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Adams Oshiomhole, Accountability, and the Uneasy Politics of Speaking Up
Adams Oshiomhole, Accountability, and the Uneasy Politics of Speaking Up....KINDLY READ THE FULL STORY HERE▶
There is a quiet problem in Nigeria’s politics that rarely makes the headlines. It is not the absence of voices, but the fear of using them. In legislative chambers across the country, restraint has become fashionable, caution has replaced conviction, and silence is often mistaken for maturity.
In that atmosphere, Adams Oshiomhole remains an uncomfortable presence.
Not because he is seeking attention, but because he refuses to stay silent. In a Senate where many choose the comfort of agreement, Adams Oshiomhole chooses scrutiny. He asks the kind of questions that slow things down just enough for clarity, demand proper explanations, and ensure decisions are fully understood before they are taken. That momentary pause is intentional. It is about accountability, not disruption.
The image of him engaged on the Senate floor captures more than a moment—it reflects a posture. Representation is not a ceremonial duty; it is an obligation to challenge power on behalf of those who sent you. Oversight was never designed to be polite.
For Edo North, this approach is familiar. The constituency has a long history of valuing firmness over flattery, substance over style. Oshiomhole’s political instincts are rooted in that tradition, and they continue to shape how he operates at the national level. He treats accountability not as an attack, but as a responsibility.
What unsettles many is not the tone of his interventions, but their implications. They suggest that authority must explain itself, that governance must be measured, and that public office is not a private arrangement among elites. In a system where unity is often valued more than performance, such insistence is easily mischaracterized.
But democracies do not weaken because questions are asked. They weaken when questions disappear.
Nigeria’s struggle with governance is not caused by too much debate, but by too little insistence on results. When lawmakers choose comfort over courage, citizens pay the price.
Adams Oshiomhole’s presence is a reminder that accountability is rarely convenient—but it remains essential.
Osigwe Omo-Ikirodah is the Principal and CEO of Bush Radio Academy.
