Mr Presidentβs housing message speaks to a major national priority: making home ownership more accessible and treating housing as a long-term economic strategy.
I have also read many of the concerns expressed across this conversation.
While the discussion here is about housing, it is clear that for many Nigerians, security, the safe return of abducted children, economic opportunity, and the rising cost of living remain immediate and deeply personal concerns.
These concerns deserve to be heard. They also remind us that progress in one sector cannot reduce the urgency of addressing challenges in another.
The expectation of citizens is understandable: to see sustained action, measurable results, and continued accountability across all areas of governance.
Beyond our political differences, we can all agree on one principle: every child deserves safety, every family deserves opportunity, and every community deserves hope for a better future.
Our collective focus must remain on solutions, accountability, and national progress. π³π¬
When I placed the Renewed Hope Agenda before Nigerians, I did not speak of housing in vague terms. I gave my word that this administration would work to make decent homes affordable again, and that a hardworking family, after years of paying rent, would finally have a path to a house of its own.
Let me account for that promise plainly, by juxtaposing what we pledged beside what we have actually achieved.
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