There is a dangerous misunderstanding growing in younger participants Nigerian politics.
They think passion is enough.
They think crowds are enough.
They think social media energy is enough.
They think moral superiority is enough.
It is not.
Movements do not win power because they are loud. They win because they solve the mathematics of structure.
And Nigerian political history keeps proving this over and over again.
The Buhari Blueprint: How Movements Mature Into Power
Take Muhammadu Buhari.
People often remember only 2015.
But 2015 was not a sudden victory.
It was the final answer to a twelve-year political equation.
2003 — The Beginning
Buhari first ran under ANPP.
He reportedly secured about 12.7 million votes against Olusegun Obasanjo.
At that stage:
* he had popularity
* regional loyalty
* emotional support
But not enough national structure.
2007 — Bigger Movement, Same Limitation
In 2007, Buhari again ran under ANPP and secured roughly 6.6 million votes.
His supporters strongly believed the election was manipulated.
This is important.
Every time Buhari lost, he went to court.
But notice carefully:
He challenged the conduct and credibility of the election itself.
Not the personal qualification of the winner.
Why?
Because his political strategy was larger than legal victory.
The court process:
* calmed supporters
* legitimized democratic participation
* sustained movement morale
* reinforced the belief that their votes mattered
The movement survived because it remained emotionally organized.
2011 — The Movement Peaks
By 2011, Buhari had moved into CPC.
This time:
* his support exploded nationally
* he partnered with Pastor Tunde Bakare as running mate
* he softened the narrative that painted him as a sectional candidate and an islamic fundamentalist.
He secured roughly 12.2 million votes.
Again:
his supporters believed he won.
Again:
he challenged the election process in court.
Again: he lost.
But every loss was doing something dangerous politically:
The movement was growing.
What Buhari Understood That Many Still Don’t
A movement can:
* fill stadiums
* dominate conversations
* produce millions of votes
and still fail.
Why?
Because movements alone do not control:
* party machinery
* elite negotiations
* delegate systems
* institutional processes
* coalition arithmetic
This was Buhari’s breakthrough insight. An insight that was lent to him.
2015 — When Movement Met Structure
This is where the mathematics finally balanced.
CPC alone was insufficient.
So the movement merged with:
* ACN
* ANPP factions
* parts of APGA
* defecting PDP blocs
The result became APC.
Now the movement had:
* national spread
* institutional backing
* party depth
* elite alliances
* grassroots structures
* ballot protection mechanisms
And finally:
Buhari won with roughly 15.4 million votes.
The lesson was now undeniable:
Movements become dangerous only when they become structured.
Now Enter Peter Obi
Then came Peter Obi.
What happened in 2023 was politically significant.
For the first time in years:
* young people mobilized organically
* social media translated into physical enthusiasm
* urban political participation increased sharply
Peter Obi secured approximately 6.1 million votes on the Labour Party platform.
That number matters.
Because Buhari’s movement also once sat around those numbers before it matured structurally.
But Here Is the Hard Truth
Emotion is not structure.
A crowd is not structure.
A hashtag is not structure.
And this is where the next chapter will be decided.
The Biggest Threat to Any Movement
Most people think elections are won on election day.
That is no longer fully true.
Sometimes the biggest battle happens:
* inside party primaries
* inside delegate systems
* inside institutional negotiations
* before names even appear on ballots
And this is where movements often die.
Not because they lack popularity.
But because they lack structure.
The Peter Obi Question
Can Peter Obi’s movement evolve into national power?
Yes.
Absolutely yes.
But only if it transitions from emotional energy to organized political architecture
What Must Happen Next
1. Build Ward-Level Structures
Not online groups.
Real structures.
Ward by ward.
LGA by LGA.
State by state.
Not supplemental volunteers, but party people.
Politics is still won physically in Nigeria.
2. Capture Internal Party Processes
This is critical.
A movement that cannot influence:
* delegate selection
* party leadership
* internal primaries
can lose before reaching the ballot.
And this is where many idealistic movements fail.
3. Build Political Beneficiaries
Tinubu mastered this.
People defend structures that feed their political future.
Movements must create:
* local leaders
* candidates
* coordinators
* beneficiaries
Not just supporters.
4. Transition From Protest to Governance
Movements attract idealists.
Structures require operators.
These are different skill sets.
At some point, the movement must prove:
* administrative competence
* negotiation ability
* coalition maturity
* political patience
5. Build Coalition Without Losing Identity
This is difficult.
But necessary.
Buhari only won after coalition.
No major Nigerian presidency has been won recently without broad alignment.
The Most Dangerous Mistake
The biggest mistake the “movement camp” can make is believing:
“Popularity automatically converts into power.”
It does not.
Power is engineered.
But Here Is Why It Is Still Possible
And this is important.
Very possible.
Because Buhari himself once looked unelectable nationally.
Until structure solved the equation.
Also, opposition is proof of potential. If there is no resistance in your path, you are climbing down.
Peter Obi’s movement already has:
* visibility
* emotional loyalty
* youth engagement
* urban penetration
* belief
Those are not small things.
The question now is whether it can develop:
* institutional depth
* political patience
* coalition strategy
* ballot security
* internal party control
The future of Nigerian politics may belong to movements. But only movements that mature enough to become structures.
Because in politics:
* passion starts movements
* structure sustains movements
* institutions protect movements
* and only organized systems win elections
The mathematics is hard and takes time and strategy to solve.
But as the movement itself likes to say:
PO is still POssible. 🙂
A movement sometimes becomes a mob, unable to evaluate data without bias, blaming the unfairness of others for their fate and coming after everyone who does not see things their way calling them names, just for seeing differently.
Come for me carefully. 😆
