The African Democratic Congress has said that an overwhelming majority of Nigerians believe the country is heading in the wrong direction, citing independent survey data showing that 93 per cent of citizens are dissatisfied with the current state of affairs under President Bola Tinubu’s administration.
In a statement on Sunday, the party’s National Publicity Secretary, Bola Abdullahi, attributed the dissatisfaction to rising poverty, worsening living conditions, and growing hardship across the country.
The ADC had earlier, in a statement on Tuesday, accused President Tinubu’s administration of pushing Nigeria’s poverty rate to over 63 per cent, arguing that the All Progressives Congress-led government has worsened living conditions for many Nigerians.
Responding in defence of the President, APC National Publicity Secretary, Felix Morka, said in a statement on Saturday that Nigerians support the ongoing reforms, which he noted are already producing positive outcomes.
The ruling party also accused the opposition of attempting to incite Nigerians against the government.
However, the ADC maintained that publicly available reports clearly show the human cost of the administration’s economic policies and reflect the experiences of ordinary Nigerians who, according to the party, are enduring severe hardship under the APC government.
“The African Democratic Congress takes note of the ruling party, APC’s response to our earlier statement on the rising poverty figures under the Bola Tinubu-led government. But instead of addressing the clear evidence that more Nigerians are falling into poverty under this government, the ruling party has chosen to attack the opposition and dismiss the lived realities of millions of citizens. Facts, however, cannot be dismissed by press statements.
“The independent report that triggered this debate shows that Nigeria’s poverty rate has risen to 63 percent, up from about 50 percent before the removal of the petrol subsidy. This means that tens of millions of additional Nigerians have been pushed into poverty since the administration’s economic policies were introduced. The APC claims Nigerians support its reforms, yet the data says otherwise.
“Independent surveys show that 93 percent of Nigerians believe the country is heading in the wrong direction. Eighty-eight percent describe the national economy as bad, while 74 percent say their personal living conditions are poor. These are not opposition talking points; they are the views of Nigerians themselves, APC members included.
“The APC also insists that the hardship Nigerians are experiencing is transient. But the numbers tell a different story. Recent surveys show that 82 percent of Nigerians report going without enough food at least once in the past year, 82 percent have gone without medical care, 79 percent have gone without cooking fuel, 74 percent have gone without clean water, and 95 percent have gone without a cash income at some point during the year. These figures point not to temporary discomfort but to widespread and deepening economic distress.”
The ADC added that while the APC celebrates macroeconomic indicators, Nigerians face the reality of fuel prices rising by nearly 500 percent — from about N255 per litre in May 2023, when President Tinubu assumed office, to around N1,500 per litre in many parts of the country today.
“This is pushing up transport costs and driving food prices beyond the reach of millions of households. The APC claims that the money previously spent on fuel subsidy, roughly N6.4 trillion in savings last year alone, is now being redirected to vital sectors such as healthcare and social development.
“However, it is on record that only N36 million, just about 0.02 percent of the capital budget, was actually released for capital projects in 2025 for Nigeria’s entire federal healthcare sector. Nigerians are therefore left to ask a simple question: if the subsidy savings are truly being redirected to critical sectors, where exactly is all the money going? Why are local contractors not paid? Why are the universities still poorly equipped?
“The human cost of Tinubu and the APC’s policies is even more evident in the food and agriculture sector. Latest reports indicate that out of more than 150 rice mills across Nigeria, nearly 90 have shut down operations, while the remaining mills are operating at between 30 and 70 percent of their installed capacity, largely because the Tinubu administration’s policies have encouraged import dependency.
“Official data from the National Bureau of Statistics show that Nigeria’s food import bill has jumped from N3.83 trillion in 2023, when President Tinubu came into office, to N7.65 trillion today, an increase of N3.82 trillion, or about 100 percent. This shows that instead of strengthening our local agricultural sector and protecting Nigerian farmers, the policies of the APC government are undermining domestic production and putting thousands of Nigerian farmers and processors out of business.”
The party concluded that economic reforms should be judged by their results, noting that the rise in poverty from 50 to 63 percent, widespread dissatisfaction with the country’s direction, and the struggle of millions to afford basic needs indicate serious policy failures.
“Nigerians do not expect economic lectures or political attacks on the opposition. They expect policies that make their lives better.
“The APC may dismiss these concerns, but Nigerians cannot dismiss the realities of the APC’s failures that they confront every day. Until the APC-led Tinubu government begins to measure success by the well-being of its citizens, the gap between official claims and the lived reality of Nigerians will only continue to widen.”