Connect with us

Political Issues

Urging Wike To Eschew Thriving On Headlines Only For Confrontational And Combative Reasons -By Isaac Asabor

The 2023 election cycle further cemented his combative style. After losing the PDP presidential primaries to Atiku Abubakar, Wike refused to bow to party discipline. Instead, he built the G5 Governors’ bloc into a rebellion platform, weakening his own party while openly flirting with the APC. Again, it was headline politics, dramatic, noisy, but ultimately counterproductive.

Published

on

Nyesom-Wike

It is not an exaggeration to opine that Nyesom Wike, Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and immediate past governor of Rivers State, has perfected the art of being in the headlines. But the troubling part is that those headlines are rarely about policies, innovations, or people-centered reforms. Rather, they are consistently about confrontation, threats, and bulldozer politics.

As a journalist and mass communicator, I do not make this assertion lightly. I know the weight of headlines, how they shape public perception, and how they can either elevate or diminish a leader’s legacy. Headlines should project progress, vision, and hope, not portray a leader as perpetually combative. Unfortunately, Wike’s style has positioned him as someone who thrives on being newsworthy for all the wrong reasons.

From his years as governor of Rivers State, Wike’s political brand has been more combative than constructive. His never-ending feud with Rotimi Amaechi consumed Rivers politics, leaving governance to play second fiddle to personality clashes. The much-publicized accusations and counter-accusations drained political energy that could have been channeled into meaningful development.

Advertisement

The demolitions of two hotels during the COVID-19 lockdown are still remembered as an overreach of power, a show of force that generated headlines but at the cost of empathy and fairness. It was the type of decision that said more about the governor’s need to flex political muscle than about safeguarding public health.

The 2023 election cycle further cemented his combative style. After losing the PDP presidential primaries to Atiku Abubakar, Wike refused to bow to party discipline. Instead, he built the G5 Governors’ bloc into a rebellion platform, weakening his own party while openly flirting with the APC. Again, it was headline politics, dramatic, noisy, but ultimately counterproductive.

Today, in Abuja, the same script is playing out. Instead of making headlines for advancing transport systems, driving urban housing, or rolling out innovative infrastructure, Wike is constantly in the news for demolitions, ultimatums, and political strong-arming. His inability to leave behind Rivers politics and the ongoing feud with Governor Siminalayi Fubara further distracts from his mandate in the FCT. Therefore, he needs to be told that Abuja residents deserve a minister, not a political showman?

Advertisement

This obsession with combative headlines raises a critical point: leadership is not about dominating news cycles with drama. Olusegun Obasanjo, for example, combined toughness with diplomacy. Bola Tinubu, even in his fiercest battles, often relied on strategy and proxies rather than personal theatrics. Umaru Musa Yar’Adua governed with quiet calmness and is remembered as a statesman. Wike, in contrast, often behaves as though every opponent must be crushed, forgetting that politics is also about bridge-building and problem-solving.

Nigeria today is struggling with insecurity, economic hardship, and infrastructural decay. Abuja in particular requires a calm, strategic hand, one that can quietly but effectively deliver solutions. What it does not need is a minister who sees headlines as trophies of confrontation.

Let it be said without equivocation: as a journalist and a practitioner of mass communication, I understand the anatomy of headlines. I know when they reflect true leadership and when they merely feed a cycle of noise. If Wike continues to prioritize drama, history will not remember him as a reformer but as a politician who mistook attention for achievement.

Advertisement

There is still time for Wike to change course. If he adopts diplomacy, patience, and empathy, he can recast himself as a statesman. But if he continues to thrive on combative headlines, his legacy will be written in bold fonts of conflict, loud but empty.

Nyesom Wike must realize that Nigeria is bigger than his confrontations. Governance demands more than drama; it requires calm, vision, and results. Headlines alone do not build a legacy, substance does.

Advertisement

Opinion Nigeria is a practical online community where both local and international authors through their opinion pieces, address today’s topical issues. In Opinion Nigeria, we believe in the right to freedom of opinion and expression. We believe that people should be free to express their opinion without interference from anyone especially the government.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Comments

Trending Articles

Democracy & Governance2 hours ago

Fayose’s Thank You Message To Obasanjo: Uncouth, Unthinking And UnAfrican -By Isaac Asabor

Obasanjo, for his part, responded with a pointed but dignified jab, thanking Fayose for revealing his true nature and promptly...

Nigeria map and flap Nigeria map and flap
Democracy & Governance12 hours ago

Why Nigeria Must Act Now or Face the Consequences: The Wake-Up Call of the U.S. Religious Freedom Accountability Bill 2025 -By James Ezema

And to the Nigerian people—Christians, Muslims, and traditionalists alike—this moment demands unity, not division. Petition your lawmakers, demand justice, and...

Africa Russia summit and mining Africa Russia summit and mining
Global Issues1 day ago

Africa’s Mining Industry: New Opportunities for Cooperation with Russia and China -By Kestér Kenn Klomegâh

The Chinese delegation played a significant role in the event. Participants included Sun Yongjun, First Secretary of the Embassy of...

Nyesom-Wike-FCT-minister- Nyesom-Wike-FCT-minister-
Democracy & Governance2 days ago

The Yerima Effect: How A Naval Officer’s Stillness Destroyed Wike’s Political Weapons, Collapsed His Judicial Shield, And Taught A Young Democracy To Stop Fearing Strong Men -By Prof. John Egbeazien Oshodi

The Ministry of Defence publicly defended the officer, not Wike. They stated clearly that Yerima acted within lawful authority. That...

senate president lawan withdraws appointment of festus adedayo as media aide 1 senate president lawan withdraws appointment of festus adedayo as media aide 1
Democracy & Governance2 days ago

Aso Rock and Kitoye Ajasa’s Lickspittle Press -By Festus Adedayo

To demonstrate their opprobrium for Ajasa’s leaflet, the Nigerian Pioneer newspaper, the people scoffed at it on the newsstand. To Ajasa’s contemporaries, his...