National Policy Dialogue

..the abode of Wisdom.

National Policy Dialogue

..the abode of Wisdom.

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The Deep Driver of Nigeria’s Political, Social, and Economic Challenges

The Old Order Is Dead – The New Must Be Born Now

MUSA-ODODO ABDULRAHAMAN

I. WHAT IS A CRISIS OF HEGEMONY?

  1. Conceptual Definition (Theoretical Clarity)

A Crisis of Hegemony occurs when the ruling ideas, institutions, and leadership class of a society lose moral, intellectual, and political authority, even if they still retain coercive power.

In such a condition:

The ruling elite can no longer lead, only rule.

The people no longer consent, only endure.

Institutions function mechanically, not meaningfully.

The state survives, but the nation fractures.

This concept was rigorously articulated by Antonio Gramsci, who observed that:

“The old is dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum, a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.”

Nigeria is living inside this interregnum.

  1. Crisis of Hegemony vs Crisis of Government

Nigeria does not merely suffer from:

Bad leadership

Corruption

Weak policies

Electoral malpractice

These are symptoms, not causes.

Nigeria suffers from a hegemonic collapse – the absence of a shared national moral-intellectual leadership that can command legitimacy across ethnic, religious, generational, and class lines.

II. THE TYPICAL NIGERIAN EXPERIENCE OF HEGEMONIC CRISIS

How It Manifests Daily

In Nigeria:

Laws exist, but are not respected.

Elections occur, but do not inspire belief.

The constitution operates, but does not unify.

The economy grows statistically, but impoverishes socially.

Security institutions expand, but fear increases.

This paradox is the hallmark of hegemonic crisis:
formal order without moral authority.

III. THE KEY CHARACTERS IN NIGERIA’S CRISIS OF HEGEMONY

  1. The Colonial State (Foundational Distortion)

Nigeria was not formed by organic nation-building, but by administrative convenience (1914 amalgamation).

Colonial rule created:

A state without a Nation

An economy of extraction

A governing elite trained to obey, not to lead morally

This implanted a command-state, not a consensual polity.

  1. The Post-Colonial Elite (Inherited Hegemony Without Legitimacy)

After independence (1960):

Political elites inherited colonial structures, not national consensus.

Power became:

Ethnicized

Regionalized

Militarized

Instead of forging a national hegemonic project, elites competed to capture the state.

Result: Authority without legitimacy.

  1. The Military (Coercion Replacing Consent)

Military interventions (1966–1999):

Destroyed constitutional continuity

Centralized power violently

Ruled through force, not persuasion

Undermined civil institutions

The military ruled the state, but never led the nation.

This deepened hegemonic decay.

  1. The Political Class of the Fourth Republic

Since 1999:

Democracy restored procedures, not purpose

Elections became:

Rituals of elite recycling

Not expressions of collective will

Political parties lack:

Ideology

National Purpose & Vision

Moral Authority

Politics became transactional, not transformational.

  1. The Fragmented Citizenry

The people themselves are now trapped in:

Ethnic survivalism

Religious absolutism

Youth disillusionment

Economic desperation

Without a National Hegemonic Vision, society atomizes.

IV. HISTORICAL PROOF: HOW CRISIS OF HEGEMONY DRIVES NIGERIA’S FAILURES

A. Pre-Independence Era

No shared national identity forged

Political mobilization occurred along ethnic lines

Colonial authorities suppressed ideological nationalism

Independence came without national consensus

B. Early Post-Independence (1960–1966)

Elite rivalry replaced national leadership

Census crises, election violence, regional mistrust

State power used as zero-sum instrument

Collapse into military coup

C. Military Era (1966–1999)

Governance through decree

Absence of civic participation

Economic centralization without productivity

Citizens obeyed but never believed

D. Democratic Era (1999–Present)

Formal democracy without substantive legitimacy

Rising insecurity, poverty, youth exit (japa)

Parallel loyalties stronger than national loyalty

State exists, Nation erodes

V. WHY THIS CRISIS DRIVES POLITICAL, SOCIAL, AND ECONOMIC FAILURE

  1. Political Failure

No ideology – No Direction

No legitimacy – No Obedience

No national narrative – Endless instability

  1. Social Failure

Ethnic and religious identities replace citizenship

Trust collapses

Violence becomes normalized

  1. Economic Failure

Economy lacks productive national vision

Rent-seeking replaces value creation

Wealth concentrates without legitimacy

No economy can thrive without national cohesion.

VI. HOW CAN THE NEW BE BORN NOW? (THE MOST IMPORTANT QUESTION)

The New cannot be born by:

Elections alone

Constitutional amendments alone

Military force

External prescriptions

The New Must be Consciously Created and Deliberately Constructed.

VII. THE BIRTH OF THE NEW: A NIGERIAN NATIONAL RENEWAL

  1. A New National Idea (Foundational)

Nigeria must answer anew:

Why do we exist together?

This requires:

A shared moral narrative

A civic definition of Nigerian identity

A future-oriented national purpose

  1. Moral-Intellectual Leadership (Not Just Political Power)

True Nationhood begins with:

Thinkers

Educators

Cultural leaders

Ethical statesmen

Before power is seized, ideas must rule.

  1. Institutional Re-legitimation

Institutions must:

Serve justice visibly

Reward productivity

Punish abuse impartially

Legitimacy grows from consistency, not force.

  1. Economic Reorientation

From rent to production

From extraction to creation

From exclusion to inclusion

Economic justice is National Cement.

  1. Civic Re-education of the People

Citizens must be re-formed as:

Rights-bearing

Duty-conscious

Nation-first actors

No Nation survives without popular participation.

VIII. FINAL DECLARATION

Nigeria’s crisis is not accidental.
It is structural, historical, and hegemonic.

The Old Order is Dead because it has:

Lost legitimacy

Lost moral authority

Lost national meaning

The New must be Born – not by violence, not by illusion –
but by a Deliberate Creation of a New National Spirit and Reconceptualization of a New National Ideals.

Without National Consciousness (Spiritual, Philosophical, Mental & Physical) power collapses.
With Renewed National Consciousness, a Nation is REBORN!

Shepherd of Nigerian Divine Destiny
Musa-Ododo Abdulrahaman
Founder, Initiative for Discovery of Nigeria Heritage and Endowment (IDNHE)
Convener, The Conscious Creation of a New Nigeria
Chairman, National Policy Dialogue – a Dialogue with Wisdom.

www.nationalpolicydialogue.org

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