RE: 2027 GENERAL ELECTIONS: RT. HON. NICHOLAS MUTU AND THE BURDEN OF EXPERIENCE: WHY BOMADI/PATANI STILL TRUSTS THEIR LONGEST-SERVING REPRESENTATIVE
By Dcn Allan E. Egbogi, APC Chieftain, Bomadi LGA
The recent article titled “2027 General Elections: Rt. Hon. Nicholas Mutu and the Burden of Experience: Why Bomadi/Patani Still Trusts Their Longest-Serving Representative” by Engr. Yeigagha Henry. JP raises important points about experience, electoral legitimacy, and democratic choice. However, it is necessary to respectfully clarify that the growing call for political expansion and representation renewal within Bomadi/Patani Federal Constituency has largely been misunderstood and, in some cases, unfairly portrayed as a campaign against Honourable Nicholas Mutu personally or an attempt to force him into political retirement. Such interpretations do not accurately reflect the true concerns and aspirations being expressed by many citizens across Bomadi/Patani Federal Constituency.
The central issue is not whether Honourable Nicholas Mutu possesses political experience. No reasonable observer can deny that after nearly 28 years in the National Assembly, he has accumulated considerable legislative exposure, institutional relationships, national visibility, and political influence. The real concern being raised by many stakeholders is whether democratic growth is best served when one office remains occupied continuously for almost three decades without creating broader opportunities for leadership expansion, generational inclusion, and rotational participation within the constituency.
Importantly, the ongoing agitation is not a call for Honourable Nicholas Mutu to leave politics altogether. Rather, many citizens believe that his long years of legislative experience and national exposure position him appropriately to aspire to higher legislative or executive responsibilities should he choose to do so. Across Nigeria’s democratic history, the House of Representatives has consistently served as a platform for political progression into the Senate, Governorship positions, ministerial appointments, diplomatic roles, and other strategic national assignments.
Indeed, there are contemporary examples that reflect this democratic progression. In Delta State, Honourable Victor Nwokolo of Ika Federal Constituency, despite his influence and close political relationship with former Governor Ifeanyi Okowa, is allowing room for leadership expansion ahead of 2027. Similarly, in neighbouring Bayelsa State, Honourable Frederick Yeitiemone Agbedi of Sagbama/Ekeremor Federal Constituency is transitioning toward a senatorial aspiration while creating space for other capable leaders to emerge within the House of Representatives. These examples demonstrate political maturity, institutional continuity, and democratic foresight rather than political weakness.
The Bomadi/Patani situation should therefore be viewed through this same lens of democratic progression and leadership expansion.
Much has been said about “the power of seniority in legislative politics,” and certainly legislative experience can be valuable. However, the concern repeatedly expressed by many constituents is that despite nearly 28 years in the House of Representatives, there is limited public awareness of significant motions, landmark bills, or major legislative initiatives directly associated with Honourable Nicholas Mutu’s long stay in office.
The issue therefore is not whether seniority matters, but whether such seniority has translated into sufficiently visible legislative impact and constituency advancement commensurate with almost three decades of representation. This concern remains one of the strongest recurring themes in public conversations across the constituency.
Similarly, arguments suggesting that criticisms against Honourable Mutu amount to “selective outrage” fail to recognize the unique nature of the Bomadi/Patani reality. Honourable Nicholas Mutu is widely regarded as the longest-serving member of the House of Representatives in Nigeria’s current democratic dispensation. Historically, very few federal lawmakers remain continuously in the same legislative office for nearly three decades without transitioning toward higher executive or legislative responsibilities.
Furthermore, Bomadi/Patani Federal Constituency consists of two Local Government Areas: Bomadi and Patani. Honourable Nicholas Mutu hails from Bomadi Local Government Area and has occupied the position continuously since 1999. Understandably, many people from Patani Local Government Area now strongly believe that fairness, inclusion, and democratic balance require the opening of the political space to other qualified and capable individuals from their axis of the constituency.
This call should not be viewed as hostility, but rather as a legitimate democratic aspiration for broader inclusion and equitable participation.
On the issue of development, opinions may naturally differ. While some acknowledge constituency interventions and political influence associated with Honourable Mutu’s years in office, many citizens continue to express dissatisfaction over the level of visible federal presence and transformative development relative to the duration and strategic influence attached to his representation.
Particularly significant is the argument that nearly three decades in the National Assembly - including more than a decade occupying influential positions connected to the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) - should ordinarily have translated into stronger federal interventions addressing some of the major ecological and infrastructural challenges affecting the constituency.
A frequently cited example is Honourable Nicholas Mutu's Akugbene community, which continues to face severe threats from coastal and environmental erosion. For many constituents, the persistence of such ecological dangers despite years of representation and committee influence symbolizes broader concerns regarding developmental outcomes within the constituency.
The argument therefore is not necessarily that “nothing was done,” but that many citizens genuinely believe significantly more could and should have been achieved considering the unprecedented duration and influence associated with the representation.
On the issue of longevity reflecting trust rather than tyranny, there is certainly truth in the argument that repeated electoral victories demonstrate political strength and organizational capacity. However, many stakeholders also believe that the continued political dominance of the structure over the years has been substantially reinforced by government patronage and entrenched political influence at both state and federal levels.
This perception has fueled increasing calls for a freer, fairer, and more competitive political environment where leadership opportunities are not perceived as permanently concentrated around one individual or structure.
Importantly, the growing agitation within Bomadi/Patani is not rooted in envy, bitterness, or hatred toward Honourable Nicholas Mutu. Reducing the conversation to “politics of envy” oversimplifies a much deeper democratic concern.
What many citizens are advocating is a reset and expansion of the political space, one that allows leadership succession, generational participation, broader inclusion, and fairer representation between the constituent Local Government Areas.
At the heart of the ongoing conversation is a simple democratic principle: no constituency should appear permanently closed to emerging leaders, younger voices, and other capable citizens willing to serve.
Ultimately, all sides appear to agree on one fundamental principle — that democracy belongs to the people. This is precisely why many stakeholders are insisting that the 2027 electoral process within Bomadi/Patani Federal Constituency must be transparent, open, competitive, and free from undue political patronage capable of influencing the true democratic will of the electorate.
If the people are genuinely allowed to decide freely through a credible process, then whichever outcome emerges will command far greater legitimacy, acceptance, and long-term political stability.
The growing call across Bomadi/Patani is therefore not fundamentally about rejecting Honourable Nicholas Mutu as a person. It is about strengthening democracy through fairness, inclusion, leadership renewal, political expansion, and the creation of opportunities for broader participation within the constituency.
In the end, democracy grows strongest not merely through continuity alone, but through the peaceful ability of political systems to renew themselves responsibly while preserving institutional stability, experience, and democratic legitimacy.
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