Anambra’s election is over. The microphones have gone quiet. But democracy doesn’t end when results are announced — it begins.
The true strength of any democracy is not measured by how power is won, but by how it is checked.
And in Anambra, that duty now falls squarely on the opposition.
Opposition is not an enemy of government; it is the mirror of governance. Its role is to question, evaluate, and engage — not for personal gain, but to ensure that public power serves public interest.
When the ruling party proposes a budget, the opposition should analyze it, line by line, and tell Ndi Anambra where money is being wasted or misdirected. When projects are announced, they should verify what was completed, what stalled, and why. When policies affect local businesses or schools, they should speak — not from anger, but from evidence.
That is how political maturity begins — when opposition becomes a partner in progress, not a casualty of defeat.
Peter Obi’s conduct after the 2023 elections offers a clear lesson. Though outside government, he continued to engage national issues factually, promoting fiscal discipline, inclusive governance, and accountability. He stayed active without being antagonistic — a model of how opposition can remain credible, visible, and relevant.
Anambra needs that same civic discipline at every level — from party secretariats to ward leaders. Constructive opposition should hold government accountable in towns, councils, and communities. It should track projects, monitor service delivery, and push for reforms that benefit the people.
Silence is not neutrality — it’s surrender.
When the opposition retreats, the people lose their watchdog, and governance drifts without correction.
So, let the opposition in Anambra wake up.
Let them debate with facts, challenge with data, and engage with ideas. Let them stay in the conversation — not as critics of government, but as defenders of good governance.
Because the strength of our democracy depends not just on those in power, but on those who dare to hold power accountable.
—
Linus Anagboso.
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