, at least have a sensible alternative regional coalitional strategy.

As I have repeatedly pointed out in my columns, the Muslim North isn’t politically invincible. Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan have shown that convincingly. But to defeat it, you need to galvanize the entire South, the Christian North and a sprinkling of the margins of the Muslim North.

Tinubu is incapable of executing this strategy. Most of the Southeast won’t warm up to him in 2027 both because of his systematic exclusion of the region and because of the region’s enthusiastic embrace of its son, Peter Obi, who will most likely run again in 2027. Given Obi’s popularity among southern minorities, the best scenario for Tinubu would be that he would divide southern minority votes with Obi.

Votes from the Southwest, northern Christians, many of whom seem to have thawed their initial ice-cold hostility toward him on account of his choice of a Muslim as his running mate, and a plurality of southern minorities will never be sufficient to compensate for his active, self-created loss of northern Muslim votes.

And that causes me to wonder what Tinubu’s 2027 electoral game plan is. Whatever it is, it can’t be a legitimate electoral victory. But my biggest worry, more than electoral calculations, is the extreme, unexampled, in-your-face ethnocentric capture of the country by Tinubu, which sets an even worse precedent for his successor than Buhari set for him.

Nigeria needs a Nigerian president, not a sectional overlord who is Nigerian only in name.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Editor
  • Website

Related Posts

Xenophobia’s bitter irony: South Africa’s shameful attacks on fellow Africans, By Peter Wamboga-Mugirya

May 15, 2026

When democracy must defend itself: Karl Popper’s paradoxes, the Open Society and Nigeria’s democratic question

May 3, 2026

To our beloved brothers in South Africa, By Femi Fani-Kayode

May 3, 2026

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

UN women screens film on women’s inclusion

May 16, 2026

NYSC urges corps members to uphold values

May 16, 2026

LCCI urges govt to sustain economic reforms

May 16, 2026

Ooni speaks on years of pressure over children

May 16, 2026
About Us
About Us

ASHENEWS (AsheNewsDaily.com), published by PenPlus Online Media Publishers, is an independent online newspaper. We report development news, especially on Agriculture, Science, Health and Environment as they affect the under-reported rural and urban poor.

We also conduct investigations, especially in the areas of ASHE, as well as other general interests, including corruption, human rights, illicit financial flows, and politics.

Contact Info:
  • 1st floor, Dogon Daji House, No. 5, Maiduguri Road, Sokoto
  • +234(0)7031140009
  • ashenewsdaily@gmail.com
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
© 2026 All Rights Reserved. ASHENEWS Daily Designed & Managed By DeedsTech

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.