By Barrister Wale Ojo-Lanre
I am not a joy killer.
Let nobody misread me. Let nobody say I have come to pour cold water on the political merriment of yesterday. Let no supporter of Senator Michael Opeyemi Bamidele, Senator Yemi Adaramodu or Senator Cyril Oluwole Fasuyi accuse me of standing at the gate of celebration with a long face.
No.
I could see it clearly.
I could see that the people of Ekiti State, the voters, the delegates, the party faithful and the political conscience of the land of pride and integrity have again returned their three wise senators to the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
I could see their supporters dancing.
I could see the congratulatory messages flying.
I could hear the songs of victory.
I could feel the excitement in Ekiti Central, Ekiti South and Ekiti North.
But honestly, no joy yet for these three senators.
To show clearly that I am not a killjoy, I will personally visit and rejoice with each of them. I will congratulate Senator Michael Opeyemi Bamidele. I will rejoice with Senator Yemi Adaramodu. I will celebrate Senator Cyril Oluwole Fasuyi. Their victory is worthy of acknowledgement. Their return is politically significant. Their supporters deserve their dance.
But even as I rejoice with them, I will whisper the truth into their ears: distinguished senators, the celebration is not complete yet.
Yes, no joy yet for Senator Michael Opeyemi Bamidele, CON, Senator Yemi Adaramodu and Senator Cyril Oluwole Fasuyi.
Not because they did not win.
Not because their return is not significant.
Not because their victory is not worth acknowledging.
But because sending them back to the Senate is not just for the fun of it. It is not a political carnival. It is not a mere party dance. It is not a ceremonial renewal of Abuja comfort.
It is an àrokò.
It is a coded message.
It is a deep communication from the people to their representatives. It is the kind of message our elders describe in the proverb: Adìẹ bá lọ́kùn, ara ò rọ okùn, ara ò rọ adìẹ.
When a chicken perches on a rope, neither the rope nor the chicken enjoys rest.
That is the situation before our three wise senators today.
Ekiti has placed them on the rope of responsibility. The people have also placed themselves on the same rope of expectation. Therefore, there can be no careless celebration. There can be no unending merriment. There can be no political sleep.
Yesterday, Ekiti spoke.
Ekiti said: let the three men who presently carry the senatorial mandate of the state return.
Senator Michael Opeyemi Bamidele, CON, representing Ekiti Central.
Senator Yemi Adaramodu, representing Ekiti South.
Senator Cyril Oluwole Fasuyi, representing Ekiti North.
Three senators. Three districts. One Ekiti mandate.
Like the three wise men in the Bible who journeyed to behold the birth of purpose, offered their gifts and returned to their abode with deeper understanding, Ekiti has again looked in the direction of her three senatorial representatives and resolved that the journey should continue.
But this journey must not continue as usual.
Their return is not a coronation for comfort. It is not a licence for political relaxation. It is not an endorsement of business as usual. It is not a certificate for arrogance. It is not an invitation to sleep in Abuja while Ekiti waits at home.
No.
Their return is a burden.
It is a responsibility.
It is a debt.
It is a covenant.
The people have given these three senators another political opportunity. They must now convert that opportunity into measurable advantage for Ekiti. They must use their ranking status, experience, network, committee influence and legislative exposure to advance the interest of the state beyond speeches, ceremonies and seasonal appearances.
They must legislate with courage.
They must oversight with seriousness.
They must lobby with intelligence.
They must attract with strategy.
They must speak with one voice when Ekiti interest is at stake.
Their return should mean stronger advocacy for federal roads in Ekiti. It should mean deeper attention to education, health, agriculture, youth development, women empowerment, tourism, culture, infrastructure, security and employment opportunities.
It should also mean more regular feedback to the people.
Representation is not only about being elected. It is about being felt. It is about being heard. It is about being seen. It is about returning home, sitting with the people, listening to their pains, explaining legislative actions and translating Abuja access into local benefit.
The people of Ekiti are enlightened. They are not political illiterates. They know when a representative is working. They know when a mandate is being honoured. They know when a politician remembers them only during elections. They know when noise is being mistaken for impact.
Therefore, the return of these three senators must be treated as a fresh beginning, not as a mere continuation.
Iṣẹ̀ ṣẹ̀ṣẹ̀ bẹ̀rẹ̀ ni.
The work has just begun.
The objections raised against some of them during the build-up to the primaries should not be dismissed with arrogance. Every objection in politics carries a lesson. Every opposition reveals an area of concern. Every contest exposes the need for improvement. Every protest, whether loud or mild, is a mirror.
They should study the mirror.
They should ask themselves sincere questions.
Who feels neglected?
Which communities feel unseen?
Which promises are still hanging?
Which political relationships need healing?
Which youths need encouragement?
Which women need inclusion?
Which development gaps require urgent attention?
Victory becomes dangerous when it makes a man deaf.
But victory becomes noble when it makes a man wiser.
Senator Michael Opeyemi Bamidele, as Senate Leader and one of the most visible parliamentary figures in Nigeria today, carries a burden beyond Ekiti Central. His voice is no longer local. His seat is no longer ordinary. Ekiti expects him to use his national stature to secure strategic benefits for the state.
Senator Yemi Adaramodu must continue to prove that Ekiti South made no mistake in trusting him again. The people expect deeper connection, stronger projects, wider consultation and more structured representation.
Senator Cyril Oluwole Fasuyi must treat the victory in Ekiti North as a call to renewed service. His mandate must speak in the language of development, inclusion, humility and responsiveness.
Together, the three senators must remember that Ekiti is one.
Central. South. North.
Different districts, one destiny.
Their return should produce cooperation, not competition. Synergy, not rivalry. Shared agenda, not isolated performance. Ekiti does not need three disconnected senators pursuing three private political maps. Ekiti needs three wise men working with one vision, one voice and one commitment to the development of the state.
Their joy will be complete when Ekiti roads receive stronger federal attention.
Their joy will be complete when their senatorial districts feel projects that are visible, verifiable and impactful.
Their joy will be complete when youths in Ekiti can point to opportunities attracted through their influence.
Their joy will be complete when women are not remembered only during mobilisation but carried along in empowerment and development.
Their joy will be complete when their constituency offices become living centres of engagement, not locked-up signboards.
Their joy will be complete when they return home regularly, not only during elections, funerals, birthdays and political rallies.
Their joy will be complete when Ekiti’s voice is heard loudly on the floor of the Senate, in committees, in caucuses and in the corridors where national decisions are shaped.
Their joy will be complete when the three of them can sit together, rise together, lobby together and defend Ekiti together without ego, rivalry or political suspicion.
Yesterday, Ekiti did not merely return three senators. Ekiti renewed hope. Ekiti extended trust. Ekiti gave another chance. Ekiti made a democratic investment.
Now, the three wise senators must justify that investment.
They must return to the Senate wiser, stronger, humbler, more focused and more determined. They must carry Ekiti not as a slogan, but as a sacred trust. They must remember that power is transient, but service is remembered. Position fades, but impact endures. Titles expire, but legacy speaks.
The people have done their part.
The party has done its part.
Democracy has spoken.
Now, let performance answer.
Let representation deepen.
Let oversight strengthen.
Let legislation serve the people.
Let Ekiti feel the value of sending three wise senators back to Abuja.
For truly, this is not the end of the race.
It is not even the beginning of celebration.
For MOB, Adaramodu and Fasuyi, no joy yet.
Iṣẹ̀ ṣẹ̀ṣẹ̀ bẹ̀rẹ̀ ni.
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