Democracy & Governance
Nigeria’s next president should be a woman -By Abdullateef Asaliy
If a woman is nominated and elected as Nigeria’s next president, she would realise that she is in a position where no woman has ever held before in the history of Nigeria and that would make her remember what she has been elected for.
Silence becomes cowardice when occasion demands speaking out the whole truth and acting accordingly. Men have been failing for several occasions in political drive. Historically, they have been so corrupt and prejudice that they are degraded with unsound principle
There is a saying that “What a man can do, a woman can do better”. It is now I realise that we need someone who is nonpartisan and such can be women, not men anymore.
A good example to back up the saying “What a man can do, a woman can do better,” is that of famous leader “Margaret Thatcher”, she established the validity that a woman can excel in man’s world. She is a woman of conformity to the standard of right.
Manifestos stated by men politicians who have been ruling us are nothing but lies and propaganda. They aristocratically operate in their political system.

What Nigerians fail to understand is that women are not corrupt as men are. If a woman is found in the man’s world, she will have passionate performance, protect her dignity unlike man who cares not of tagging himself with bad label.
Since the rein of government is with the civilian, it would be better if the different parties or at least one party nominates a female presidential candidate to participate in the next election.
Men have failed to be patriotic, they only fight for their pockets not that they fight to serve their fathers’ land anymore. Men operate with the work of depraved mind. Men are morally degenerated and perverted.
The Nigeria system of economy is unbearable by the Nigeria populace. Bad roads, problem of unemployment, poor infrastructure and high cost of living are what men politicians have been stating to work on, in their manifestos.
If a woman is nominated and elected as Nigeria’s next president, she would realise that she is in a position where no woman has ever held before in the history of Nigeria and that would make her remember what she has been elected for.
Our Nigerian politicians practice Machiavellianism. It is not anymore surprising, because the father of corruption, Machiavelli, has already stated his models guiding immoral political system. According to him “It is not necessary for a ruler to be man of integrity, it is not necessary for him to be an upright man and it is not necessary to be faithful to his promise.
These are what our so-called Nigerian politician emulate from their role model in leadership.
