RIVERS IS NOT LAGOS: WHY FUBARA MUST STAND FIRM AND REDEFINE THE POLITICS OF POWER IN RIVERS STATE
The political battle in Rivers State is no longer hidden behind closed doors. It has become a defining struggle over independence, authority, governance, and the future identity of the state itself.
Years ago, during tense political moments involving President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the growing influence of national political structures, Chief Nyesom Wike boldly declared that “Rivers State is not Lagos.” That statement carried weight because it reflected resistance against external political control and the idea of one political figure determining the destiny of an entire state from behind the curtain.
Today, Governor Siminalayi Fubara must remember those same words.
If Rivers State is truly not Lagos, then its governor must not govern under fear, intimidation, or constant political submission. Leadership demands courage, strategy, patience, and institutional strength. Governor Fubara already possesses the constitutional legitimacy and the people’s mandate. What remains is the will to fully exercise it with wisdom and firmness.
Wike himself survived intense political pressure during the administration of former President Muhammadu Buhari and the influence of former Governor Rotimi Amaechi because he built strong grassroots alliances, protected loyal political structures, controlled the narrative, and refused to surrender Rivers State’s political direction to outside interests.
Governor Fubara now stands at a similar crossroads.
Rather than appearing politically vulnerable, he must deepen consultations across Rivers State , engaging elders, youth leaders, traditional rulers, community stakeholders, Niger Delta opinion leaders, civil society groups, and political blocs to strengthen stability and unity across the state. Rivers politics has always rewarded strategic organization more than silence.
The governor must also champion a broader conversation about fairness, inclusion, and rotational leadership so that every ethnic group and region in Rivers State can feel represented in the future of governance. Such a vision would strengthen unity instead of division and create a more balanced political culture for generations ahead.
This is not the season for panic. It is the season for calculated leadership.
A governor who delivers projects, protects democratic institutions, sustains grassroots support, and governs with courage can withstand even the fiercest political storms. History remembers leaders who defended the dignity of their office, not those who surrendered it at the first sign of pressure.
Rivers State is watching.
Nigeria is watching.
And history is taking notes.

