Your Best Isn’t Good Enough,” the LP Campaign Council Fires Buhari Over a Remark Made in the US

President Muhammadu Buhari has been under fire from the Labour Party (LP) Presidential Campaign for a recent remark he made in the United States. In a meeting with Bob Roberts, his deputy, and Al-Mahfoudh Bin Bayyah, the secretary-general of the Abu Dhabi Forum, President Buhari asserted that in his seven and a half years in office, he had done his best for the nation.
The President said his government is doing its best to address the myriad issues affecting the country, according to a statement by his spokesman, Garba Shehu.
We face numerous difficulties and have a large population, but we are making an effort in many areas, he had remarked. I have worked hard over the past seven and a half years. The LP Presidential Campaign Council responded to the remark by claiming that the President’s efforts were insufficient and that he left Nigeria in a worse situation than when he arrived in 2015.
The Chief Spokesperson for the LP campaign committee, Yunusa Tanko, called the President’s statement “unfortunate” in an interview with Vanguard on Wednesday in Abuja. According to Tanko, Nigerians were let down by Buhari and the All Progressives Congress (APC), which is why patriotic Nigerians are clamoring for Peter Obi to lead the country out of its current predicament in 2023.
It is quite unfortunate, he remarked. I say this because he left Nigeria with his best, and Nigerians are worse off as a result. Today, Nigeria is regarded with sympathy among other countries thanks to President Buhari’s finest efforts.
Despite the fact that 163 million of our 200 million population live in extreme poverty, we are not the least blessed country in the world in terms of natural deposits.
Nigerians are now among, if not the most dangerous people in the world to live with due to insecurity, thanks to Buhari’s policies. Because of the insecurity that has nearly become the norm, life is, as they say, “miserable, brutish, and short” for the majority of Nigerians today.
Bandits, terrorists, and other non-state actors are preventing our farmers from accessing their crops; they thrive off ransoms demanded from innocent residents of rural areas.
With cases of corruption in government agencies being handled with child gloves, President Buhari has done his utmost to elevate graft to the level of statecraft.