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Beyond Politics — Esosa Iyawe’s Governance as a Civic Classroom
Beyond Politics — Esosa Iyawe’s Governance as a Civic Classroom
In an era where politics is often reduced to noise, applause, and empty drama, Hon. Engr. Esosa Iyawe, the Member representing Oredo Federal Constituency, stands out as a different kind of leader — one who treats governance not as a theatre of politics, but as a civic classroom.....KINDLY READ THE FULL STORY HERE▶
To Iyawe, every policy is a lesson. Every empowerment is a demonstration. Every constituency visit is an open lecture on responsibility and shared progress. In his world, leadership is not about titles — it’s about teaching the people to understand how government works for them and with them.
This teaching instinct didn’t start in the National Assembly. It began in the discipline of engineering — a field that rewards logic, patience, and precision. As an engineer, he learned that systems only work when every part understands its role. That same philosophy guides his approach to governance in Oredo: connecting people, policies, and progress into one working design.
In a typical Iyawe town hall, you don’t just find a politician making promises; you find a teacher breaking down national programs in simple language — from student loans to youth empowerment, from digital literacy to community works. He believes democracy thrives best when the people understand how to use it.
Through his outreach initiatives, school rehabilitation projects, transport support, and mentorship engagements, Iyawe has quietly built what can best be described as the Oredo Civic School of Leadership — where learning takes place not in classrooms, but in communities. His style gives meaning to the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu — translating federal vision into local understanding.
In the end, Hon. Esosa Iyawe’s story isn’t just that of a politician serving his people. It’s the story of a man using his platform to raise a more informed generation — one that can think, question, and build. Because for him, politics is temporary, but civic education is permanent.
In Oredo today, leadership isn’t performed; it’s taught.
And the teacher’s name is Hon. Engr. Esosa Iyawe FNSE.
Osigwe Omo-Ikirodah writes in for iReporteronline.
