News

My Book Addresses The Role of Leadership In National Development – Simon Kolawole

In addressing the role of leadership for national development, the founder of TheCable online newspaper Simon Kolawole said his coming book is set to address the issue of poor leadership in Nigeria

Published

on

In addressing the role of leadership for national development, the founder of TheCable online newspaper Simon Kolawole said his coming book is set to address the issue of poor leadership in Nigeria.

According to e release from the journalist, the book be will released on Monday, October 3, 2022.

The book, Fellow Nigerians, It’s All Politics, is a collection of essays on Nigeria’s nationhood, dealing with topics on leadership, democracy, national integration and the economy.

“I am excited to finally publish a book after so many years of thinking about it,” Kolawole said in a press release announcing the release of the 336-page book.

“The central theme of the essays is the role of leadership in national development. My basic argument is that we have all ingredients required to make Nigeria great but our leaders have proved over time that they are more passionate about politicking than delivering good governance.

Advertisement

“I often argue that if the politicians devote as much passion to governance as they devote to politics and politicking, Nigeria would develop. The essays explore this key proposition in different ways and through different events and anecdotes.” Kolawole said.

Kolawole, writing on ‘The Search for a Perfect President’, warns ahead of the 2023 elections that although Nigerians desire and deserve a world-class leader, the stark reality is that human beings are flawed and no one candidate will tick all the boxes.

“We are never going to get a president who does not have underbellies, contradictions and failings. It is now left for us to decide what failings we can live with and how we are going to engage, positively and constructively, with the new leader to focus on the things that matter the most to us,” he argues, adding: “I would say the economy and security are our biggest worries for now and we should keep that in mind when we vote.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending

Exit mobile version