- Bwala’s skepticism extended back to March 2023, when he insisted in another interview that the PDP won the election.
The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Policy, Daniel Bwala, revealed on Tuesday that his past criticism of President Bola Tinubu’s administration stemmed from his opposition role in the Peoples Democratic Party.
Bwala made this disclosure on Arise TV’s The Morning Show. “I criticised Tinubu’s election and administration in the past because I was in the opposition.
“The opposition’s work is to criticise the sitting government and hold them accountable. My views changed after I met the President, and he saw a need to appoint me,” he said.
Prior to his appointment, Bwala had accused Tinubu of rigging the election, stating that the President would face moral legitimacy challenges upon assuming office.
“Right now, although the presumption of law is in favour of Tinubu until the final determination of the election tribunal and appeals, he will struggle with moral legitimacy (because he rigged the election) for 240 days of his presidency,” Bwala posted on X.
Bwala also noted that some individuals were backing Tinubu for cultural and tribal reasons.
“Eminent scholars, human rights activists, and strong opinion molders who have traditionally been critical are suddenly, for cultural and tribal reasons, throwing their weight behind him in a clandestine way,” he added.
In May 2023, Bwala reiterated his claims during an Arise Television interview, questioning the legitimacy of Tinubu’s victory.
He described Tinubu as a “president-select” rather than a “president-elect,” accusing the Independent National Electoral Commission of manipulating the presidential election results.
“We are in court to say it was a rigged process. As long as there is no final determination of the matter, we have every right under law, equity, and justice to express our opinion that he is a president-select and not a president-elect,” Bwala declared.
Bwala’s skepticism dated back to March 2023, when he insisted in another interview that the PDP won the election.
“We won. If these results were allowed to be read from the result sheet, we won with over one million votes. Nigerian people voted PDP as the winner of this election, but history and posterity will judge,” he maintained.