Oluremi Tinubu leads push for greater women’s inclusion ahead of 2027 elections

Oluremi Tinubu leads push for greater women’s inclusion ahead of 2027 elections

First Lady of Nigeria, Senator Oluremi Tinubu

Nigeria’s First Lady, Oluremi Tinubu, has demanded that women’s numerical strength be translated into national influence, stressing that women represent “over 50 per cent of the population” and are uniquely positioned to influence change and contribute their quota in national growth.

Tinubu stated this at the National Women Mega Empowerment and Rally 2026 themed “Power of 10 Million,” organised in Abuja by the Federal Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development, where she received the Women’s Charter for National Development on behalf of Nigerian women.

According to her, the charter would be transmitted to President Bola Tinubu as a reflection of women’s collective aspirations for greater inclusion in governance and development.

“I have received your charter, and I assure you that I will deliver it to Mr. President. This is our Charter, and we will see it to fruition,” she said.

The First Lady said empowering women remained central to national development, noting that economic empowerment enables women to improve outcomes for families and communities.

“When women are empowered, they can make informed decisions about their lives, and in turn, families and our communities thrive,” she said.

Acknowledging the economic strain many Nigerians have faced under recent reforms, Tinubu commended women for enduring the hardship occasioned by the removal of fuel subsidy.

“I want to appreciate all our womenfolk for your resilience, sacrifices, prayers, and steadfastness, particularly during the removal of the fuel subsidy. Your patience, understanding, and endurance have not gone unnoticed,” she said.

Defending the administration’s economic policies, she argued that the current reforms were laying the groundwork for long-term prosperity.

“This first term of Mr President has been a period of laying a solid foundation through bold and necessary reforms that will usher in lasting prosperity for our dear nation,” she said.

Earlier, Minister of Women Affairs, Imaan Sulaiman-Ibrahim, described the Women’s Charter as a policy framework capturing the demands of Nigerian women for political, economic and social inclusion.

“This Charter represents the collective voice, aspirations, and strategic expectations of Nigerian women. It is not merely a document; it is a social contract, a policy compass, and a bold declaration of our place in the future of this nation,” the minister said.

She stated that the charter seeks “greater political inclusion, increased representation, dedicated financing for women’s development, expanded economic opportunities, strengthened family systems, improved child welfare, and deeper inclusive governance.”

Sulaiman-Ibrahim maintained that the demands contained in the charter were fundamental to national progress, not preferential treatment.

“These are not demands of privilege, but imperatives for national progress,” she said.

In her remarks, Ogun State Deputy Governor, Noimot Salako-Oyedele, said the rally represented a deliberate effort to move women from informal participation to structured political and economic influence.

“What we are witnessing today is not simply a large gathering. It is a deliberate step towards recognising how Nigerian women participate in our polity,” she said.

According to her, Nigerian women have long contributed across sectors without commensurate institutional influence.

“Women across this country have contributed significantly, whether in our homes, our markets, our farms, our offices, or in public service. Yet that contribution has not always translated into structured influence,” she said.

Salako-Oyedele added that women’s challenge was not lack of competence but lack of coordinated structures.

“The challenge has not been capacity. It has been connection,” she stated.

She argued that organised mobilisation of women would reshape governance outcomes, saying: “Ten million women who are informed, aligned, and intentional will not only participate in development, they will influence its direction.”

Also speaking, disability rights advocate, Loud Aura, demanded broader inclusion for women with disabilities in governance and public office, lamenting their exclusion from decision-making structures.

“We are at a zero per cent level of participation. We need to move from exclusion to inclusion. Women and girls with disabilities can become senators, governors, and occupy any elected position in this country when support and opportunities are given to us,” she said.

Auta urged implementation of constitutional and statutory provisions guaranteeing inclusion, noting that political participation remained largely inaccessible to women living with disabilities.

Female heads of federal agencies, grassroots leaders, entrepreneurs and professional groups also pledged support for expanded women’s representation and stronger coordination across sectors.

Among them, female agency heads said they had mobilised in solidarity with the movement and would support efforts to sustain it beyond the rally.

The event also featured testimonials from women in agriculture, mechanics, entrepreneurship and local government structures, underscoring demands for institutional pathways that connect grassroots female participation to policy-making and leadership.