
By midnight, the news hit the streets. In the bustling markets and the quiet suburbs, the "Legitvibes" headline flashed on thousands of smartphone screens. To the vendors, it meant continuity; to the activists, it meant four more years of uphill climbing.
The marble hallways of the National Assembly were unusually quiet as the final numbers trickled in from the Independent National Electoral Commission. For weeks, the air in Abuja had been thick with the scent of uncertainty, but as the sun dipped below the horizon, the scoreboard told a definitive story: 57 senators and 162 representatives. The APC had held the line. By midnight, the news hit the streets
Across town, the opposition was already gathering in a dimly lit conference hall. The mood there was somber but defiant. They had gained ground, peeling away seats in traditional strongholds, but the "Red Chamber" remained just out of reach. For them, the numbers represented a new kind of battleground—one where every single legislative vote would now require a masterpiece of negotiation. The marble hallways of the National Assembly were
Inside the party’s strategy room, the atmosphere was a mix of exhaustion and calculated triumph. Senator-elect Marcus, a veteran of three decades in the trenches of Nigerian politics, leaned back in his leather chair, watching the ticker tape on the wall-mounted screen. "Fifty-seven," he whispered to his chief of staff. "It’s enough to lead, but not enough to sleep." Across town, the opposition was already gathering in
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