When 7% Turns Out In FCT, Celebration Is Premature — Showunmi – Igbere TV
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When 7% Turns Out In FCT, Celebration Is Premature — Showunmi

A former Ogun State governorship aspirant and public affairs commentator, Otunba Segun Showunmi, has cautioned political actors against celebrating what he described as a hollow victory in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), arguing that a reported seven percent voter turnout should trigger introspection rather than triumphalism.

In a statement titled “When 7% Turns Out, Celebration Is Premature,” Showunmi said turnout figures are a more reliable indicator of political health than press conferences or victory speeches. According to him, the FCT, as Nigeria’s administrative nerve centre and one of its most politically literate jurisdictions, cannot record such low participation without raising serious questions about public confidence and engagement.

“If you claim overwhelming performance in the Federal Capital Territory, yet barely 7% of registered voters turn out under conditions that were anything but restrictive, the appropriate response is not triumphalism — it is introspection,” he stated.

Showunmi argued that low turnout is not a neutral statistic but a political signal that may indicate voter fatigue, dissatisfaction, or quiet recalibration by the electorate. He maintained that participation levels function as an informal referendum on governance, noting that high turnout reflects enthusiasm and legitimacy, while low turnout may suggest detachment or silent protest.

He warned against interpreting electoral silence as endorsement, stressing that those who stay away from the polls may be more politically consequential than those who vote. According to him, an incumbent establishment should be concerned when it cannot mobilize even a fraction of voters in a territory as politically sophisticated as Abuja.

The politician further cautioned that arrogance and complacency often serve as blind spots in Nigerian politics, where early momentum can lead leaders to underestimate the importance of sustaining grassroots coalitions and managing public perception.

“You cannot credibly argue that the people are with you when the people do not show up,” he said, adding that technical victories achieved under conditions of low participation may lack psychological legitimacy.

Showunmi concluded that in any competitive democracy, turnout is political oxygen. Where citizens believe in performance, he argued, they mobilize voluntarily and validate governance with their presence at the ballot. Where they do not, celebration may be premature.

He warned that history has shown that disengaged electorates can re-engage abruptly, often producing outcomes that surprise even the most confident political actors.

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