Headlines
Tinubu tells court his removal as President over inability to secure 25 percent votes in Abuja may spark anarchy in Nigeria

Different interpretations have been proffered on the clause in the constitution after Tinubu won the highest number of votes in a three-way presidential race in February but failed to score 25 percent in the FCT.Tinubu’s lawyers said courts have always been careful about giving extreme interpretations of the Constitution that could spark chaos.
“Our courts have always adopted the purposeful approach to the interpretation of our Constitution, as exemplified in a host of decisions,” the team said.
They also said Tinubu would still have won the election even if he didn’t score anything in Abuja and one other state, although this was not the argument of petitions by Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party and Peter Obi of the Labour Party .
“Even if there was no election in one State (including the FCT), or even if the election of a State/States (including the FCT) is/are voided, the entire election cannot be voided or canceled.“In concluding our arguments on this issue, we urge the court to hold that in any election where the electorate exercise their plebiscite, there is neither a ‘royal’ ballot nor ‘royal’ voter; and that residents of the FCT do not have any special voting right over residents of any other State of the federation, in a manner similar to the concepts of preferential shareholding in Company Law.
“We urge this court to resolve this issue against the petitioners and in favour of the respondent,” the lawyers said.
Analyses
The Anchor of Dependency: Rethinking Nigeria’s Port Financing Strategy

Headlines
NPA: Starving the goose that lays the golden eggs

Tomorrow, on Monday Discourse, Ibrahim Nasiru looks at what he describes as the paradox in the financing system of the Nigerian Ports Authority( NPA).
An agency which lays the golden eggs that feed the nation, yet has to borrow from external creditors to fix its infrastructures.
On Monday Discourse, Nasiru advises government to rethink Nigeria’s Port Financing Strategy
“The NPA is projecting a staggering ₦1.489 trillion in revenue for 2026. Yet, why are we still looking outward to borrow billions of dollars for Port Modernization?
“The truth is, Nigeria’s Ports are trapped in a fiscal paradox.
“We treat the NPA as a cash cow to fund federal deficits, sweeping its massive trillions into the central treasury, while leaving our 100-year-old Ports to starve of the vital liquidity needed for self maintenance.
“Forcing an agency to bleed cash to the treasury while begging foreign creditors for infrastructure loans is an unsustainable contradiction.
“If we are serious about the Blue Economy, it’s time for a legislative rethink that allows internal revenue retention for a dedicated Port Modernization Fund.
Read Nasiru’s analysis on why Nigerian Ports must feed themselves before they can sustainably feed the nation.
Keep a date with Nasiru on Monday Discourse tomorrow ,Monday, June 1st, 2026.
It’s a must read
Headlines
NRC suspends Warri- Itakpe train service over operational concerns

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Aviation3 months agoFAAN resumes toll collection at Airports, adopts hybrid payment method
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