ATIKU WILL WIN 2027 ELECTION WITH CLEAR MARGIN

ATIKU WILL WIN 2027 ELECTION WITH CLEAR MARGIN

Aare Amerijoye Dotb 

In the theatre of Nigerian politics, betrayals are not new, but some are timely, divinely orchestrated even. The masquerades hiding behind the veil of loyalty are gradually being unmasked. And it is better they are revealed now, before the drums of 2027 begin to thunder. For Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, former Vice President and Waziri of Adamawa, the 2027 presidential election is not just another contest, it is destiny knocking, more defined, more focused, and more unstoppable.

Let us return to the facts: in 2023, Peter Obi, with no single seating Governor, no Senator, no House of Representatives member, no House of Assembly member, no Local Government Chairman, not even a councillor, garnered 6.1 million votes. Why? Because he struck a chord with a segment of the population suffocating under the weight of economic mismanagement and political deception.

Now look at Atiku Abubakar: despite the sabotage from within his own party, yes, party governors and actors who wore the cloak of camaraderie but wielded daggers beneath, he pulled nearly 7 million votes. He did so not with the strength of institutional loyalty, but by sheer national presence and enduring belief in his leadership capacity.

Now, imagine the combined force of Obi’s passion-driven numbers and Atiku’s broad-based national acceptance, without the so-called political actors whose loyalty is dictated by appointments,contracts, crumbs, fear and convenience. What becomes clear is this: besides political structures what win elections in Nigeria is the people.

Atiku does not need the poisoned loyalty of political profiteers; he needs the raw, unfiltered anger of the Nigerian people, channelled into a well-coordinated political revolution. He needs to invoke the weariness of the masses who are groaning under Tinubu's trial-and-error economic policies, spiralling inflation, mass unemployment, and insecurity that has become an epidemic. He needs to stand as a mirror that reflects the frustrations of millions, and a compass that shows them a better path forward.

His Excellency, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, is now refining his approach. This time, his circle will be populated by young, vibrant, and passionate leaders,men and women who believe in vision above ambition, who are ready to sacrifice privilege for purpose. Perhaps the betrayals he has suffered are divine signals, a pruning by Providence, to clear the space for those whose loyalty is not for sale and whose faith in his mission is unshakable.

Yes, the governors who worked against him in 2023 remain unchanged, some betrayed openly, others cloaked their disloyalty in subtlety, and their followers mirrored the same duplicity. They’re merely replaying a tired script, only this time with new masks and recycled deceit. But their antics are no longer unpredictable; their treachery is foreseen. And rather than derail Atiku's vision, their betrayal will serve as a springboard for greater resolve. It is far better that their intentions are unmasked now, when the cost is manageable, than at the eleventh hour when the damage could be irreparable. Atiku must respond not with words, but with the undeniable momentum of strategic progress and the visible success of his reengineered political movement.

Let us be clear: this is not the time for recycled strategies. Atiku's campaign must evolve into a people’s movement, powered by truth, courage, and a relentless hunger for change. We must take lessons from those who built castles of lies yet convinced millions. They packaged fiction with flair. We have the truth, let us wrap it in brilliance and strategy.

The goal is not just to respond to the status quo but to dismantle it with superior coordination and messaging. Our politics must be reengineered to reflect the true aspirations of the Nigerian people. The suffering is deep, the cries are loud, and the desire for rescue is undeniable. Atiku must rise as the conductor of this national orchestra of discontent and redemption.

This is the moment. The time for political gymnastics is over. What is needed now is a crusade, a movement driven by precision, not noise; by vision, not vengeance. Let the Tinubu administration be judged not with emotions but with evidence—economic hardship, declining security, broken promises, and policy confusion.

The tide is turning. Nigerians are not blind. The 2027 election will not be decided by governors with divided loyalty or political actors drunk on their own relevance. It will be decided by the Nigerian people, millions of whom are hungry, angry, and waiting for a leader who understands their pain.

Atiku Abubakar will win 2027, not narrowly, not controversially, but with a clear, resounding margin. And those who once sought to undermine him will be forced to watch from the sidelines, spectators in a play they once thought they could script.

The revolution is near. The time for a new style of politics is now. And Atiku Abubakar is ready.