For many people, Wale Edun being sacked as the Minister of Finance, came as a surprise, but for me, it didn’t. If anything, it took longer than I expected.
One thing you should already know about this government led by BAT, the Landlord of Burdilon, is simple. You are not meant to speak truth to power. You are not meant to think for the masses. You are not meant to contradict the script and if you do, your time is usually short.
Now let’s talk about what actually happened with Wale Edun because this was not just a case of “poor performance” like they want it to sound. This was a chain of public disclosures that started shifting the internal balance and once that happens in politics, especially at that level, things don’t remain the same.
On 16th December 2025, Wale Edun publicly said Nigeria missed its 2025 revenue target by about ₦30 trillion.
That is not a small gap. That is a structural shortfall. A number that immediately changes how people interpret the state of the economy and in that same period, he added something even more sensitive. He explained that while projections were around ₦40.8 trillion, actual revenue was about ₦10.7 trillion.
So you have a situation where what was expected and what was actually achieved are completely different realities. In any system, that kind of gap is not just technical. It is political.
Then in February 2026, he confirmed that a forensic audit of NNPC revenue flows was already ongoing to track deductions and remittances. Now this is where it gets more serious because once you start pushing for forensic audits in sensitive revenue areas, you are no longer just reporting numbers. You are opening systems that many prefer to stay quiet.
Still in December 2025, he disclosed that about 70 percent of the 2025 capital budget was being rolled over into 2026. Meaning a large portion of planned government projects were not executed within the year they were meant for.
By early 2026, lawmakers were already describing it as severe underperformance, with accusations of very low implementation of capital projects. That alone tells you the scale of the problem.
Then on 10th December 2025, reports surfaced of a heated exchange between him and the Landlord of Burdilon at a Federal Executive Council meeting. The issue was simple but heavy. Revenue performance was not matching expectations, and capital project delivery was lagging.
At that point, anyone watching closely could already sense the direction things were heading because in systems like this, once internal disagreement becomes public tension, it rarely ends in stability.
Now fast forward, Taiwo Oyedele steps in to take over from Wale Edun and immediately, people start debating experience, competence, and suitability. Now, if you understand how this kind of system works, you know that is only one layer. The deeper layer is alignment. The ability to fit into the direction without disrupting the narrative.
Let’s be fair, Wale Edun is not a small figure in finance. He has deep experience in investment banking, macroeconomic systems, and international financial structures. He understands how economies are built and managed at scale. That is part of why his public disclosures carried weight.
Taiwo Oyedele, on the other hand, is experienced in taxation and policy advisory. That is his strength and his lane but a country’s finance system is not just tax policy. It is a full structure that includes debt management, currency stability, investment confidence, and economic direction all working together.
So when you narrow it too much to one angle, you are already changing the scope of the job but even beyond that comparison, the real story is the pattern.
Tinubu doesn’t care about the masses, his mission is to tax poor Nigerians to death, that’s why Taiwo is his best fit for the position of a space that needs a more knowledge person
What is becoming clear is this. When you align, you stay. When you contradict too openly, especially on sensitive numbers and performance, you become replaceable. Not because you are not good, but because you are no longer aligned.
Also see: Tinubu Makes New Appointments in Education Sector
That is why I don’t get emotional about appointments in this system because it is not only about what you know.
It is about how long you can remain inside the acceptable narrative without stepping outside it. Once you do, things move quickly.
Let me say it plainly, Wale Edun forgot to drop his functional brain at home when he accepted to work with Tinubu and APC because just like Daniel Bwala said, once you enter APC, your brain stops working.
Whether people agree with that statement or not, the pattern of events keeps making people reference it.
Do I feel sorry for Wale Edun? Not really. He understood the environment he was in. Nobody enters that level of power under the Landlord of Burdilon expecting full independence of thought and expression. That is not how it works.
This is the part that should make people pause. This is not just about one exit and one replacement. It is about a system where truth becomes uncomfortable, numbers become political, and loyalty slowly becomes more important than clarity.
Nigeria has entered one chance and the most worrying part is not even what is happening at the top. It is how normal it is starting to feel at the bottom. People are adjusting instead of questioning, watching instead of analyzing, surviving instead of challenging.
However, if you step back and really look at it, the pattern is clear. This is not just about Wale Edun. It is about how power responds when truth starts disrupting comfort.
By Iniobong Udoh
