AS the noise around the 2027 elections begins to rise, Nigeria once again finds itself at a familiar crossroads. Posters will soon fill our streets, party slogans will dominate radio jingles, and loyalists will defend colours and symbols as if they were family heirlooms.
Yet beneath all that noise is a quieter and more serious question that many Nigerians are already asking. Should we continue to vote for parties simply because they are parties, or should we finally decide based on the integrity and capacity of the individuals asking to lead us.
For decades, party loyalty has shaped our politics. In some places, voting against a dominant party is seen as betrayal. In others, elections are treated like football rivalries where logic is suspended for passion. This culture has kept parties powerful even when their promises repeatedly fail the people.
The truth is that political parties in Nigeria have become weak vehicles for strong ambitions. Ideology rarely survives beyond campaign season. Manifestos are printed, shared and forgotten. Politicians move from one party to another without blinking, proving that for many of them the platform is not about values but about access. When the same individual can wear three different party colours within one political cycle, it becomes difficult to argue that the party itself stands for anything solid.
Looking at what is obtainable in the country today, it is hard to deny that party dominance has not translated into good governance. We have voted for parties that promised security, yet insecurity has spread into places that once slept with doors open.
We have voted for parties that promised economic revival, yet many families now plan their meals with painful calculations. We have voted for parties that promised unity, yet distrust among regions and groups feels deeper than ever.
This does not mean individuals are automatically better than parties. Nigeria has also suffered from leaders who arrived with impressive personal stories only to disappoint once in office. But it does mean that blind loyalty to a logo or slogan is no longer defensible. Leadership is personal. Decisions are personal. Courage and honesty are personal. When a leader fails, it is not the party that wakes up at night to make choices. It is a human being with a name and a conscience.
As 2027 approaches, Nigerians must pay closer attention to character. How has this person lived their public life. How have they handled power in the past. Do they speak honestly even when it costs them popularity. Do they respect institutions or try to bend them. Capacity matters too. Good intentions without competence can be as dangerous as bad intentions with experience. A leader must understand the complexity of Nigeria, its diversity, its economy and its wounds.
There is also the uncomfortable issue of accountability. Parties in Nigeria rarely punish failure. Losing elections often comes with more rewards than consequences. Defection becomes an escape route. If voters continue to reward parties regardless of performance, there is no incentive for improvement. But when voters focus on individuals, track records suddenly matter. Empty speeches become less effective. History starts to follow candidates wherever they go.
Some argue that voting for individuals weakens democracy and strengthens godfather politics. That risk exists, but the current reality already favours godfathers operating behind party structures. The difference is that individual-based voting at least gives citizens a moral standard to insist on. It allows voters to say no, not just to a party, but to a person who has shown no respect for the people.
Nigeria is too complex and too wounded for lazy political choices. The country needs leaders who see public office as responsibility, not entitlement. Leaders who understand that power is temporary and service is permanent. Leaders who can unite rather than inflame, who can plan rather than improvise, and who can listen rather than threaten.
In the end, parties should matter, but only as tools, not as excuses. They should be judged by the quality of people they present. Until that happens, Nigerians cannot afford to outsource their judgment to party symbols.
The ballot is one of the few moments where an ordinary citizen holds real power. Using it wisely means looking beyond colours and chants and asking a simple but demanding question. Is this person worthy of leading us, and do they truly have the capacity to change this nation.
As 2027 draws closer, that question may determine whether Nigeria continues in circles or finally begins to move forward.
- West is a seasoned journalist and development practitioner with over a decade of experience in media, human rights advocacy, and NGO leadership. Her syndicated column, The Wednesday Lens, is published every Wednesday in News Point Nigeria newspaper. She can be reached at bomawest111@gmail.com.

