By Umar Sani Daura
The recent public appeal by Kabiru Turaki, a prominent figure in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), calling on President Donald Trump to intervene in and “rescue” Nigeria’s democracy, represents a new low in partisan politics. While political opposition is the lifeblood of a healthy democracy, this specific utterance goes beyond mere criticism; it is a profound act of political desperation that is self-centered, deeply unpatriotic, and flagrantly damaging to Nigeria’s global image.
The Question of Confidence: Why Not President Tinubu?
The most immediate and damning criticism of Turaki’s call is the implied, yet devastating, vote of no confidence in the incumbent Nigerian leadership. By bypassing established national institutions and ignoring the office of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Turaki essentially declares that the current political structure—and the people who run it—are incapable of solving Nigeria’s problems.
This is not a matter of whether he supports the President’s policies; it is a fundamental rejection of the country’s sovereign capacity.
If Turaki and his faction truly believe in democracy, their primary duty is to challenge the current administration through the democratic channels available: robust opposition in the National Assembly, effective grassroots mobilization, and legal challenges. The failure to do so, preferring instead to appeal to a foreign figure, strongly suggests that the PDP faction’s priority is not the development of Nigeria, but the immediate restoration of their own political fortunes.
The call is fundamentally political, not developmental. Nigeria’s most pressing challenges—poverty, insecurity, and structural economic reforms—require national consensus, innovative local policies, and sustained investment. None of these are addressed by inviting a foreign figure to “rescue” the nation.
The implied message is dangerously clear: “If my party/camp is not in power, the nation is broken, and foreigners must intervene.” This attitude frames the nation’s well-being as secondary to the success of a political faction. It is a terrifying descent into self-serving politics, where national sovereignty is offered up as a bargaining chip for partisan gain.
Furthermore, inviting Donald Trump—a highly controversial figure with a history of isolationist foreign policy and disregard for international norms—to arbitrate Nigeria’s democracy is baffling. This action inadvertently inflates Trump’s ego and grants him an unwarranted global stature as a “Lord of Democracy.”
It plays directly into the narrative that only a figure of his unique, disruptive brand of influence can fix the complex issues of a sovereign African nation. Such an endorsement from a major opposition party leader diminishes the hard-won democratic struggles of Nigeria’s own people and elevates a foreign personality above our national leaders and institutions.
This statement has a direct, devastating impact on Nigeria’s international image. When a key opposition leader openly invites a foreign power to intervene:
It Undermines Sovereignty: It makes Nigeria look like a fragile state, incapable of managing its own political affairs, thereby compromising the nation’s standing in the comity of nations and discouraging foreign investment.
It Invites Meddling: It opens the door for other foreign nations to potentially interfere, exploiting the perceived political instability for their own strategic advantage.
It Weakens Regional Influence: As the continent’s most populous nation and a key driver of ECOWAS, Nigeria’s weakness is Africa’s weakness. This statement damages its credibility as a regional leader promoting democracy and stability.
While the Presidency is often wise to ignore trivial provocations, this is not a trivial statement. President Tinubu must act swiftly—not to engage in a political squabble—but to reaffirm Nigeria’s sovereignty with an unequivocal statement that addresses all attempts by anyone, foreign or domestic, to undermine the nation’s independent democratic process. Inviting foreign emissaries to interfere in internal affairs touches the very heart of statehood and cannot be left unanswered.
The path to rescuing Nigeria’s democracy lies in transparent governance, robust institutions, and patriotic opposition that channels grievances into productive national dialogue, not in desperate pleas to foreign powers.







































