The Anambra governorship election has been exposed as a naked auction, with the Labour Party making the admission that it is being financially bulldozed in a “heavily monetized” contest where votes are openly being bought and sold.
In a bombshell declaration that reveals the rotten core of the process, the party’s National Chairman, Yunusa Tanko, confessed the LP has “no funds for vote-buying,” effectively surrendering in a cash-based war where political influence is going to the highest bidder. This admission paints a picture of an election where policy and integrity have been utterly replaced by raw purchasing power, leaving democracy itself on the brink.

Why It Matters
Let’s stop mincing words. This is not an election but a corporate takeover of democracy, and Yunusa Tanko’s admission is the smoking gun. The Labour Party isn’t just “cash-strapped”—it’s priced out of the marketplace for Nigerian souls.
Their confession proves that the entire political arena is a rigged game where principles are a liability and integrity is a handicap. This is the moment the mask slips completely and you find out your vote is not a sacred right but a product on a supermarket shelf, and the major parties are engaged in a bidding war for your conscience.
What’s happening in Anambra isn’t a political contest; it’s the funeral of Nigerian democracy, and the Labour Party just announced the corpse is rotting. This is the final, ugly proof that the system isn’t broken—it was built this way, and it’s working exactly as the political elite designed it: to make them richer and you powerless.
















