Skip to content
Saturday 11 April 2026
  • Home
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact
The Frontier
Click to read
The Frontier
  • News
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Headlines
  • Education
  • Health
  • Business & Economy
  • Sports
  • More
    • International
    • Religion
    • Entertainment
    • Info Tech
    • Matilda Showbiz
      • Gists
      • Music
      • Gossips
      • Oga MAT
      • Romance
    • Arts & Culture
    • Environment
    • Opinion
    • Features
    • Epistles of Anthony Kila
    • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade
The Frontier
  • News
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Religion
  • Headlines
  • Education
  • International
  • Business & Economy
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Arts & Culture
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Matilda Showbiz
    • Gists
    • Music
    • Gossips
    • Oga MAT
    • Romance
  • Opinion
  • Epistles of Anthony Kila
  • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade
  • Info Tech
  • Interview
The Frontier
Click to read
Opinion
Opinion

Eleven unassailable achievements of the Akpabio-led tenth Senate and a historic legacy of purpose, by Eseme Eyiboh

The FrontierThe FrontierMarch 11, 2026 547 Minutes read0

•Senate President Godswill Akpabio

To inquire — often with a faint hint of derision — about the legacy Senator Godswill Akpabio may bequeath as President of Nigeria’s Tenth Senate is to display a troubling indifference to recent legislative history.

The record is neither obscure nor equivocal. Under his stewardship, the Senate has passed more than 90 bills, with over 58 already receiving presidential assent.

That is not a statistic easily waved away, even by the most committed cynics. You are invited to verify these figures and raise the alarm if they prove to be anything less than accurate.

If the question arises from ignorance rather than malice, then this serves as an opportune moment to elucidate the record. After all, this record speaks clearly enough for itself, requiring no embellishment; only acknowledgment.

For citizens fatigued by grandstanding and hungry for facts, here are eleven key achievements that withstand serious scrutiny. Taken together, they reveal a Senate not merely passing time in office, but deliberately shaping a consequential and enduring legacy.

1. Refining the Legal Framework Governing Elections

With the recent passage of the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill, 2025, the catalogue of landmark laws passed by the Tenth Senate has once again escalated. This seminal piece of legislation directly addresses critical areas for improvement in Nigeria’s democratic process, introducing provisions that enhance the transparency of result management and the credibility of party primaries.

By refining the legal framework governing elections, the Senate has moved beyond reactive patchworks to proactively strengthen the very foundation upon which representative governance rests. It is a declaration that the health of Nigeria’s democracy is a permanent and urgent legislative priority.

As evidenced by that recently amended law, the Tenth Senate has been conspicuously industrious, legislating with intent. Always with an unwavering focus on the intricate machinery of the state.

2. Restoring Budgetary Sanity and Scale

Perhaps the most understated yet consequential achievement of the Akpabio-led Senate is the restoration of fiscal order.

By timely passing the 2024 and 2025 budgets and re-establishing Nigeria’s adherence to a January-to-December budget cycle, the Senate has reinstated a foundational discipline of governance. This is not mere clerical neatness; it is an economic signal. Investors plan according to calendars, not excuses. Ministries execute when timelines are predictable. The ₦49.7 trillion 2025 budget, a bold leap in scale, reflects a state that has finally acknowledged the magnitude of its challenges and responded with proportionate ambition.

One may debate the figures, but seriousness has returned to the process. It is the sound of a heavy door being firmly shut on an era of chronic postponement.

3. Ministerial Screenings with Teeth

Gone are the days when ministerial confirmations resembled ceremonial nods, rituals of handshakes and rehearsed platitudes.

Under this Senate, screenings have transformed into substantive engagements. Nominees are rigorously questioned on their vision, coherence, and the intricate mechanics of delivery. Policy literacy has become paramount. Track records are scrutinized, not merely recounted. The message is straightforward and long overdue: holding an office is not synonymous with understanding it.

From the outset, the Senate has asserted that executive authority must be accompanied by intellectual heft, not merely political credentials.

4. Legislating for a Modern Economy

To be unequivocally clear, the Tenth Senate has exhibited a refreshing zeal for structural reform. The Electricity Act Amendment, which enhances decentralization in power generation and distribution, directly addresses one of Nigeria’s most obstinate growth constraints. Alongside it are the Nigeria Tax Act and the Data Protection Act, measures that modernize fiscal administration and safeguard the digital economy. These are not ostentatious laws; they are load-bearing beams for a twenty-first-century economy striving to transcend oil dependency, improvisation, and the dense administrative fog that has long impeded progress.

5. A Proactive Security Posture

Security has not merely been treated as a rhetorical device but as a legislative obligation. Through focused committee work, national security dialogues, and laws such as the Control of Small Arms and Light Weapons Act, the Senate has targeted the supply lines of insecurity.

The Defence Industries Corporation Modernisation Act signifies a deeper shift: a transition from perpetual dependence to long-term self-reliance. It represents the distinction between reacting to threats and cultivating the capacity to deter them. A subtle yet vital recalibration.

6. Embracing the Constitutional Moment

If history proves benevolent, the ongoing constitutional review process may define this Senate more profoundly than any single bill. By reopening fundamental discussions on state policing, fiscal federalism, and local government autonomy, the legislature has chosen arduous work over comfortable evasions. These are not mere academic exercises; they are the unresolved dilemmas at the heart of Nigeria’s chronic instability. To engage them earnestly is to accept that nation-building is often profoundly uncomfortable before it becomes rewarding.

7. Institutionalising the Anti-Corruption Fight

This Senate appears to grasp, instinctively, that corruption is not vanquished by outrage but by design. By fortifying legal frameworks through reforms such as the Fiscal Responsibility and Transparency Act and the Police Professionalism and Accountability Act, it has concentrated on systems rather than slogans.

The objective is unglamorous yet effective: to embed integrity into procurement, budgeting, and law enforcement itself, thereby depriving corruption of its hiding places.

8. Fiscal Stewardship in an Age of Debt

Borrowing requests have proliferated. The Senate’s response has been neither blind obstruction nor rubber-stamp approval. Instead, it has exercised scrutiny, conditionality, and a persistent demand for value.

This is the delicate art of co-governance: supporting the executive when warranted, pushing back when prudent, and repeatedly posing the often-unfashionable question of sustainability. It is not dramatic work; it is the patient, responsible labor of trusteeship.

9. Legislating for the Human Dimension

Amid grand macroeconomic recalibration, the Senate has maintained a focus on the citizenry.

The Student Loans Act expands access to higher education at a time when household incomes are under severe strain. The National Minimum Wage Increase Act is a direct legislative acknowledgment of the dignity of labor in an inflation-ravaged economy. These are not silver bullets; however, they represent deliberate attempts to soften the sharpest edges of hardship and to invest in people, still Nigeria’s most abundant and renewable resource.

10. Infrastructure as a Legislative Priority

By prioritizing approvals, oversight, and enabling legislation for major infrastructure projects, particularly in power and defense, the Senate has regarded infrastructure not as executive indulgence but as a national imperative. Roads, energy grids, and security assets do not merely consume budgets; they generate employment, unlock productivity, and stabilize communities. The Senate’s role in facilitating these pathways is not peripheral; it is central.

11. The Quiet Power of Stable Leadership

Perhaps the most underrated achievement is the institutional stability itself. Akpabio’s instinct for realpolitik, coupled with his understanding of the intricate calculus of regional and political balance, has fostered a chamber that debates, negotiates, and ultimately functions.

In a political climate where friction frequently devolves into paralysis, this relative consensus has served as the essential lubricant in the engine. It may not be glamorous, but it is, quite simply, indispensable.

A Legacy Forged in the Work of the Possible

Senator Godswill Akpabio is not given to lyricism about politics. He is, rather, a consolidator—an institutional mechanic with a reformer’s appetite—who understands that in a sprawling and argumentative democracy such as Nigeria, progress is rarely the offspring of moral exhibitionism.

It is more often the product of negotiation, arithmetic, persuasion, and, when necessary, unsentimental compromise.

Purists, who prefer the hygiene of opposition to the burdens of responsibility, may call this duplicity. Those acquainted with governance call it reality.

The distance between statute books and village squares remains stubbornly wide. Hunger has not been legislated out of existence. Insecurity has not been adjourned sine die.

The proof of any Senate’s seriousness lies not in the eloquence of its debates but in the execution of its enactments — in whether ink becomes infrastructure, whether clauses become commerce, whether appropriations become actualities.

Dismissing this Senate as irrelevant, however, requires ignoring the instruments it has deliberately fashioned and set within reach. Laws do not implement themselves; they require administrative will and bureaucratic competence across the vast machinery of the state.

What the Tenth Senate, under Akpabio, has supplied — swiftly and with focus — is architecture. At a time when institutional paralysis is too often mistaken for normalcy, it has chosen to function. That decision, prosaic though it may sound, is no small achievement in a political culture where dysfunction can masquerade as authenticity.

As 2027 approaches, bringing with it the predictable turbulence of democratic contestation, the Akpabio-led Senate deserves assessment by the cold metrics of substance rather than the warm currents of sentiment. Nations are not constructed by vibes, nor sustained by viral indignation.

They are built incrementally — by statutes, by procedures, by institutions that confront disorder and, stubbornly, insist on operating. In an era when Nigeria has too frequently flirted with drift, the deliberate choice to govern— to keep the constitutional machinery moving — may prove to be not merely a legacy, but the indispensable precondition for any legacy at all.

*Rt Hon Eseme Eyiboh mnipr, is the Special Adviser on Media/Publicity and official Spokesperson to the President of the Senate

 

 

Tags
Akpabio-led tenth SenateEleven unassailable achievementsEseme Eyibohhistoric legacy of purpose
FacebookTwitterWhatsAppLinkedInEmailLink
Previous post UNILAG lecturers commence strike today over ‘amputated’ salaries
next post HAPPENING NOW: Heavy traffic jam as container truck falls on Otedola Bridge Lagos
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Opinion

Straight from the Strait of Hormuz, By Nnimmo Bassey

April 1, 20260
Opinion

Yet another abduction of worshippers, by Tochukwu Jimo Obi

March 1, 20260
Opinion

Forgiveness is divine: Senator Akpabio as a grace carrier, By Ken Harries Esq

February 27, 20260
Load more
Read also
Inside Akwa Ibom Today

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 20250
News

Continued terrorist attacks on innocent citizens threaten Nigeria’s stability – Former Vice President Atiku warns

April 11, 20260
News

Reps mourn late Lawmaker Muhammad Hassan

April 11, 20260
Interview

How Pastor raped me on church altar while removing 7 marine spirits – Narrates 16-year-old schoolgirl

April 11, 20260
Business & Economy

Electricity: Questions N3.3 trillion FG power bailout can’t answer

April 11, 20260
News

Army, Navy personnel detained after clash in Bayelsa during Tinubu’s visit

April 11, 20260
Health

Emzor calls for investment, stronger maternal health rights in Nigeria

April 11, 20260
Load more

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025

Continued terrorist attacks on innocent citizens threaten Nigeria’s stability – Former Vice President Atiku warns

April 11, 2026

Reps mourn late Lawmaker Muhammad Hassan

April 11, 2026

How Pastor raped me on church altar while removing 7 marine spirits – Narrates 16-year-old schoolgirl

April 11, 2026

Electricity: Questions N3.3 trillion FG power bailout can’t answer

April 11, 2026

Army, Navy personnel detained after clash in Bayelsa during Tinubu’s visit

April 11, 2026

inside the Hill top newspaper

0 Comments

Continued terrorist attacks on innocent citizens threaten Nigeria’s stability – Former Vice President Atiku warns

0 Comments

5 burnt to death scooping fuel from fallen tanker

0 Comments

Naira slumps further as dollar scarcity bites harder

0 Comments

BREAKING: Appeal Court sacks Senate Minority Leader, orders election rerun

0 Comments

Again, Trump fined $10,000 for violating gag order

0 Comments

Follow us

FacebookLike our page
InstagramFollow us
YoutubeSubscribe to our channel
WhatsappContact us
Latest news
1

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025
2

Road mishaps: 1,500 Dangote Cement truck drivers undergo screening

August 25, 2025
3

Certificate forgery: 9 Poly workers, students under investigation – Rector

October 31, 2025
4

BREAKING: Vice Chancellors set minimum admission benchmark for Nigerian universities

July 8, 2025
5

Tinubu to attend 44-yr-old Bassirou Faye’s inauguration as Senegalese president tomorrow

April 1, 2024
6

FRSC blames route violation as four die in Anambra road crash

February 1, 2025
Popular
1

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025
2

Cabinet reshuffle: October 1 fears grip ministers •2 strong opposition politicians Tinubu may appoint into cabinet

September 29, 2024
3

Avoid fresh protests – Nigerian farmers urge Tinubu to act on hunger, poverty

August 21, 2024
4

EXPOSED: Ministries, departments, agencies engaged in job racketeering identified

December 9, 2024
5

Don’t block Senator Natasha’s resumption – Nigerian lawyers warn Senate

September 18, 2025
6

Heritage Bank depositors seek NASS intervention in CBN revocation

March 26, 2025

About The Frontier

The Frontier is Nigeria’s leading online newspaper. It is published by Okims Media Links Limited headed by Sunny Okim, a veteran journalist who is widely known as The Grandmaster, fondly called so by colleagues and friends for being Nigeria’s pioneer movie journalist.

Most viewed

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025

Chief Imam accused of witchcraft beaten to death

November 6, 2025

JUST IN: Police fire tear gas at protesters in Bauchi

August 1, 2024

Tinubu to sign amended Electoral Bill this month, says Senate President Akpabio

February 10, 2026

Suspected cultist hacks bizman to death, 3 others arrested

April 8, 2025
Top posts

Categories

  • News4449
  • Politics3871
  • Crime3748
  • International2633
  • Sports2170
  • Business & Economy2060
  • Headlines2031
  • Education1202
  • Matilda Showbiz861
  • Health768
  • Entertainment707
  • Africa434
  • Religion425
  • Environment308
  • Special257
  • Arts & Culture224
  • Hunger protests in Nigeria224
  • Info Tech206
  • Interview173
  • Inside Akwa Ibom Today161
  • Opinion144
  • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade111
  • Advert30
  • Epistles of Anthony Kila19
  • Trends16
  • Local News4

© 2026 The Frontier, Published by Okims Media Links Limited.

designed by winnet services

  • Home
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact