RE: I Don’t Want My Successor To Inherit The State Like I Did In 2019 -Governor Sule ***












By: Dauda Azagaku Musa, December 2025

With due respect, this statement sounds more like an indirect insult to the very man who made his emergence possible. In 2019, Abdullahi A. Sule was not the most popular aspirant within the APC; in fact, he was far behind notable contenders such as Ahmed Aliyu Wadada, Halilu Envulu-Anza, Shehu Tukur, and others who had strong grassroots acceptance. Yet, from nowhere, he became the party’s flag bearer solely on the strength of the decision and support of then-Governor Tanko Al-Makura. Today, what we see resembles disloyalty and a subtle attempt to discredit his predecessor. 


One wonders if Al-Makura now regrets placing such trust in someone who appears eager to rewrite history. When indigenous aspirants with proven political structures were sidelined, the expectation was gratitude and continuity, not constant lamentation. The endless emphasis on “debt, debt, debt” has moved beyond governance explanation; it increasingly feels like an excuse and an insult to the administration that handed over power. 


Leadership demands responsibility, not selective amnesia. History will always remember how this journey began, no matter how often it is denied. A. A. Sule talks too much, abeg! 

 

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