 Alright, thanks for staying with us now, referencing a 2018 article from Tribune, the impending reordering of the sequence of elections has serious cost implications, both in terms of the direct cost of conducting elections, as well as the cost of individual corporate and government businesses shut down, owning to the compulsory restriction of human and vehicular movements on elections days in the country. Now, the conference of Siebel Society of Nigeria had said the 2023 polls should start with the governorship election and not the presidential election as contained in the INEC timetable, noting that the reordering of the election sequence is necessary to avoid any disruption that might arise from the conduct of the presidential polls. Now today we want to look at the pros and cons of reordering the sequence, right? Even though INEC has clearly said that they are not going to do that, but it's still important for us to just analyze the situation. If we were to reorder the what's it called the coming elections, what would be the pros and what would be the cons? Now please, let's hear what you have to say. Remember, you can join the conversation, send us an SMS or WhatsApp to 081-803-4663. You can also tweet at us at Weissho after one with the hashtag Weissho. So before we quickly bring in our guests, because our guests don't stand by, I just want to hear your two cents on this. Agila, let me come to you first, right? I mean, when you heard, when you read the story around the re-sequencing of the elections, what came to your mind and, you know, your findings? Okay. So my question is, why now? Why the agitation now? This has been going on since 2018. There's been a whole lot when the president, I mean, signed the new electoral law in February. So, I mean, INEC has had ample time. There has been ample time to really engage on this subject matter. And I think that bringing this up now, it's a very delicate subject because already there is a lot of agitation in the country towards the 2023 elections. And I just feel like anything right now that does not, that is not geared towards that, may or may not influence people's thoughts towards the success of the elections, so to say. So I'm not sure that this is what we should be talking about right now because, I mean, I don't want to have to be thinking that February will it happen, will it not happen? Or again, I'm of the opinion that I would also like to understand the why. Okay, maybe outside of the why now. The second thing is, what is the reason why they feel, or why do they feel that a gubernatorial election is much more, should come first rather than the presidential? Is it because they're afraid of bandwagoning? Like, okay, maybe the popular votes, you know, once you vote for the president, then automatically everybody moves to the popular party and all that. But is that even visible because there are, there's a process, the electoral law, I'm not sure that it allows that you can just up and just change your... Well, the new electoral laws, I hear that if you decide to because you're trying to follow a party that is at the center, you have to forfeit your, because the seat belongs to the party now, no longer individuals. So let me hear your thoughts, Chinelo. Okay, I mean, when I heard this, I think it makes sense, right? Because it's like building a house. You want to build a house from the roof, from the foundation rather to the roof, not from the roof to the foundation. So if you're saying that you want to start with a gubernatorial polls before the presidential polls, that makes sense. Like, as you already said, why now, why are we bringing this now, when we have just less than six months to go. But thinking about the treason of politics, politics is local, right? So I think putting gubernatorial polls before presidential polls will actually consolidate democracy at the grassroots. This is my opinion, right? So I think that it would also necessitate the, how do I put this, necessitate re-adjustments, saying politics look out, necessitate the re-adjustments of putting the gubernatorial polls before the presidential polls. Okay, so let me quickly say that for me, I think, I mean, like, I think Adiola tried to, to, to harp on the point. You know, Nigeria still believes in the center dictating where things go. So if the power still belongs to the center, like the center is the most powerful, which is also rock, you know, is the most powerful, it will only make sense that people would want to gear their minds. So it's very possible that wherever the presidential elections land as winner, it's possible that we might now then have House of Representatives seats, gubernatorial seats, House of Assembly seats going to that party wherever the winner emerges from. But let me bring in our guest, right? Prince Adebayo is a public affairs commentator who provides advice on national issues and participates in Nigerian politics as a member of the Third Force. Now on January 15, 2023, Prince Adewale Adebayo declared his intention to run for the office of the Nigerian president. Now he is the presidential candidate of the Social Democratic Party and he's joined us live from, I think, Enuguna Odoe. Thank you so much for joining us, sir. Thank you very much. How are you? We are very well. Thank you. So I mean, let's quickly just jump into this conversation because we have so much to unpack. I mean, some will consider that your party is not considered rather as a power bloc, especially in this era, where it seems like the power blocs are sending other parties, the PDP, the APC, and maybe now Labor trying to join the party. Some would say SDP is not a power bloc, right? So you are the presidential candidate for the SDP, right? If you were to just go by this re-sequencing or reordering of the elections, what, first of all, would you prefer and why? I'm okay with what I like to do right now. What people should learn to be matured. If you want to vote for SDP, you must know the manifesto of SDP, you must believe in the candidates. You have several months to listen to the candidates. You should be able to make up your mind. I think this idea of corally over sequence is part of the trickery of the past, and lack of confidence in your supporters. So I believe that if the lesson is heard today, I can almost know how many votes I will get. I know where my support bases are. If the lesson is heard on the 25th of February, which is how it is charging now, I know where I want to be. So I don't think that we, the SDP, want to waste our time on social permutations and all of that. What's important is for us to make our message clear to the people, fair way to poverty and insecurity. There's nothing too difficult to understand in that one. My profile is well understood by people, and the candidates are contesting. If anybody who looks at my message, looks at the message of hope again 2023, and is still looking at DPC, and it's a dinosaur of a candidate, or looking at GDP, and it's already better than all of these managers. I don't think that the sequence of the lesson is going to make any difference at all. People who are voters have to take responsibility for who they want to be the president of Nigeria. So I don't have a problem with sequence. So part of the agitation was the fact that somehow if the presidential election does not go in certain direction, it might disrupt other elections because of the, I put it in quotes, the perceived violence that might erupt. I mean, lately we've been hearing so many security reports. A lot of people are leaving the country because they are still afraid that this 2023 elections might come out, you know, might turn out violent, right? So does it not then make sense to say, you know what, let's get everything out of the way in terms of electionary. So whatever happens, because it seems, because I mean, you know that being at the center is the A or the B all in this country. So since they say, okay, that is like the hottest seat that everybody is fighting for, why don't we just, you know what, let's get every other small, small elections out of the way and save the the cherry on the icing for later. Does that not make sense? It's a product of I do thinking. Number one, there's no violence coming anywhere. Okay. This election will be done. Winner will emerge. If Nigeria is lucky, it will be me and there will be no violence, no problems. We will start now digging ourselves out of the my asthma we find ourselves in. Whoever wins the nation, there will be no violence. I can guarantee you that. People are trying to scare monger everybody. Even the security a lot brought out by certain diplomatic missions for their citizens. They are overblown. There's no rational basis for them. I've been traveling around the country. I go around this country. I was implanted yesterday. I'm in Emo now and I'm going to be in Delta tomorrow. I'm going around this country. I'll be in Kano on the day after. There is no violence coming anywhere. There is no foreign people trying to invade Nigeria. I beg to differ, sir, because just on Friday here on Lagos Ibadon Expressway, a few people were kidnapped. I mean, for the first time, I saw someone that was close to home kidnapped and a ransom of 50 million was demanded. From the reports that we gathered, the people that were kidnapped were a lot of people that were kidnapped on that Lagos Ibadon Expressway. When you say that it is unfounded or maybe they are trying to overblot this security warning that they are giving, I beg to differ, sir, because we know that where we are currently in the country, we have a lot of security lapses. We have a lot of loose ends that we need to tighten up. We have a lot of loopholes in our security system. So it would be unfair to say that the people that are calling out for this warning that they are being overdramatic or something. I beg to differ, sir. Correct me if I'm wrong. Maybe you should look at the distinction between what you are saying and what you put out. What we know in this country is that we have boundary tree, kidnapping, insecurity, armed robbery, and all sorts of violent crimes. We have it. That's why my motto is spare water poverty and insecurity. It is different from saying a Buddha is calling. There's going to be multiple attacks and the government is going to collapse and we should be like Afghanistan. That is different. Crimes occur all the time and the irresponsibility of the government of the day is the reason why we have not got infected policing and manning of all these crime centers. I believe that this will not affect our election. We will be able to vote in the proper government that will come and deal with security. But I'm not going to accept the situation where foreign nations who are supposed to be friendly nations are going to be throwing out manning that the whole city will be invaded and the government will collapse and now they are running away. That's a different thing. Okay. Sorry, sir. Sorry to interrupt. Sorry. I'm not saying that the country is safe from criminality. I say it all the time. I experience it. I've not said the country is free from kidnappers. I am saying that the one, there will be no violence in the election. The election will put a winner will emerge. The losers will probably go to tribunal. That's the end of it. Secondly, that this country has strong enough armed forces and security agencies that we cannot be overwhelmed by Kabul in Afghanistan. And Nigerians who are running abroad should stop that. There's no such thing. However, we need to be vigilant in our neighborhoods. We need to govern our highways. We need to police our bushes to ensure that kidnappers who you find on Kaduna, Kaduna-Budia Highway. Now they have reached Ligibandon Highway. They are all over the South East where I am now. So I know. I'm not saying I'm not blind to that, but this is a country that can be regarded as a stable country with a very weak security architecture as well by the government and we will be able to deal with it. There's no reason to panic. That's what I'm saying. Okay. I just want to ask that, do you agree that when you talk about crime, crime can be, because from what you're trying to say, you already understand the kind of crime that we have in this country. But you know that crime can grow balls. Crime can become a lot more bracing, right? Do you agree with that? That it is possible that it might start as a petty thief and end up as an armed robber, right? It's possible. We know that. I don't think we need to have arguments that. No, we're not arguing. We're just having a conversation. We know, for example, because we know that what is happening in Nigeria is unacceptable. Okay. There is no country that can accept a situation where Mourudas block highways, kidnap a deputy pastor, kidnap students, ask for ransom. The red line has been attacked. People are kidnapped and billions are paid. They invaded my farm and captured the expatriates who worked for me. I've had my own folk work with my family inside, invaded by armed robbers in the city of Aguja a few years ago. So I know what criminality is. What I am saying is that none of this is going to stop the election from both. If you go to Brasilia, if you go to Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, a lot of car mocking, people being attacked on the highway. It's happening in Brazil, but they had their election. What is happening in Nigeria is that President Mamadou Buhari, the APC and many people in government have failed to take measures that will secure the people of the country. The solution to that is to elect a government that is going to come and deal with it, that will invest in police and intelligence and keep the country safe. It is not to invest in panic to say that because of this criminality, elections will not be peaceful, elections will not hold, and people start to run the task. If you know the number of people in the last 10 days who have been consulting me, saying that they want to leave the country, they want to run away, someone to run from Aguja to Lagos, and someone to run to whatever, I am saying to them, don't endanger yourself. There is insecurity in many parts of Nigeria. There's no part to run to that you cannot run into some situation, hold your mouth, but the country is not going to fall. What the Americans, the British and all of them are saying is not correct. In America for many years, we have witnessed people bringing guns to attack shopping malls, kill students in schools. It doesn't mean the American government is going to fall. That's what I'm making, but I don't enjoy the currency where the country is not being kept safe by an incompetent government that needs to be replaced. Alright, so we will go back to the conversation because it was good that we cleared that one out of the way, and I 100% agree with you Prince, but let's quickly go on a very short break because I know the ladies have questions on this re-sequencing. Stay with us, we'll be right back. Alright, so if you just tune in, we're discussing the 2023 general elections. We're asking what are the pros and the cons of if there were to be a reordering of the sequence, right? What would that be? And we have with us Prince Adewale Adebayo. Now please let's hear what you have to say. Remember, you can join the conversation. Send us an SMS or WhatsApp to 08-1-803-4663. Alright, so Prince, you are the presidential candidate for the SDP, and you have clearly said a lot of things that you're going to do about this. But let's go back to the conversation, why we even decided, you know what, we needed to have this conversation today. And I think, Diola, you had a question, right? Okay, so I want to know why the gubernatorial election, I mean, you know, there is a clamor to have the gubernatorial elections first, you know, that's the old essence of this re-sequencing. So I'm thinking that should that not be a function of the awareness of people? Because I think that if people are truly aware of the role each of these officers hold in the, in the, in nation building, people will be more, they will participate more, you know, in the process. And regardless of what causes it, I think the Prince already mentioned it when he said, if they know you are the candidate, they would, yeah, go ahead. Okay, let me say something clear. There are two sets of elections to be held. One, let us call it national elections, the president and national assembly. That one is held nationwide. But for the second set, governorship and houses of assembly, that one is partially full and that is where the problem lies. There are only 28 out of 36 governorships that are going to be held. So in, for example, even a state where I am today, there will be no governorship election next year. The same thing for my home state. I don't know where I come from. There will be no governorship election there as well. Anambra will have no governorship election. Edo will have no governorship election. And a few others like that. So then they will have houses of assembly election, but they will have no governorship election. So I think that INEH has talked about it, and INEH did consult stakeholders all across. They consulted all the political parties, civil society, everyone, before coming up with the notion that the best thing to do is to hold the presidential election first because that one is taking place nationwide. And they want to get that right. Once you get that right, then they can take resources to places where they have governorship and the rest of it. So for me as a person, it is only, I used to be an argument in our school whether if we did mathematics exam in the morning, you are more likely to pass than if you did it in the evening. It is those people that are weak in maths that are used to worry about such a thing. If you know your, if you know your audience, I want to have my own election first and hopefully get elected. Why should I bother about saying that I don't have a best selection to come before mine? So I don't have a problem with it. And I want politicians to stop looking for advantages. The simple thing about this election, politicians must not be afraid of the people. The people are now getting enlightened. The people are interested. I am not worried about any other person. I believe that there are 176,184 units. If I work in each and every one of them, I will be able to win the election. Don't be timid, don't be intimidated. Don't worry about bandwagon. People who vote deliberately and intentionally, they are not going to be confused when they are going to the balance. Those who would vote for Mr. A will not vote for Mr. B. I can guarantee you that provided that the message is clear, the problem facing many of my colleagues who are complaining is that you can meet a presidential candidate in the bus or on an airplane and you will not recognize who he is. People need to work harder. People need to go around. There are people I know who are running for president who have not been to five states and they will be telling INEK to go on the other election and all of that. Let us go around the 8,800 words, 1,6184 units, 36 states, 774 local government, 6 zones, go and do the work. There is no part of Nigeria where there is no photo waiting for you. I can guarantee you that. Okay, so I was going to say to you that it's interesting how you're just dismissing this what's called this reordering because given that I feel like it's supposed to favor in quotes smaller parties or the parties that have a smaller recognition because if for instance something happens tomorrow and an SDP becomes the president, an SDP candidate becomes the president elect of Nigeria come 2023. What do you think would happen if there was a gubernatorial election that was happening and SDP probably had like maybe around the, you mentioned how many states now are running for governor's 28 states. Yes, and you had 28 candidates. Do you not think that it was going to favor that something would happen if the SDP candidate. So they understand the dynamics of these things and they know why probably they are clamoring for it. But let's just keep all of those things aside, right? Because hey, it's not, I mean you are in the game and if you say that you are cool with what INEC is doing, who are we? So how do we get Nigerians right too? Because I like the fact that you're quite focused on the goal. The goal is to let's push what we're doing. Let's just stay focused and stop as far as you are concerned. Some of this call for re-sequencing and all of that are distractions, right? So how do we start to get the electorate? The people that would vote for you guys. How do we start to get them also to start to think in that direction? Because a lot more propagandas or a lot more transactions like this will come up in the future where there will be so much distractions and people are not focused on what they're supposed to be doing. So how do we get the electorate to be a lot more concentrated and focused? Because I like your focus. You are very clear. You know your goal and you want to just move there and let's leave all of these distractions away. How do we get Nigerians to start being focused on what is important and not major on the minus? You see, what I see is this. When you're looking at demography, you have to do segmentation and the Nigerian electorate is not homogeneous. So like the people who are in Leki, Victoria Island, the Potachots, Abuja and all these elite centers that they have something that they train together and the connecting ecosystem is public social media and mainstream media. But for the rest of the majority of the voters, they are these aggregated. They are in their silos all across. So there is no breach in other local government in better state. So when you go to Isjibwe, go to all those villages around Addo, they are not talking about a sequence of all these things, of our issues. They are talking about who is going to make the breach to connect us to the rest of Nigeria. If you go to Gezawa in Kanu, they don't have access to roads to buy their produce to come to Kanu market or Gumen market or Jusei. So they are limited by those issues. So when you go to Biasa now, they are talking about flooding and they abandon their biodegrad agenda and they are dealing with flooding. So I want us to understand that the people already focused, so any politician who meets them at the point of need is going to be the person who is talking about their issues. So there is no one single issue across the country that unifies all the electorates. But those who have the progress of influence in the media can frame certain issues and make those issues to be like the mainstream issues and keep talking on your money issues, evening issues, webinars and theater spaces. And these issues will dominate, but the electorate that is voting based on those issues are not more than 12% to 15% of the electorate. So because the Social Democratic Party is grounded across the country. So we are folk, we take our issues from the issue that are important to the people. That's why we summarize the issues into two groups. Issues pertaining to poverty and issues pertaining to insecurity. That anybody who addresses those two issues will get majority of the votes provided that the people believe that you genuinely are committed to those issues. And getting the message to the electorate is such that if you were to offer me free appearances on your television station every day, I might not take it. Because I can talk here for hundreds of days, a majority of my electorate might not even get to see what I'm saying. So it requires me to diversify my interaction and pay lay emphasis on grassroot connection and door to door village to village. Well, I get I get that point, but I believe that your electorate trust me they are watching when we say that they are watching. It might not come across like they are not watching, but they are watching. I was just going to say No, I get your point. You know, yes, the real people that really need this, right? They might not be at the conventional channels that we use, you know, to communicate. So that's why it's important that grassroots involvement must go on in some of these things. And they do not even understand what sequencing or no risk sequencing or whatever it is that is happening. So if you were to just summarize, because I like that, you know, in the conversation, you keep bringing up the goals and the vision, right? For your party and what you hope to achieve, you know, should you become president elect? So I was going to say that, you know, if you, for instance, 2023 happens and an SDP becomes presidential president elect, right? What would you do differently? You know, if you were to look at the Nigerian space right now, what would you do differently? Okay, what I would do, and today I was with President Bahai, which is better in Ibo, and I see some of the problems that they see. The first thing we need to do is to form a proper government. The fact that we elect politicians into office does not mean that automatically a government will be formed. Sometimes they just come and supersede their campaign officials. So square peg around holes and all sorts of things like that. So the first thing we do is to set up a government of service. A government that the Nigerians have not seen for a long time. A government that makes the post office to work. A government that opens the school. A government that if you call a random number on a government letterhead, someone is going to answer the call and tell you welcome to the department of water resources, and it's going to answer your question. A government you can write a letter to and within 72 hours you get a reply. Even if the reply doesn't have an answer, even if it just comes back, government will respond to you later, give us three ways to look into it. A government that works. A government that is the reason why Nigerians are going overseas. So that is what we have not had. And if you've lived in Nigeria for the past 50 years like me, one 50 years ago, you have not witnessed a government before. You witness a government, but you've not witnessed a government where the sanitary inspector is actually inspectors sanitation. The guy whose job it is to clean the gutter is actually showing up. The guy whose job it is to fill the bottle is actually coming. There's a nurse for you in your clinic. So just in the government of services, that's what people will see first. You're not going to see a government of big men. You're going to see a well-detailed government that looks into things that you can just pick your phone. Within one month of coming to government, we'll set up short codes and majesty call for every service you want to get in government. So you will see a government that works. After that, we would make sure that we provide food, housing, healthcare, education, and basic employment for Nigerians. Because until you do those things, you are not going to be able to eradicate or even dead poverty in any way. Three, we're going to ensure that the police actually becomes the people's police. And I've spent the last 24 hours mingling with the idea of police, former IG, senior police officers, and the president who eradicated this money. And I've made it very clear to the police that what we are calling policing is just government exercising authority. That is not what policing should be about. Police should be an infrastructure of civilization that people can use, people can rely on. And the police is the person you go to when you miss your way. Police is the person you go to when you have your wife about to deliver a baby and you don't call your neighbor. You call a number and an emergency service is going to come. So it's just basically to civilize our government. We have enough resources in this country to do these things. But the notion that we can use the resources of Nigeria to satisfy the aspiration and yearning of 1% big men in government. That's what we have been doing so far. That's the difference. And you know that this idea is not just my imagination. They are constitutional rights of Nigerians that are contained in chapter two of the Constitution of Nigeria, titled Fundamental Objectives and Directive Principles State Policies. This country, given its wealth, is not supposed to have a hungry person anywhere, a homeless person, a person without medical care. This, both so that we have the resources. And that was why I noted that I was once under a racial alarm that the government budgeting is cheating Nigeria. That 80% of our food oil was being stolen. I was making that noise about six months before the government said, okay, I was exaggerating. It's 75%. Then when the government started confessing, other politicians joined me to now make it. Now the government is claiming that they are dealing with it. But I checked this money and I saw that it was still stolen, even today. Even though the government claims. But if you put all that money together, and you're not using these billions every month that you are using, for something billion dollars being lost, we will be able to take care of our people and create a government that leads to the representation in the constitution that the wealth of this country will be used for the well-being and welfare of Nigerian people and that the resources of this country will not be concentrated in the hands of a few. And that joblessness, hopelessness, and hunger, she is something that we should not have in our country. This is a thing that won't be different. But a kind of people who are going to find who will do this. I don't make any noise. We will not do it. You need to make 6,000 appointments in order to create the presidency that can deliver this to you. But this 6,000 presidency that will run for services, run all of these things, cannot be lifted to people who contribute money to your campaign. If you look around those who participate in elections, they are just the exact opposite of people who can run a government. And you have to separate between those who are running campaigns and those who are actually going to run your government. That's why you don't collect people's money to do elections. Absolutely. Let's quickly take some comments from our audience. We have a few comments. Let's quickly take some comments. Go ahead. Okay. So there's a comment here that says, regarding tonight's subject matter, I think a bottoms up sequence is a good idea in order to avoid confusion. That is, we should start with states' House of Assembly and Governorship election and conclude with the National Assembly and Presidential election. But the most important thing is that the elections should show up the best of candidates who have what it takes to bring about the transformation Nigerians desire and deserve. Thank you. That's from Wayamdi, right? Yes, please, Wayamdi. I say for your guest analysis, Prince Adewale, the presidential candidate, I think he is running an issue-based campaign. So good luck to him. Thank you, Wayamdi. Go ahead. So this person says, there's no government in history that has invested in equipment and men in the Nigerian police and the military. Have we noticed that bank robberies have reduced drastically? There's a reason for that. Bank robberies, let me tell you why bank robberies have reduced drastically is because kidnapping has increased exponential. But Prince, we're running out of time. If you had one thing to say, I mean, someone has said, brother, that you are running an issue-based campaign. Do you think that would take you far as a presidential, what's it called, aspirants in these coming elections? Yes, we have a lot of issues in this country, but I don't think Nigerians have gotten to that consciousness that we need to start making our elections issue-based. So do you think that is a good strategy for your, what's it called, presidential aspirations and goals? Well, anybody who wants to be president has to have a sense of responsibility. You don't become president just because it's a fanciful title. I came, these are the issues that were disturbing me in my private life. I do have a personal problem, but these are the things that were disturbing me. I can only live in a country with these enormous amount of wealth and I'm ashamed when I walk on the street, everywhere is dirty, people are hungry, education, you can't run proper school system. I'm in America, I can pick my phone and call any government department. I can't do that here. There's emergency, you have to call your neighbor, you can't call it. So these are the issues that brought me, that's number one. Number two, I've been going around the country and when people come to me in all parts of the country, I had a delegation from Kassela, I spent 20 days, 20 days, my friends are trying to see me. One, eventually I saw them, they came with issues. They were talking about being kidnapped, they were talking about security, insecurity. They're talking about hunger. So the same issues that the people are telling me about are the same issues that I'm campaigning on. The only issue is that because I'm now a politician and I'm in the political party and I have other candidates who are now making it, but I refuse to let them infect me with their own attention. I focus on the people that I'm representing. I don't want to acquire this elite quest for personal safety, quest for stability for yourself, quest for security of your own career. I want to focus on the people know these issues. If we can do the hard work of convincing them because the genius are not, let me look, the state has seen the genius that they're not stupid at all. They don't want to be fooled by the big parties and they have the insult of being fooled by this small party again. So they don't know whether we are sincere, whether we are genuine, they don't know whether we are running to be a logist or we are running to collect our own cake. So it will take us time to convince them and then they're getting convinced they are turning. So I believe these issues will work in the end. But after the focus, you have to know what you are doing. I love the focus because every conversation around this table tonight has been really focused. But thank you so much. We've been speaking to Prince Adewale Adebayo, the presidential candidate for the SDP. I mean, you need to check out his manifesto, go online and check it out. I think, you know, it's interesting how the big parties are just, you know, they are all over the place, but they are quiet people in different parties that really have some great points. I just only wish that everybody could come together and just form a very strong third force. But that is my own wishing. Absolutely. So let that work. Let that work. Then I am looking forward to an exciting election. But thank you so much. I mean, it was short notice and you made yourself available. We do not take it for granted. We really appreciate your time tonight. And thank you for keeping us focused on the go. All right. Thank you so much. All right. Thank you. Thank you. Yes, Adeola. Thank you. All right. So before we go, guys, thank you, Adeola. Thank you, Cinello. Do ensure you follow us all over social media. It's at Wayshoe Africa. You can interact with us, further drop a comment. And most importantly, follow all our engagements on social media. Like, share and invite your families and friends to watch and follow the conversation. Now, if you missed today's quote, here it is again. Voters must have faith in the electoral process of our delicate democracy, or before our delicate democracy to succeed. We must just trust what INEC is doing. Let's not feel like, you know what, they are trying to cheat us out of whatever it is that's all right. INEC knows what they are doing. And again, you can attest to that. We'll see you guys tomorrow at 8 p.m. Also bring another great conversation to your screen. Enjoy.