Ndi Anambra,
The carnival is over. The chants have faded. The streets are tense with quiet expectation. Today is not about the politicians — it’s about you.
Power, for once, is in your hand — not in their convoys, not in their promises, but in that small ink mark that can either heal or wound our tomorrow.
Somewhere around you, someone will try to buy your voice.
They’ll call it appreciation; you must call it what it is — betrayal.
Those who exploit poverty to purchase votes are not philanthropists; they are agents of underdevelopment, trading your future for their next contract.
And for those who will collect money to betray their own parties — you are no less guilty.
You have turned loyalty into merchandise and politics into a petty trade.
To the voters: if they must give, let them give. Collect what they offer — but vote your conscience. The real transaction is not in naira, but in integrity.
To the security agents: your duty today is sacred. Protect the powerless.
Do not look away when thugs intimidate. Do not trade your uniform for envelopes. A uniform without honour is just fabric.
To those far from home: call your family. Remind them that their thumbprint is their voice. Encourage them to vote — and ensure it counts.
The ballot may not speak, but it remembers.
Mark carelessly, and it will curse you in silence.
Mark with conscience, and it will bless your children’s tomorrow.
Let this election not just change leaders — let it change us.

