Election Tracker Nigeria: Who Really Kept Their Manifesto Promises?

Elections in Nigeria are colorful, high-stakes affairs. Parties make sweeping promises—end poverty, fix power, defeat corruption, diversify the economy. But after the fanfare fades, citizens often wonder: Who actually kept their word?

An “Election Tracker” isn’t about slogans. It’s about separating announcements from actions, and actions from outcomes. Looking at Nigeria’s Fourth Republic presidents, here’s what the record shows.


Umaru Musa Yar’Adua (2007–2010) — The Seven-Point Agenda

Pledges: Power and energy, food security, wealth creation, land reform, transport, education, security.
Delivery: Ambition outpaced execution. Chronic power outages persisted, land reform barely took off, and transport plans were stuck in paperwork. His illness and untimely death cut the agenda short.

Verdict: Mostly Unmet. A reminder that vision without capacity—or continuity—quickly collapses.


Goodluck Jonathan (2010–2015) — The Transformation Agenda

Pledges: Job creation, power sector reform, agricultural transformation, human capital.
Delivery: Some gains in agriculture (cassava and rice programs) and policy moves on privatizing power. But unemployment rose, poverty remained stubborn, and blackouts didn’t end.

Verdict: Mixed. Seeds of reform were planted, but they never grew into the transformation promised.


Muhammadu Buhari (2015–2023) — Change Agenda: Corruption, Security, Economy

Pledges: Defeat Boko Haram, kill corruption, fix the economy.
Delivery: Buhari’s tenure was judged harshly by independent trackers like Buharimeter. Yes, the Treasury Single Account expanded, and some infrastructure got attention. But insurgency morphed into widespread banditry and kidnappings. Two recessions hit. Anti-corruption outcomes were more talk than transformation.

Verdict: Largely Unmet. Expectations were sky-high, but the results fell flat.


Bola Tinubu (2023– ) — Renewed Hope Agenda

Pledges: Scrap fuel subsidy, unify exchange rates, boost jobs, expand student loans, secure the country.
Delivery so far (mid-2025):

  • Subsidy removal: Done on Day 1. Prices soared.
  • Exchange rate unification: Implemented, causing naira devaluation.
  • Student loans: Passed into law, revised in 2024, rollout ongoing.
  • Jobs & welfare: Still early, but inflation and hardship dominate the daily lives of citizens.

Verdict: Kept in action, mixed in outcome. The reforms are bold, but without cushions, citizens are paying the price.


The Patterns Across Administrations

  1. Announcements are easy, delivery is hard. It’s one thing to scrap subsidies or unveil an agenda. It’s another to make power reliable or jobs plentiful.
  2. Independent trackers expose gaps. Buhari’s low scores show the value of citizen-led accountability. Without these, governments spin their own stories.
  3. Reforms without safety nets spark backlash. Subsidy removal and FX unification were manifesto promises—kept, yes—but at huge cost to households.
  4. Institutions, not individuals, sustain reforms. Yar’Adua’s illness showed how personal leadership gaps can stall national agendas.

Scorecard Snapshot

LeaderSignature AgendaStatus
Yar’AduaSeven-Point Agenda❌ Mostly Unmet
JonathanTransformation Agenda⚖️ Mixed
BuhariCorruption, Security, Economy❌ Largely Unmet
TinubuRenewed Hope🟡 In Progress (actions kept, outcomes painful)

A Citizen’s Checklist for Accountability

If Nigerians want to hold leaders to account, here are four questions to ask every quarter:

  1. Is there a verifiable instrument? (Law, circular, budget line, regulation)
  2. Is money flowing? (Capital releases, disbursements, procurement—not just speeches)
  3. Are service metrics moving? (Uptime, food prices, enrollment numbers)
  4. Is the reform protected? (Institutions and rules that survive beyond one leader)

Final Word

From Yar’Adua’s stalled agenda to Jonathan’s partial delivery, Buhari’s unmet “change” promises, and Tinubu’s painful but decisive reforms, one truth stands out: Nigerian elections are often won on hope, but governance is judged on delivery.

The next frontier isn’t more manifestos. It’s building institutions and trackers that let citizens say, with evidence: Yes, this promise was kept—or no, it was broken.

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