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Home News Opinion

Nigeria’s Political Culture: When Office Ends But Power Remains

by Lanre Ogundipe
May 14, 2026
in Opinion
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Political culture in the Nigerian Senate Plenary Session - Tax Reform
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There is a pattern quietly consolidating itself within Nigeria’s political culture—so familiar now that it scarcely generates the level of national reflection it deserves. Across the country, governors approach the twilight of their constitutional tenure and, almost seamlessly, the conversation shifts toward the Senate. Party structures begin adjusting subtly. Political loyalists reinterpret signals. Potential challengers retreat cautiously. Gradually, what should ordinarily be an open democratic contest begins to resemble an arranged political transition.

The Illusion of Choice and Political Continuity in Nigeria

The movement has become so recurrent that an uncomfortable public question now lingers beneath the surface of Nigeria’s democratic experience: has the Senate gradually evolved into a continuation platform for political power that never truly leaves office?

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This question is not directed at any individual alone. Former governors possess every constitutional right to seek legislative office, just like every other citizen. Indeed, democratic systems often benefit from experienced public officials whose institutional knowledge can enrich parliamentary governance. The issue, however, lies elsewhere—in the growing normalization of political continuity that increasingly appears insulated from genuine democratic competition.

Democratic Space Narrowing Ahead of Nigeria Senate 2027

As the 2027 political season slowly unfolds, familiar signs are already emerging across several states. Discussions around senatorial succession no longer seem entirely driven by open aspiration or competitive participation. In many instances, there exists a quiet assumption that certain seats are naturally reserved for outgoing governors long before formal primaries begin. The atmosphere around such transitions often carries less the uncertainty of democratic contest and more the inevitability of managed succession.

That perception matters.

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Democracy thrives not merely because elections are periodically conducted, but because access to participation remains genuinely open. Once political opportunity begins revolving repeatedly within narrow and entrenched circles, public confidence in the representative character of the system gradually weakens.

Nigeria’s Political Culture: The High Cost of Entry and Elite Political Recycling

The concern deepens further when viewed alongside the escalating financial cost of political participation itself. Across major political parties, nomination forms for legislative offices now command staggering sums beyond the reach of most ordinary citizens. Teachers, professionals, academics, community leaders, civil society actors, and younger aspirants already confront enormous barriers merely to enter the arena. Where such financial exclusion intersects with incumbency influence, party machinery, delegate control, and consensus arrangements surrounding outgoing governors, democratic competition narrows even further.

The consequence is subtle but profound.

Politics slowly begins to appear less as a marketplace of ideas and more as a carefully managed circulation of influence among familiar actors. The same names rotate through executive office, legislative office, party leadership, and strategic appointments while newer entrants struggle to access meaningful political space. In such an atmosphere, democracy risks becoming repetitive rather than regenerative.

​Accountability and the Red Chamber

This recurring transition from Government House to the Red Chamber also intersects with another delicate area of public concern—accountability.

Over the years, several outgoing governors across party lines have left office amid varying degrees of public allegations, anti-corruption scrutiny, petitions, audits, or unresolved accountability questions. It is important to state clearly that allegations do not amount to convictions, and constitutional rights remain fundamental in every democratic system. Yet public perception is rarely shaped only by legal outcomes. It is shaped by recurring political patterns.

And the pattern Nigerians repeatedly observe is difficult to ignore.

Political actors facing public scrutiny often re-emerge almost immediately within new positions that preserve institutional relevance, bargaining power, visibility, and influence. Whether justified or not, such continuity has gradually generated a troubling public interpretation—that political survival and strategic party alignment sometimes appear to overshadow unresolved accountability concerns within the larger democratic culture.

This is where the institutional reputation of the Senate itself becomes part of the national conversation.

Restoring the Nigeria Senate 2027 Vision

The Nigerian Senate was conceived as a chamber of legislative sobriety, national reflection, and constitutional balance. Yet when the upper chamber increasingly appears populated by former governors transitioning almost automatically from executive office, questions naturally arise about whether the legislature is gradually becoming less a forum for broad national representation and more an extension of entrenched political continuity.

Again, the issue is not experience. Democracies need experience. The real concern is imbalance.

Every healthy democratic order requires periodic renewal: new voices, new entrants, new social energies, new perspectives, and genuine opportunities for political mobility beyond elite circles.

Without renewal, institutions become insulated. Without openness, participation becomes symbolic. And without credible access, democracy slowly weakens beneath the weight of continuity masquerading as stability.

This is particularly dangerous in a period of deepening economic hardship. Millions of Nigerians continue to navigate inflation, unemployment, rising living costs, and social uncertainty. In such an environment, visible elite continuity—combined with the commercialisation of political participation—can deepen psychological distance between citizens and the political system itself.

The optics are difficult to dismiss.

Citizens watch a democratic process where the financial cost of contesting rises astronomically, while the pathways to strategic offices appear increasingly concentrated within established political networks. The resulting perception is that democratic participation is becoming progressively inaccessible to ordinary citizens long before the electorate ever casts a vote.

Political parties therefore carry enormous responsibility at this moment.

Internal democracy must not become subordinate entirely to elite arrangements, predetermined succession calculations, or the silent management of political continuity. Consensus candidacies may serve legitimate stabilizing purposes where genuinely negotiated. But where consensus gradually evolves into perceived entitlement or inherited access, public trust inevitably erodes.

Nigeria’s democracy remains young, fragile, and still evolving. Its long-term health will depend not merely on the conduct of elections, but on whether citizens continue to believe the political space remains genuinely accessible beyond wealth, incumbency, influence, and entrenched networks.

Because democracy does not collapse only through authoritarian interruption. Sometimes, it weakens quietly—through shrinking access, narrowing participation, elite recycling, and the gradual normalization of power that never truly leaves.

And perhaps that is the deeper question now confronting the nation: when office ends, but power remains, how much room truly exists for democratic renewal?

Tags: Democracynigeria senate
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Lanre Ogundipe

Lanre Ogundipe

Lanre Ogundipe, a Public Affairs, and former President Nigeria and Africa Union of Journalists writes from Abuja

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