Battle for Buhari’s 12.7m ballots: Tinubu parleys CPC group
• CPC not fragmented, says Speaker Abbas
With less than 15 months to the 2027 presidential poll, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, yesterday, renewed interest in appropriating the legendary 12.7 million ballots usually credited to the late President Muhammadu Buhari, when he met with a faction of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) founded by the immediate past Nigerian leader.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, yesterday, said the Federal Government would no longer resort to borrowing to meet its financial obligations as it now meets its revenue target.
The disclosure came on the back of what appears like an information blackout on the government’s fiscal condition. The last time the government published the budget implementation report (BIR), a comprehensive report on the government revenue and expenditure with details on expenditure items matched with budget projects, was in the third quarter of last year.
The previous administration, even with the burden of alleged fiscal recklessness it carried for eight years, published the BIR religiously quarterly.
Today, Nigerians depend on snippets of public disclosures by public officials, albeit conflicting in many cases, for scanty information on the government’s fiscal performance.
But stressing that Nigeria’s fiscal direction is now anchored on prudent management, not debt, the President declared: “We have met our revenue target. Nigeria is not borrowing again. Nobody is trading pieces of paper for an exchange rate anymore. The naira is stabilising. What we need now is to build the infrastructure for export and import, create jobs and opportunities for our people. That is my guarantee.”
Indeed, the administration has improved its revenue profile. In the first half (H1) of the year, the government said it collected a total of N14.27 trillion in tax revenues, a leap of 43 per cent when compared with N9.98 trillion it realised in the first half of 2024.
According to data shared by the Presidency, non-oil tax grew by 44.2 per cent to N10.64 trillion in the period compared to N7.37 trillion recorded in the comparative period in 2024.
By the current horizontal revenue sharing formula, the Federal Government gets 52.68 per cent or N7.5 trillion from the total pool of taxes, which are shared among the three tiers of government.
In the H1, The Guardian reported that Nigeria lost about N2.5 trillion in unrealised oil revenue target with crude below $75 budget benchmark and around 1.5 million barrels per day (mbpd), a 25 per cent discount of the N2.06mbpd the fiscal document of the year envisaged.
Today, oil trades below $70 per barrel on average, or about $93 of the target. Production has increased moderately at 1.7mpbd as of July. But it remains far from hitting the critical threshold to push up the Federal Government’s equity in the N55-trillion budget for the current year to N40.89 trillion.
The Federal Government needs to increase last year’s revenue by over two folds to hit the revenue target, which the President said the government has done. That will require a 100 per cent performance of both non-oil and oil revenue streams.
But oil production and prices are already faltering. Since Tinubu assumed office, non-oil has posted over 100 per cent performance though not enough to meet the hole created by the volatile oil sale.
And supposing the government raises N40.89 trillion set for the year, there is a N14.1 trillion fiscal hole the government said it would borrow to plug.
Indeed, the effective fiscal deficit estimate could be much higher with the government putting the projected joint proceeds from “independent revenues” and “other revenues” at N11.02 trillion.
In the first three quarters of the year, the Federal Government earned a total of N14.06 trillion in retained revenue, pushing the annualised performance at N18.7 trillion, 33 per cent above the N14.07 trillion generated in 2023.
If the government increases its earnings by a similar margin this year, the total available fund for financing the budget will be N24 trillion. But the government may be hoping to replicate the 2023 ‘magic’ when the retained revenue more than doubled from N6.9 trillion to over N14 trillion.
If that happens, it may come near N40 trillion, a little below the benchmark. But the fiscal dynamics are different from what they were in 2023 – the naira is stable, which the President attested to. Other macroeconomic variables that triggered a spike in revenue are relatively stable as well.
The government would necessarily alter these baselines to meet its near N41 trillion revenue target and suppose that to mark for the fiscal deficit to stop borrowing to fund its obligations in line with the year’s appropriation. Otherwise, the spending outlays would need to be reduced drastically.
Sadly, it has only N23.3 trillion capital votes to play with to scale down its spending. With debt on the rise in recent months, it may outrun the N14.32 trillion allocated to debt financing. The N13.64 trillion recurrent expenditure may also need to be retained or expanded.
On food security, the President announced that his government would roll out a nationwide mechanisation programme, with farm centres established across all regions to boost productivity, ensure food sovereignty and lift millions out of poverty.
“Our path to food security is clear. Every region will have a mechanised farm centre. We are committed to removing poverty from our land, and that is the work we have already started,” he said.
Baring his thoughts on the partisan disputations in the polity, the President urged his supporters not to be distracted by political noise ahead of 2027, emphasising that his focus remains on reforms that will guarantee prosperity for all Nigerians.
His words: “Don’t let anybody threaten you with uncertainty. We know the direction we are going, and we are certain of success. The legacy you will inherit from me is total commitment to justice, transparency and progress. At the end of this journey, it will be a house of joy and prosperity for all.”
EARLIER, the visitors, who were led by the former Nasarawa State governor, Senator Tanko Al-Makura, assured the President that the group would deliver massive support for the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in the 2027 general elections.
The former governor informed the President that the CPC bloc within the APC remained firmly behind his administration and would mobilise nationwide to ensure the party’s victory in the next election.
“We are with you in loyalty, in person, and in purpose. May Almighty God grant you the wisdom and strength to continue leading our nation,” Al-Makura assured.
THE president’s remarks about improvement in the nation’s fiscal position came at the heels of former Kaduna State governor, Mallam Nasir Ahmad el-Rufai’s claim that the administration has failed to address the socio-economic challenges of the country, including security of lives and property.
Ardo Zubairu
National Secretary
TInubu Re- Election Project 2027 . Office Phones:
08033305195
08098885195
07033454053
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