Special Reports

Osun ‘26: Returning To What Works

 

​​In the quiet moments of history, there comes a time when the noise of the crowd fades and a single, piercing question remains. It is the question asked of leaders when the road becomes blurred and the people lose their way. 

 

In Osun State, recent pronouncements from the opposition lay bare the unembellished reality of our current political situation. The incumbent administration’s tenure has been a series of missed opportunities and anti-developmental stances. The critique is clear: while the state remains without critical infrastructure, the current leadership has seemingly opted to block progress rather than foster growth.

 

There is a seductive danger in populist leadership; it feels good in the moment, much like a sugar high, but it leaves the body politic malnourished in the long run. Governance is not a social club, and the state is not a dance floor. For the past three and a half years, Osun has been treated to a peculiar style of governance – one that prioritizes optics over outcomes and “vibes” over vision. We have seen an administration that has mastered the art of the viral video but struggled with the science of the state. While the incumbent government celebrates surface-level handouts, the structural foundations of our economy are creaking.

 

​When you strip away the fanfare, what is left? The hard truth is that Osun is currently drifting. We have seen policy somersaults that confuse investors and a lack of a coherent fiscal blueprint to move the state beyond its total dependence on federal allocations. Tragically, we are being led by an administration that seems to believe that if you smile enough at the problem, the problem will simply go away.

 

Today, as we look towards the horizon of August 15, 2026, that question hangs heavy over our beloved state. It is a summons to clarity, a demand for account, and a call to a higher purpose. ​ This brings us to the man of the moment. We look towards the man whose record speaks of stability in an era of turbulence, and we ask: “What sayest thou, Asiwaju Munirudeen Bola Oyebamiji, aka AMBO?”

 

If the current administration is a lesson in accidental governance, then Oyebamiji represents the return of intentional leadership.  After all, every society eventually tires of the “entertainer-statesman” and begins to yearn for the “architect-statesman.” After the noise of the carnival, the people look for the person who actually knows how the machinery of government works.

 

In our own situation, AMBO is that person. Having served as the Commissioner for Finance, he understands the financial nervous system of Osun better than anyone else. He is not a man who needs a “learning curve”; he is a master of the balance sheet. In a state where debt management and revenue generation are the difference between paying salaries and a total shutdown, we can no longer afford an amateur.

 

Osun needs someone who has spent decades in the high-stakes world of banking and public finance. He is someone who treats the state’s treasury with the sacredness of a trust, not a personal purse. Oyebamiji’s stint as the Managing Director of the National Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA) has only reinforced what we already knew: the man is a fixer. He takes broken systems and makes them breathe again. This is the “AMBO factor.” It is a blend of private-sector efficiency and public-sector empathy.

 

​Beyond the individual, we must look at the platform. The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun is not just a political party; it is a custodian of a specific developmental philosophy. It is the party of urban renewal, of educational reform, and of massive infrastructural leaps. The critics may talk about the “hardness” of the APC years, but they cannot deny the results. The bridges were built. The schools were modernized. The security architecture was solid.

 

​The APC represents a brand of governance that is willing to make the difficult, unpopular decisions today so that our children can have a stable tomorrow. Therefore, a vote for the APC on August 15 is a vote to return to that blueprint of excellence. It is a vote to say that Osun is too important to be left in the hands of those who see governance as a hobby. We are a land of intellectuals, artisans, and farmers who deserve a government as serious and hardworking as they are.

 

​To my fellow indigenes of Osun, I urge you to look past the stickers and the slogans. Populism is a debt that eventually comes due. When the music stops and the cameras are turned off, we are left with the reality of our schools, our hospitals and our roads. Do we want a leader who tells us what we want to hear, or a leader who does what needs to be done?

 

​The choice of Oyebamiji is a choice for predictability over chaos, professionalism over populism, and competence over caprice. AMBO is not a man of loud, empty promises; he is a man of quiet, effective action. He represents a synthesis of the old and the new – respectful of our traditional institutions and heritage, yet fully equipped with the modern tools of governance. The August 15 election is our “Correction of Errors.” It is the moment we decide if we want to continue the drift or if we want to steer the ship back to the harbour of prosperity.

 

​So, we return to that piercing question. In the face of economic uncertainty and the erosion of administrative standards, the silence must be broken. We need a voice that speaks of fiscal discipline and a hand that knows how to build. Currently, we are standing at a crossroads, ready to be led back to the high ground of administrative dignity and economic stability. Oyebamiji is the bridge between the glories of our past achievements and the possibilities of our future evolution. He is the answer to the anxiety that many of us feel when we look at the state of our state today.

 

​As I often reflect on the words of the poet Robert Frost, “Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, and I – I took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the difference.” On August 15, let us choose the road of competence. Let us choose the road of the APC. Let us choose Asiwaju Munirudeen Bola Oyebamiji (AMBO). If we do this, we can say with confidence that we are no longer drifting. We will be moving towards progress that our children can point to with pride.