For many Nigerians, Atiku’s warning taps into an already growing unease about the direction of the country’s politics. Beyond partisan loyalties, citizens are increasingly sensitive to signs that competition is being narrowed and that power is consolidating around one center.
The fear is not necessarily that Nigeria will formally declare a one-party system, but that opposition will be weakened to the point of irrelevance, leaving voters with fewer real choices and diminishing accountability.
This perception, whether fully accurate or not, reflects a broader erosion of trust in political institutions.
What Nigerians want at this moment is reassurance through action, not rhetoric. The health of democracy depends not only on the ruling party’s conduct but also on the opposition’s ability to organize, present credible alternatives, and earn public confidence.
The recommendation, therefore, is twofold: the government must visibly respect pluralism and fair competition, while opposition parties must focus less on elite disputes and more on building strong grassroots connections and clear policy visions.
Only then can democratic space be expanded in practice, not just defended in statements.



