By: Oyez Olatunde Rex
As the 2027 governorship election draws closer, Kwara State is witnessing a familiar political ritual: the race for endorsements.
Support groups are being unveiled, communiqués issued, and photographs taken, often long before ideas, frameworks, or governing philosophies are properly articulated.
While endorsements may create momentary buzz, history has shown that they are poor predictors of effective leadership. They measure visibility, not viability; organisation, not vision.
As such, Kwara must be careful not to mistake orchestrated applause for genuine public readiness.
Endorsements thrive where political imagination is limited. They are easier to manufacture than consensus and cheaper than competence. In many cases, they reflect access to networks rather than acceptance by the wider population.
For a state as politically mature as Kwara, the fixation on endorsements risks reducing a serious leadership choice into a contest of optics. Elections are not won by who gathers the most groups early, but by who convinces the most citizens at the moment of decision.
Endorsements do not test:
a candidate’s grasp of policy trade-offs
capacity to manage institutions under fiscal constraint
ability to unite competing interests without coercion
readiness for crisis leadership.
Yet these are precisely the competencies Kwara will require between 2027 and 2031.
The real question, therefore, is not who has been endorsed, but who is prepared.
The Quiet Emergence of a Different Kind of Contender
In contrast to the noise of early endorsements, Prof. Wale Sulaiman represents a quieter, more consequential presence in the 2027 conversation. His growing relevance is not driven by staged declarations or orchestrated backing, but by a widening recognition that Kwara may need a different leadership archetype.
Rather than centering his public value on familiarity or political lineage, Prof. Sulaiman fits a profile increasingly attractive to discerning voters: a leader formed by systems, standards, and accountability, not by constant proximity to power.
What sets Prof. Sulaiman apart is not the volume of support groups around him, but the type of conversations his name provokes. He features in discussions about governance capacity, institutional reform, and long-term state positioning, topics rarely raised by endorsement-driven campaigns.
In political cycles, there is always a candidate whose relevance is delayed but decisive. These candidates do not chase endorsements; endorsements eventually chase them late in the electioneering moments.
Kwara’s electorate is more informed than before. The state has experienced both the highs and limits of political branding. Voters now understand that leadership is less about who is loudly supported and more about who can govern quietly but effectively.
As such, the most important signals to watch in 2027 will not be endorsements, but:
Quality of policy engagement
Clarity of governance philosophy
Depth of institutional thinking; and
Restraint in political theatrics.
On these metrics, Prof. Wale Sulaiman stands out, not as the loudest contender, but as the most watchful one.
Endorsements come and go. Banners fade. Groups realign. What remains is the leader who can shoulder the burden of office when applause has ended.
For Kwara State, the task ahead is not to reward early noise, but to identify enduring capacity.
In that regard, the 2027 governorship race may not be decided by who gathers endorsements first, but by who proves, over time, that they were prepared long before the race began.
And in that unfolding assessment, Prof. Wale Sulaiman remains the candidate to watch.


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