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Kwara Has Come Far, What is Really Needed in The Next Governor?

•• Our Next Choice Can Consolidate Gains or Cost us a Generation

By Oyez Olatunde Rex

Kwara has walked a long road. We have seen progress, celebrated small victories, and endured setbacks. Markets are busier, schools fuller, and towns livelier than before.

Yet, every step forward brings a question that lingers in the hearts of elders, civil servants, and everyday citizens alike: Are we choosing leaders who will build on our gains, or merely repeat what we have already lived through?

Many times in the past, Kwara elections are about:


Who has the name, who has the money, or who has the big slogan.
_Politics of where someone comes from more than what they will do,_ grips our minds with a vice grip, and for too long, that has left many people feeling tired of politics that sound strong, but feels weak in real life.

And again we have come to the crossroads. The road we take, the decisions we make now, will echo far beyond the present,  in the lives of children, in the hopes of our youths, and in the memories of those who come after us. History does not just record names; it records choices.

Without  doubt, the people of Kwara are clear about what they want. These are the big issues heard in newspapers and public forums. These are clear:

Kwarans want fair chances for all parts of the state, not just one area getting all the attention. People don’t want old patterns that make others feel left out.

The people want Security and peace in the communities, especially where people speak about daily fears and safety.

Kwarans feel the need for Jobs and economic life, so that the youths don’t feel jobless or helpless while talented people go elsewhere.

Our women have become ever so aware of their mental prowess, and the youths are asking for a real say, not just being talked about but truly included.

And together as one, people of the harmony state demand good governance that serves the average person, not only politicians.

These are everyday concerns, the same things you hear at bus stops, in homes, religious  places, recreational spots and at community gatherings.

People in towns and villages alike are asking quietly: Who will understand our lives, our struggles, and our hopes? Who will not just manage, but serve?

The leadership Kwara needs is simple in principle, though rare in practice. It is a kind that listens before it acts. It is a kind that knows every part of the state matters, not just the capital or the hometowns of those in power. It is a kind that values jobs for the youth, care for the vulnerable, and unity over division.

It is leadership that does not confuse noise with action, nor promises with results. It respects elders, empowers civil servants, and trusts the people’s own intelligence and strength. It is patient enough to plan, bold enough to act, and humble enough to learn from mistakes.

In such leadership, every decision is guided by service, not by ambition. Every policy is measured by impact, not by applause. Every voice in the community is heard, because progress cannot thrive in silence or exclusion.

And Kwara people are beginning to say  quietly but strongly

“We want a leader who thinks with us, not for us.”
“We want someone who speaks the language of the street, not just big offices.”
“We need someone with real experiences in life, not just speeches.”

If one imagines this kind of leadership for Kwara, it seems almost rare. Many names are discussed, many campaigns shouted, but few inspire that quiet confidence that real change is possible. People naturally begin to wonder if someone like that even exists.

And yet, in recent weeks, a name has emerged quietly, steadily gaining attention, not because of slogans, but because of experience and character. A person who has walked the corridors of science, education, and service.

He understands both global perspectives and local realities. Someone who listens as much as he speaks, and acts as much as he plans.

That person is Prof Wale Sulaiman.

A world-renowned neurosurgeon, educator, and public servant, Prof Sulaiman has spent decades serving people in ways that matter. He has touched lives directly, not just administratively, and has been urged by youths, women, and community leaders to step forward. His leadership style embodies the vision Kwara has quietly been describing for years: practical, inclusive, humble, and forward-looking.

For Kwara, the choice in 2027 is more than a name on a ballot. It is a chance to embrace a kind of leadership that listens, serves, and unites.

If the state chooses wisely, history will not only record who led, it will celebrate the kind of leadership that truly built the people it governs.

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