Tag: 2015 Nigerian presidential election

Nigeria’s Presidential Election (2015)

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Last week saw Nigerian voters head to the polls to decide whether President Goodluck Jonathan deserved another term in office.  Jonathan, who took office in 2010 following the death of President Umaru Yar’Adua, was reeling from accusations of economic mismanagement and an inability to squelch the Boko Haram insurgency in the Nigerian northeast.  Observers predicted a tense poll that could result in violence.  After all, the 2011 election that Jonathan won over his challenger in this year’s race, Muhammadu Buhari, ended in riots that killed 1,000 people.  However, Nigeria defied these dour predictions and more than forty million voters turned out to give Buhari a sizable margin of victory.  The election marked the first time in Nigerian history that an incumbent president was defeated and optimists hope that the country, the most populous in Africa, can become a model for others on the continent.  To do that, though, Buhari will have to find a way to permanently squelch Boko Haram and fix corruption issues that have plagued Nigeria for much of its post-colonial history.

This topic brief will provide an overview of the major issues that emerged during the Nigerian presidential election, discuss the reasons Buhari won, and then assess his prospects of making Nigeria a more prosperous nation.

Readers are also encouraged to use the links below and in the related R&D to bolster their files about this topic.

R&D: Nigeria’s Presidential Election (2015)

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Here is today’s premium R&D to accompany today’s premium topic brief on Nigeria’s presidential election (2015).

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