Latest
The Listening President ️ — How Tinubu Turned the Pardon List Backlash into a Benchmark for Leadership
 
																								
												
												
											The Listening President ️ — How Tinubu Turned the Pardon List Backlash into a Benchmark for Leadership
There is a moment in every democracy when a leader faces a mirror: hears the anger, reads the headlines, senses the churn. That moment is not always comfortable. But when a leader listens — when he recalibrates in sight of public sentiment — it becomes a moment of hope. That is exactly what we saw when President Bola Ahmed Tinubu reconsidered his earlier pardon list and acted on the backlash.....KINDLY READ THE FULL STORY HERE▶
Let’s be frank — the very essence of a presidential pardon involves criminals. You can’t pardon saints. These are men and women who, at one point, broke the law and faced justice. So, naturally, any such list will feature individuals convicted of serious offences. And here’s the truth many overlook: nobody appears on that list by accident. It is usually those who have someone — a religious body, community leader, traditional ruler, political ally or advocacy group — fighting for their clemency that get heard. Mercy petitions are rarely spontaneous; they are lobbied, documented, and defended. Some come through institutional recommendations, others through humanitarian pleas, and a few through political channels. That is the complex reality behind every “pardon list.”
So when the earlier list of 175 names was released — featuring people convicted of crimes like kidnapping, trafficking, and unlawful possession of arms — Nigerians naturally cried out. The optics were bad. The process seemed opaque. Questions filled the air: Who prepared this? What criteria were used? The outrage was legitimate — because mercy must not mock justice.
And then came the turnaround.
Instead of brushing off public anger or hiding behind bureaucracy, Tinubu’s administration did something remarkable: it listened. The Presidency recalled the list, reviewed it through the Advisory Committee on the Prerogative of Mercy, and released a refined version with the most controversial names struck out. Even more, oversight was tightened — moving the process squarely under the Ministry of Justice to prevent future excesses.
That single act of correction is not weakness — it’s responsiveness.
Leadership is not about pretending to be flawless; it’s about being flexible enough to improve. For Tinubu to revisit a sensitive decision under public pressure shows empathy, maturity, and a deep understanding of democratic accountability.
Let’s remember: the power of pardon under Section 175 of the 1999 Constitution doesn’t operate in isolation. The president acts based on layered recommendations — from committees, the Ministry of Justice, and sometimes the Council of State. Meaning, some names slip in through multiple hands before reaching the Villa. But what matters most is not how errors enter the system; it’s how leadership responds when they’re revealed.
By trimming the list and removing those whose crimes carry heavy social and security implications, the president signalled that mercy should be tempered with wisdom. It was a balance between justice and compassion — and that balance is the essence of governance.
In truth, this is what Nigerians should focus on: not just the outrage that forced the correction, but the humility that allowed it. Every democracy thrives when leaders can hear the pulse of the people — and adjust their stride. It’s not common in our political space for a president to publicly amend a decision after criticism; that act alone deserves recognition.
Of course, cynics will still scoff — calling it “damage control.” But even if it is, isn’t accountable damage control far better than stubborn indifference? Would we rather have leaders who never correct themselves?
So, yes, we must always hold our leaders accountable, but we must also give credit where it’s due. Tinubu’s reconsideration of the pardon list is not merely a procedural tweak — it’s a reminder that power can still listen.
Because when leadership listens, democracy breathes.
When people speak, and government adjusts — hope survives.
And that, right there, is the heartbeat of the Renewed Hope Agenda.
Bush Radio Academy, inspired by Osigwe Omo-Ikirodah, is a grassroots-driven institution focused on empowering individuals through storytelling, citizen journalism, and innovative communication tools to amplify overlooked voices.

 
																	
																															 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											