By Dr Patrick Akhere Ebojele
At the weekend, Edo State Governor, Senator Monday Okpebholo stood before dignitaries at Edo State Polytechnic, Usen, to commission the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC)–facilitated internal road network. But he did more than cut tape and exchange pleasantries. In one sentence, which captured the moment, he said that Edo State would “continue to collaborate with federal agencies and development partners to deliver projects that improve lives and accelerate growth.”
The venue and timing were not incidental. The statement came at a defining moment of the government’s policy identity and political tone. By choosing the commissioning of a federally supported infrastructure project as the platform for this declaration, Governor Okpebholo, successfully, anchored his message in a concrete example of what cooperation can produce. The optics were deliberate: partnership in theory, partnership in practice.
Not a few persons appreciated the deeper meaning of the governor’s position, looking back at the immediate political past of Edo State. Mr Godwin Obaseki, as governor, operated in a sharply polarised national environment. Following intense partisan realignments in the state, he effectively strained relations between Benin City and Abuja. Apart from his frequent strong criticisms of federal economic policies, persistent warnings about macroeconomic instability, and recurring expressions of concern over his perceived direction of the national economy, he ensured Edo was outside the good books of the Federal government.
The period coincided with broader national turbulence. Nigeria was navigating difficult reforms, including fuel subsidy removal and exchange-rate adjustments under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Inflationary pressures, naira volatility, and labor unrest heightened public anxiety. Within that charged atmosphere, Edo state-federal relations, instigated by Mr Godwin Obaseki, took on an adversarial tone.
It is precisely against this backdrop that Okpebholo’s Usen declaration must be critically located. The governor is signaling a strategic reset. In Nigeria’s fiscal and administrative architecture, subnational governments that maintain functional cooperation with federal agencies typically enjoy faster access to intervention funds, infrastructure programmes, and development partnerships. Governor Okpebholo is making a calculated decision to reposition Edo State within that cooperative framework.
The NDDC road project itself provided the perfect case study. By publicly praising collaboration while standing beside a visible federal intervention, the governor was reinforcing a simple but powerful message: Edo’s development path, under his watch, will be partnership-driven rather than confrontation-driven
Equally important is the tonal shift embedded in his remarks. The Okpebholo administration is consciously moving away from rhetoric that emphasises systemic gloom toward language that stresses delivery and measurable impact. This matters more than it may initially appear. Development finance institutions, multilateral partners, and even private investors closely monitor the policy tone of subnational governments. Jurisdictions perceived as politically cooperative and administratively predictable tend to attract stronger institutional engagement.
The governor’s message, therefore, is as much economic signaling as it is political positioning while not ignoring the partisan dimension. With Edo now governed by the All Progressives Congress, the same party that controls the Federal Government, the governor’s emphasis on alignment reflects both political reality and strategic calculation. Harmonising state priorities with the Renewed Hope framework of the Tinubu administration potentially opens additional channels for federal support and policy synergy.
Governor Okpebholo knows that partnership language can elicit development outcomes in itself. He is aware of the hard metrics: the pace of infrastructure delivery, the revival of educational institutions, the attraction of private capital, and the expansion of employment opportunities. He knows that cooperative federalism is an opportunity creator that can guarantee results.
The governor is also convinced that effective state leadership in Nigeria requires two simultaneous capabilities: the ability to collaborate with Abuja and the capacity to innovate independently at the subnational level. The list of Nigeria’s most successful governors historically contain names of those who leveraged federal relationships. Governor Okpebholo is on that list, hence.
His plan to deepen federal partnerships while building distinctive, home-grown development initiatives, no doubt, will translate improved political temperature into measurable socioeconomic gains across Edo’s urban and rural communities. It is the hallmarks of a governor keenly aware of the political economy of intergovernmental relations. By lowering the temperature of confrontation and foregrounding cooperation, Governor Okpebholo’s objective is repositioning Edo as a willing and reliable partner within Nigeria’s federal system.
There is, however, a psychological layer to his messaging. After years of intense partisan contestation in the state, the governor’s intent is on projecting the image of a stabiliser — a leader more focused on pipelines of development than pipelines of political conflict. This positioning can itself be a governance asset.
What is beyond dispute is that the governor’s statement at Edo State Polytechnic, Usen, was carefully crafted and strategically delivered. In one sentence, he both acknowledged the utility of federal collaboration and signaled a departure from the more combative political posture that many observers associated with the recent past.
This approach is one that will reposition Edo State more favorably within Nigeria’s competitive federal landscape. Governor Okpebholo has placed a clear bet: that partnership with Abuja, rather than political brinkmanship, offers the faster route to tangible development gains for Edo people.
Dr Patrick Akhere Ebojele is the Chief Press Secretary to the Edo State Governor, Senator, Monday Okpebholo
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