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#Bakare: #EmiLoKan Politicians are threat to Nigeria

Presiding Overseer CGCC, formerly Latter Rain Church Pastor Tunde Bakare.

Politician and Presiding Overseer of the Citadel Global Community Church (CGCC), formerly Latter Rain Assembly Pastor Tunde Bakare, has warned Nigerians to beware of Emi Lo Kan Politicians.

Speaking during his state of the nation broadcast, in the church’s auditorium at Ikeja, Lagos, Bakare who contested the All Progressives Congress (APC) Presidential primary against the winner, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, said Emi Lo Kan politicians are driven by personal ambitions and self-entitlement.

Sunrise.ng News recalled that during towards the run to the primary, which held in Abuja on June 6, 2022, Pastor Bakare had severally prophesied that he is the next in line for Nigeria’s presidency. He insisted that he is contesting because God told him he is Nigeria’s 16th leader, after President Muhammadu Buhari.

The term ’emi lo kan’ which means ‘it is my turn’ in the Yoruba language was made popular by the APC presidential candidate, Bola Tinubu, who used it to canvass for votes in Abeokuta, Ogun State in the build-up to his party’s primary election last June.

Speaking on the broadcast titled ‘Bridging The Gap Between Politics and Governance,’ Bakare who lost APC’s presidential ticket to Tinubu said politicians who are ingrained in entitlement politics are intolerant.

He highlighted politics of division, deception, manipulation, merchandise, exploitation, betrayal, slander, intimidation, elimination, which such tendencies exemplifies as bad for the nation’s politics and polity.

Explaining the politics of entitlement further, the clergy said ‘emi lo kan’ politics only aims to gratify long time personal ambitions.

Bakare said, “This ’emi lo kan’ politics that insists on one’s turn, even if circumstances do not align, is bad. Politics of entitlement also manifests as a perennial candidacy, not with the intent to serve but to gratify long-time personal ambitions.

“It could also manifest as insistence on a given political office as a reward for what one considers a lifetime of sacrifice to the nation. Politicians with a sense of entitlement evade political debates; they do not consider it imperative to communicate with the electorate.

“Entitlement politics will breed an imperial presidency that is distant from the people and has no sense of responsibility or accountability to the people. Such imperial governance will slide towards dictatorship and will be intolerant of dissent.

“Entitlement politicians set low-performance benchmarks for themselves when they secure power and are content with projecting molehills as mountains of achievement.”

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