Tag: senatorial aspirant

  • Benue South and the Politics of Listening: Inside Hon. David Olofu’s Unusual Town Hall

    Benue South and the Politics of Listening: Inside Hon. David Olofu’s Unusual Town Hall

    By

    Dahiru Ali

    In a political culture long defined by monologues, Hon. David Olofu’s interactive session held last Friday at the serene Armed Forces Officers’ Mess and Suite, near Lungi Barracks, Abuja felt disarmingly different. It was not a rally. It was not a coronation. It was, quite deliberately, a conversation.

    For many in attendance, that alone marked a departure from the norm. Never before, participants said, had a senatorial aspirant from the district convened such a broad gathering of Idoma elders, former legislators, academics, technocrats, professionals, and youth leaders, not for endorsement, but for interrogation. One participant described the audience as “the crème de la crème of Idoma sons and daughters,” brought together to think, not applaud.

    The meeting carried the mood of a long-delayed beginning, quiet, deliberate, and heavy with expectation. In a country where citizens often encounter power only after decisions have been made, the symbolism of listening first was not lost on anyone in the room.

    A Deliberate Tone

    Proceedings opened with prayers by Pastor Omale, lending solemnity to what would become an unusually reflective political engagement. Dr. Adakole Elaija moderated the session with steady restraint, while respected figures such as Venerable Akp’olofu and Barrister John Ochoga anchored the event with moral and legal weight.

    The welcome address by Prof. David Salifu, former Secretary to the Government of Benue State, set the intellectual tone. Drawing on history, he recalled how the Idoma people began “hearing from the horse’s mouth” as far back as 1865 in Czarist Russia, an evocative metaphor for direct engagement and political awareness. The message was clear: this was not to be politics at a distance.

    Dr. Elaija reinforced that framing, describing Hon. Olofu’s aspiration as rooted in equity, fairness, and justice, values he argued must define any serious effort to reposition Benue South in the national equation.

    Naming the Problem Without Evasion

    When Hon. David Olofu spoke, he avoided flourish. Instead, he offered a blunt diagnosis. Years of moving through communities across Benue South, he said, had revealed a stubborn reality: poverty in its most pervasive form. Poor schools. Weak healthcare. Crumbling infrastructure. Limited opportunity.

    These conditions, he argued, are not isolated failures but symptoms of deeper structural neglect. Benue South’s underdevelopment, in his telling, is less about absence of effort and more about absence of equity. Representation, he insisted, must go beyond presence in Abuja to sustained advocacy that delivers tangible outcomes.

    Equality as a Political Project

    Guided by the principles of People, Power, Prosperity, and Progress, Hon. Olofu outlined a twelve-point legislative and advocacy agenda. At its core is a single, insistent demand: equal treatment of senatorial districts in national policy, budgeting, and resource allocation.

    Although senatorial districts are constitutionally equal, he noted, practice tells a different story. Some districts attract infrastructure, investment, and federal attention; others are left to stagnate. Correcting this imbalance, he said, would be a defining priority of his tenure.

    “There is no fairness, equity, or equality among senatorial districts nationwide,” he stated plainly, promising to press the issue consistently within the National Assembly.

    From Policy to Practical Outcomes

    Beyond advocacy, Hon. Olofu presented a development blueprint that cut across sectors. Education, he said, must be reimagined as social engagement, with a deliberate shift toward science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Healthcare reform would focus on upgrading Primary Healthcare Centres to strengthen access at the grassroots.

    Agriculture featured prominently, framed not as subsistence but as a pathway to industrialisation and shared prosperity. Mechanised farming, beginning with land clearing, would anchor this shift. Entrepreneurship and SME support, particularly access to capital, were identified as engines for expanding commercial activity across the district.

    The aspirant also placed strong emphasis on ICT, proposing hubs and incubation centres to channel youth creativity into productive enterprise. Infrastructure renewal, local government reforms, and insecurity rounded out the agenda. On security, he called for a review of existing laws and the establishment of a command-and-control coordination system in Otukpo.

    Redefining Representation

    What most distinguished the session, however, was Hon. Olofu’s approach to governance itself. Rejecting the idea of representation as a solo act, he proposed institutionalised citizen participation through the creation of a Benue South People’s Assembly to monitor project implementation, and a Benue South Council to provide advisory input and early warning signals.

    Under these bodies, thematic working groups would help shape legislative priorities, ensuring that governance remains responsive rather than remote. It was an approach many present described as rare in Nigeria’s political space.

    Industry, energy, strategic partnerships, diaspora engagement, and women, youth, and sports development were also highlighted as essential to human capital development and long-term economic revival.

    The audience listens in rapt attention

    The Room Responds

    The floor discussion was candid. Hassan Sale described the agenda as ambitious but urged the aspirant to sharpen priorities and remain focused on district-wide needs rather than narrow community concerns.

    Dr. Odatche, Convener of the Benue Rebirth Movement, commended the interactive format and encouraged sustained focus on agriculture, ICT, sports, and youth development as levers for social change.

    Participants also raised politically charged questions: How many terms does Hon. Olofu intend to serve if elected? What is his position on lobbying for the creation of Apa State? The questions underscored the seriousness with which the audience engaged the process.

    Beyond Party, Toward Purpose

    As the session closed, one sentiment cut across party lines. The Idoma nation, speakers agreed, has an opportunity to make a decisive statement in Zone C, not merely through electoral numbers, but through clarity of purpose and unity of voice.

    In the end, Hon. David Olofu’s interactive session did not promise miracles. What it offered instead was something rarer: the politics of listening, the discipline of inclusion, and the possibility that representation, properly imagined, can still mean something. Whether that promise survives the heat of electoral politics remains to be seen. But for a few hours in Benue South, the conversation itself felt like progress.e South, the conversation itself felt like progress.

  • Hon. David Olofu: When Preparation Meets the Moment

    Hon. David Olofu: When Preparation Meets the Moment

    A technocrat shaped by fiscal discipline, community loyalty, and quiet conviction steps forward to test experience against the demands of electoral leadership in Benue South.

    Shortly after dawn in Abuja, as the city settles into its familiar rhythm of traffic, briefings, and guarded optimism, a quieter political moment begins to take shape. At an understated venue, Hon. David Olofu prepares to meet the media, not to stage a spectacle, but to explain a decision that has been forming over years of public service.

    Further to his declaration in October 2025 to contest the Benue South Senatorial seat in the 2027 General Election, Olofu’s interactive session with journalists this morning marks a defining point in his political journey. It is the moment where preparation meets public intent, where experience built largely away from cameras is brought deliberately into open conversation.

    For those who have followed his path, the step feels less like an announcement than a culmination.

    Olofu’s story begins far from Abuja, in Opaha, Edikwu Ward 2 of Apa Local Government Area, where community life leaves little room for abstraction. Growing up within the Idoma nation, he learned early that leadership is measured by proximity to people and responsiveness to shared challenges. Those formative experiences never loosened their hold on him, even as his career carried him into the inner workings of government.

    That grounding became especially evident in 2015, when he assumed office as Commissioner for Finance and Budget in Benue State. Over the next eight years, he worked in one of the most demanding corners of governance, steering fiscal planning through economic uncertainty and mounting public expectations. Colleagues recall a man methodical under pressure, convinced that budgets were not merely technical exercises but moral documents—expressions of government’s priorities and credibility.

    His steady stewardship soon drew national attention. Between 2019 and 2023, Olofu served as Chairman of the Forum of State Commissioners for Finance in Nigeria, coordinating fiscal conversations among the states and engaging federal institutions on sustainability and reform. His later appointment as Senior Technical Adviser to the Nigeria Governors’ Forum placed him within national policy spaces where decisions quietly shape the direction of states long after political cycles turn.

    Yet, national relevance only sharpened an enduring question: how could this experience be translated into direct representation for the people who shaped him?

    That question came into focus in June 2025, when Olofu resigned from the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) after years of membership. The move was neither abrupt nor confrontational. Instead, he described it as a recalibration, an effort to align platform with principle and representation with conviction. In Apa Local Government Area, the decision ignited renewed political conversations, positioning him as a rallying figure for those seeking leadership defined more by competence than allegiance. His eventual alignment with the African Democratic Congress (ADC) reflected this evolving political direction.

    By October 2025, months of consultations across Benue South matured into resolve. Olofu formally declared his intention to contest the senatorial seat, following engagements that included community meetings, stakeholder dialogues, and symbolic royal blessings in Ugbokpo, Otukpo, Obagaji, and Ohimini. Across these interactions, his message remained consistent: development anchored on infrastructure, improved security, economic inclusion, and deliberate youth empowerment—pursued through informed and effective legislative action.

    Running parallel to this political journey is a quieter, deeply personal commitment to service. Through the Apa Legacy and Sustainability Initiative, Olofu has invested in education, healthcare, and community empowerment. His ₦50 million Education Support Fund has enabled Idoma students to remain in tertiary institutions, while his ₦10 million contribution to maternal and infant healthcare at St. Helen’s Specialist Hospital, Otukpo, addressed urgent local needs. To those close to him, these efforts are not political gestures but reflections of a leadership philosophy that views service as continuous rather than episodic.

    Taken together, Olofu’s profile reveals a leadership style shaped by patience, preparation, and proximity to people. With a background in finance, a record of public accountability, and enduring grassroots ties, he represents a growing class of Nigerian leaders whose credibility is built quietly and sustained deliberately.

    As Benue South looks toward the 2027 elections, Olofu’s transition from state commissioner to national policy adviser and now senatorial aspirant reads less like a leap and more like a progression, anchored in experience, guided by conviction, and sustained by belonging. As he sits before the media in Abuja this morning, he does so not with urgency, but with intent, offering himself for a responsibility he believes he has long been preparing to carry.

    In a political season often defined by haste and high volume, David Olofu’s entrance is measured, an argument that leadership, like trust, is best built before it is demanded.