Labour Day: Sanwo-Olu assures workers of salary review

Lagos State Governor Babajide Olusola Sanwo-Olu

…as GIG workers demand improved welfare

Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu has celebrated workers in Lagos State at this year’s Workers’ Day celebration and assured them that conversations on a further review of the minimum wage in Lagos State remain open, and engagement with organised labour on that front continues.
He said his administration does not see workers as a budget line or a voting bloc, but as the living infrastructure of the most consequential city in Africa.
Although the celebration, held at the Mobolaji Johnson Arena, Onikan, Lagos, witnessed a lower turnout compared to previous years, the governor’s promise of improved wages delighted the crowd.

The 2026 theme, “Insecurity, Poverty: Bane of Decent Work,” is designed to provide an honest assessment of the conditions that continue to stand between Nigerian workers and a life of genuine dignity.
Sanwo-Olu, who was represented by his deputy, Dr Obafemi Hamzat, said that while dialogue with the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) has not always been smooth, he does not pretend otherwise, but has always believed that a government must be able to withstand scrutiny from organised labour.
“Let me speak to the theme of insecurity plainly. The safety of workers on the street, on the bus, at the market, and in the office is not a peripheral concern. It is foundational. A city where people do not feel safe cannot be a city where people work productively. Our investments in security infrastructure, community policing, the expansion of our surveillance network, and ongoing partnerships with federal security agencies are not separate from our labour agenda; they are part of it.”

“Lagos is not great because of its government. Lagos is great because of the teacher who stays after hours, the nurse who takes a third shift, the artisan who passes their trade to the next generation, and the civil servant who processes the thousandth form with the same care as the first. Our job, my job has always been to make sure that the city you are building is also a city that works for you. We have not finished that work, but we are closer than ever, and we will not stop.”
Meanwhile, the Committee of Gig Workers’ Unions of Nigeria (COGWUJ) has demanded proper recognition and improved welfare in Nigeria.
COGWUJ is a coalition of 13 gig workers’ unions, including the Nigerian Union of Good Delivery App Transporters (NUFDAPPT), the Nigerian Union of Digital Personal Service Employees (NUDPSE), and the Nigerian Union of App-Based Home Services Employees (NUAPHSE), among others.

“As we celebrate this year’s May Day, the fate of gig workers is nothing to write home about. We need proper recognition as workers under Nigerian labour law and by our big-tech employers. We need the right to social protection and pensions. Are you interested in this noble struggle?”
Meanwhile, the Socialist Equality Party (SEP), in political solidarity with the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI), while extending solidarity with workers and youth in Nigeria and globally, said that working people in Nigeria now stand at an important crossroads in history.
“In less than eight months’ time, working-class people will be queuing up for elections in which they have no party of their own and will be left to choose between their oppressors.

“In 2023, the misnamed Labour Party, largely run by right-wing party bureaucrats as a money-making ‘commercial vehicle’ for defectors from dominant pro-rich parties such as the People’s Democratic Party and the All Progressives Congress, presented Peter Obi as its presidential candidate, alongside other right-wing members of the House of Representatives and Senate. However, between June 10, 2023, and now, many of these members have defected to either the All Progressives Congress or the People’s Democratic Party.
“Obi himself, despite the widespread support he enjoyed from trade union bureaucrats and sections of the working class and youth, has since moved to the ADC.
“The truth is that the APC, ADC, PDP, and similar parties are essentially the same. Unfortunately, the Labour Party does not have a fundamentally different character or programme either. Working people need a party of their own, founded on a programme of socialism and equality.

“The formation of the Socialist Equality Party is principled, not conjectural, emotional, or pragmatic. It is based on an analysis of the crisis in Nigeria and Africa within the broader crisis of world capitalism, and on the strategic experiences of the working class and the international socialist movement.
“We are building an international mass movement of workers and youth to challenge global capitalism. It is on this basis that we are in political solidarity with the ICFI, an international socialist organisation grounded in the ideas of Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Vladimir Lenin, and Leon Trotsky.

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