In a stirring statement laced with wit, irony, and hard-hitting facts, kakalistiq.com reports that Hon. Segun Olulade, popularly known as Eleniyan, has added his voice to the growing chorus of support for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s second term ambition.

The former Lagos State lawmaker and current Director of Customer Centricity at Galaxy Backbone Limited took a swipe at critics of the Tinubu administration while highlighting what he described as the President’s “disruptive progress” across key sectors.
Using a tone both humorous and factual, Olulade declared: “Yes, let’s say it louder, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu must GO in 2027.”

But rather than a vote of no confidence, it was a punchy endorsement rooted in performance. He began with the education sector, sarcastically lamenting the end of the notorious culture of strikes in public universities.
“For the first time in living memory, public universities have stayed open for two full academic years. Not one single ASUU strike. I mean, what kind of Nigerian president does that?” he quipped.

Owing to the Students Loan initiative and efforts to stabilize learning institutions, Olulade noted that “Tinubu is giving students a reason to hope again”, rather than “empowering corruption through shady initiatives.”
The power sector, another long-standing national challenge, also featured prominently in his remarks. He commended the President’s strides:
“In just two years, he had the nerve to add 1,500MW to the national grid… 22 federal universities are already hooked up to solar. The guy clearly doesn’t respect our commitment to suffering.”
Ongoing infrastructural efforts, such as the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, didn’t escape his praise. Eleniyan noted that past leaders were scared to touch the mega project, but Tinubu boldly moved ahead with it.
“Nine states are on track to be connected by a modern superhighway that will unlock trillions in commerce, tourism, and regional pride. That one project alone is enough to give some old politicians sleepless nights.”
From sports to agriculture and fiscal reform, Olulade detailed the president’s quiet revolution: “Yes, Tinubu rolled out the red carpet [for the Super Falcons], celebrated their excellence, and reminded our youth that Nigeria still rewards greatness.”
Turning to opposition figures, he sharply contrasted Tinubu’s efforts with what he described as the hypocrisy of certain politicians: “Atiku and Datti own universities but their kids graduate in the UK. Peter Obi stocks his businesses with foreign goods while Tinubu builds agro-processing zones.”
On national unity and responsible leadership, he offered a comparison between the President and some of his more provocative critics: “Mr. Obi and Mallam El-Rufai have mastered the art of saying things that make everyone in the country simultaneously nervous… But Tinubu? The man just won’t stop preaching unity and nationhood. Yawn.”
Backing his sentiments with economic data, Olulade added: “GDP growth of 3.4% in 2024, second highest in 10 years; over $40 billion in new investment; stock market doubled; fuel subsidy gone; FX backlogs cleared; $7 billion paid to foreign investors; budget deficit halved… outrageous!”
He concluded with a sharp declaration aimed at critics: “Yes, Tinubu MUST GO in 2027, back to annoy the looters, back to confuse the cynics, back to keep building a nation, brick by brick, policy by policy.”
“Nigeria is finally under reconstruction. And it’s paining them. So yes – Tinubu MUST go… BACK to Aso Rock in 2027.”
With this, Hon. Olulade joins a growing list of political voices framing the 2027 elections not just as a democratic ritual, but a referendum on measurable progress.