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Beyond The Tenure: Building A Legacy That Outlives The Sirens By Boma Lilian Braide(Esq.)

Contributor by Contributor
March 1, 2026
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Picture the final midnight of a Nigerian Governor’s eight year tenure. The Government House, once a citadel of unquestioned authority, has become a frantic hive of last-minute activity. In one corner, industrial shredder hum relentlessly, swallowing the paper trails of a decade that tells the secret stories of inflated contracts, bypassed budgets, and abandoned promises. In another, loyalists hurriedly load loading unmarked SUVs with state property, their eyes fixed on the gate as the clock inches toward zero.
Outside, the capital city lies still. A giant billboard glows in the night, its airbrushed portrait of the governor proclaiming a Legacy that is already starting to peel in the night air. But there is a cold hard truth that no billboard or slogan can conceal: in six hours, the sirens will fall silent. The ”Your Excellency” chorus will shift to the next occupant. Security details will melt away. And the question that haunts every Nigerian leader will finally echo in the quiet: What did I truly leave behind?
For too long, we have mistaken tenure for ownership and activity for achievement. Twenty six years into the Fourth Republic, we continue to erect monuments of ego while the foundations of governance remain fragile. This is a critical autopsy of the Nigerian political legacy and a guide for any leader who wants to be more than just a footnote in a dusty history book.

THE MONUMENT FALLACY: WHY OUR LEGACIES CRUMBLE AFTER THE CAMERAS LEAVE
Across Nigeria, we have perfected the spectacle of the grand commissioning while neglecting the discipline of long-term governance. We have embraced a costly illusion: that leadership is measured in concrete, steel, and ribbon cutting ceremonies. We are a nation governed by a Commissioning Culture: a hollow ritual where progress is performed for the cameras rather than rooted in the soil.

The scene is familiar: a little girl holding velvet ribbons, oversized golden scissors gleaming under floodlights, generators humming like a mechanical choir, and a front row of traditional rulers applauding on cue. It is development as performance. But return eighteen months after the governor leaves office, and the once celebrated project often stands abandoned, a monument to political vanity rather than public value.

This obsession drains state treasuries. A governor may withdraw fifty billion naira from a lean budget to build an international airport in a region where many citizens cannot afford transport to the next village. The ribbon is cut, the cameras flash, and the project is christened a legacy. Yet to the woman selling roasted plantain by the roadside, the airport is a distant ghost. It neither feeds her family nor equips the primary healthcare centre in her ward with basic medication.
Why does this pattern persist? Because cement photographs well. A bridge can be drone shot. A stadium can bear a governor’s name. But you cannot commission a functional school system. You cannot unveil a transparent civil service. You cannot hang a plaque on judicial integrity or tax efficiency. These are the invisible pillars of a functioning society, yet in a political culture obsessed with optics, what cannot be photographed is often dismissed as non-existent.

This is why project-based governance continues to suffocate us. We build ultra-modern markets but neglect the microfinance structures that help traders stock their shops. We purchase security vans but ignore forensic capacity, investigative training, and officer welfare. The result? Those vans are not used to track criminals; they become mobile checkpoints for state-sponsored extortion.
We erect diagnostic centres without budgeting for reagents or specialists. The International Cargo Airport becomes a premium grazing field for goats because no airline can afford the landing fees for a route that leads to nowhere.

A fortress built on the ego of one man will always crumble. A legacy built on systems can outlive generations.
True legacy is a rare bird in our political landscape. It is not defined by what you have added to the physical horizon; it is defined by what you have transformed in the daily life of the citizen who has no connection to the Government House. Real immortality in power requires a leader to care more about the continuum of the state than the continuity of their personal influence.
Until we stop worshipping the monument and start demanding the sanctity of the system, our progress will remain nothing more than a series of expensive ribbons waiting to be cut by men who will be forgotten before the ink on their plaques is dry.

THE POWER OF POLICY: THE INVISIBLE BRIDGE THAT TRANSFORMS A NATION
Nigeria’s recent history offers a clear distinction between projects and policy. During the administration of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo GCFR, one of the most consequential reforms was the deregulation of the telecommunications sector.

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By breaking the monopoly of NITEL, Nigeria moved from roughly four hundred and fifty thousand sluggish landlines to millions of connected voices. He did not build the masts; he built the policy that allowed others to build them.
That single reform reshaped the nation’s economic identity. It laid the foundation for Nollywood’s digital expansion the fintech revolution that produced titans like Paystack and Flutterwave, and the broader digital economy that now sustains millions of young Nigerians.
Yet even this achievement carries a cautionary tale. Why? Because while Obasanjo was brilliant enough to build the Market, he was too reluctant to build an independent Referee.

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) were both birthed under his watch, yet they were frequently dogged by accusations of being political hunting dogs because these institutions were never fully uncoupled from the President’s remote community. Their credibility was often traded for political expediency.
The result was a legacy that sparked debate rather than consensus. A leader may unlock economic potential through policy, but without strong, impartial institutions to safeguard it, the legacy remains vulnerable to suspicion.

THE ENDURING SHADOWS OF AWOLOWO AND AHMADU BELLO
The legacies of Obafemi Awolowo and Ahmadu Bello endure not because of the physical structures they built, but because of the human capital they nurtured.
Awolowo understood that while roads develop potholes, an educated mind remains a lifelong asset. His free primary education policy was not a project; it was an investment in generations yet unborn. The professionals it produced became living monuments to his vision.

Ahmadu Bello did more than establish Ahmadu Bello University; he cultivated a northern identity rooted in public service and leadership development. His legacy lived not in buildings but in the people shaped by his policies.
Today, Nigeria’s political models often lack this ideological depth. We see frameworks built around personal networks or individual integrity, but without institutional reinforcement, they struggle to outlive their architects.

The “Jagaban” model, a legacy of political mentorship and human networking. It focuses on placing people in strategic positions. While effective for winning power, its long-term survival depends entirely on the physical presence, loyalty and will of the leader.
The ”Buhari” model, a legacy of spartan integrity. It focused on the person of the leader. But because the system around him didn’t change, the Integrity didn’t transfer to the institutions. The moment the leader left; the old ways returned with a vengeance.
When a legacy depends on the physical presence or moral force of one leader, it dissolves the moment that leader exits the stage.

THE 2026 INFLECTION POINT: BUILDING FOR THE UNBORN CITIZEN
Nigeria stands at a defining moment. The current national policy direction has been framed as an economic reset an attempt to stabilise the macroeconomic environment and reposition the country for long term growth. But for this moment to mature into a genuine legacy rather than a period of temporary hardship, its impact must extend far beyond the air-conditioned boardrooms of Abuja.

A nation cannot claim progress when it recapitalises its banking sector yet leaves thousands of schools shuttered. Nigeria’s Human Development Index (HDI) remains among the lowest globally, a reminder that economic reforms mean little if they do not translate into improved human welfare. Fixing the currency without fixing the citizen is like building a house on sand.

Consider the Second Niger Bridge, an impressive feat of engineering and a symbol of national connectivity. Yet without meaningful institutional reform in the security sector, the bridge risks becoming a beautiful road to a dangerous destination. The structure itself is the monument; the safety of the traveller, the confidence of the trader, and the peace of the region are the true legacy.

Legacy is not what is built for the next election cycle; it is what is preserved for the unborn citizen. If the current economic reset does not produce a system where the child of a charcoal seller in Sokoto and the daughter of a business magnate in Lagos can sit in equally functional classrooms, then nothing has truly been reset. We would merely be redecorating a room while the foundation continues to crack.

THE REAL LEGACY: HOW TO BUILD A NAME THAT NEVER DIES
Any Nigerian leader who hopes to be remembered a century from now must shift focus from monuments to mechanics, from the drama of ribbon cutting to the discipline of governance. Real power is not measured by the loudness of today’s sirens but by the durability of tomorrow’s systems.
Three principles define a legacy that outlives its architect;

  1. Fix the Old Before Building the New:
    Nigeria suffers from a chronic addiction to new projects. Leaders prefer fresh constructions because they offer photo opportunities, plaques, and political branding. Maintenance, by contrast, earns no applause. Yet a leader who ensures that every rural clinic has electricity, clean water, and basic medication leaves behind a deeper legacy than one who builds a single ultra-modern hospital that is unaffordable for ordinary citizens and understaffed.
    True legacy is the quiet reliability of a system that works because someone cared enough to maintain it.
  2. Turn Good Ideas into Law (The Fortress Rule):
    Progress in Nigeria is often written in pencil. One administration introduces a promising programme; the next erases it to make room for its own signature initiative. A reform that exists only as a memo or executive directive is a suggestion, not a legacy.
    To endure, reforms must be codified. When improvements in education, pensions, or public finance are backed by legislation, they become part of the state’s architecture rather than the preference of a single leader. Laws outlive personalities; institutions outlive applause. Turn your ideas into institutions so that even after you leave, the system keeps working for the people.
  3. Strengthen the Referees to Stay Independent (Watch the Watchers):
    A legacy is only as strong as the institutions that protect it. Many leaders fear independent auditors, regulators, and judges, preferring systems they can personally control. But a legacy built on personal authority collapses the moment that authority exits the stage.
    Empowering oversight institutions; Financial, Judicial, and Administrative, ensures that reforms survive political transitions. A leader who builds a system capable of checking even his own excesses is the only leader whose work can withstand anyone who comes after.
     
    CALL TO ACTION: THE CITIZEN AS THE ULTIMATE ARCHIVIST
    For too long, Nigerians have behaved like guests in their own house. Citizens are the true landlords of the republic, and history records only the legacies that the people choose to remember. It is time to move beyond applause culture and reclaim civic responsibility.
  4. Stop Celebrating Routine Governance
    A road built with public funds is not a favour; it is a basic obligation. Applause should be reserved for leaders who build systems that keep the road from collapsing, not those who merely cut the ribbons.
  5. Demand Long Term Sustainability Plans
    Every project should come with a clear answer to a simple question: Who will maintain this in ten years? If a project cannot sustain itself, or if its survival depends entirely on the goodwill of the next administration, it is a liability, not a legacy. Citizens must insist on maintenance budgets, legislative backing, and private sector partnerships that guarantee longevity.
  6. Audit the Ballot
    In future elections, voters should prioritise leaders who present records of system building rather than glossy images of new structures. Ask for the Health Statistics, ask for the Education growth, and ask for the Business ease. In the coming elections, ignore the man who promises to start everything afresh. That is the language of an egoist. Instead, look for the leader who is brave enough to finish the good work his predecessor started. Legacy is not a solo vanity project; it is a relay race where the baton is the future of our children.
  7. Support Institutionalists
    Seek out leaders who speak about civil service reform, rule of law, and institutional autonomy. They may not command the flashiest convoys, but they are the ones laying the foundations of a nation that can endure beyond personalities.
  8. Be the Watcher of the Watchers
    Use the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act. Request expenditure records from local governments. Demand transparency. A culture of accountability begins when citizens ask questions and refuse to be silenced.

The pen of history is in our hands, but the ink is the sweat of our demand for accountability. Legacy is not what you do for yourself; it is what you leave within the people.

Nigeria does not need more strong men; it needs strong systems built by men who are brave enough to be forgotten so that the country can be remembered.
The sirens will fade. The convoys will disappear into the evening. When the dust settles, let it be said that we stopped worshipping the big man and began to uphold the big idea. Nigeria does not belong to those in tinted SUVs; it belongs to citizens with the courage to watch the watchers.
Take your stand. Ask the hard questions. Because a legacy that isn’t watched is a legacy that won’t last.

Boma Lilian Braide(Esq.) is the founder of the Surge Network

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