Speaking for President Bola Tinubu at a road commissioning in Abuja last week, Senator Akpabio told Nigerians to stop expecting miracles from government.
The statement spread fast on X and radio shows, with many asking if leaders understand what people are going through right now.
What Akpabio Actually Said At The Event

The comment came during the inauguration of a 7km access road and bridge linking Bill Clinton Drive to Tunga Madaki, Abuja. Akpabio represented Tinubu and used the event to defend the Renewed Hope Agenda. “We promised progress, not miracles,” he told the crowd, according to reports from the ceremony attended by FCT officials and local residents – [Source: Eyewitness accounts + Punch/NAN coverage of the Bill Clinton Drive–Tunga Madaki project, June 20 2026].
He pointed to the new road as proof that things are moving. Akpabio also stood by the tough decisions since May 2023 – subsidy removal and FX reforms. “Those steps were not easy, but they were needed to stabilize the economy and attract real investment,” he added, echoing statements the presidency has made repeatedly this year – [Source: Presidency policy briefs on Renewed Hope Agenda reforms, 2023-2026].
Online Reaction: “We Asked For Bread, Not Grammar”
The clip and quotes hit X within minutes. The mood was mostly anger, with people saying Abuja speeches don’t fill stomachs.
@DanielRegha brought up Akpabio’s past comments: “Didn’t the same Akpabio say that the old national anthem would help reduce insecurity after being reintroduced?” – [Source: X post by @DanielRegha, June 20 2026]. The tweet pulled over 20K views in a few hours.
Another user wrote: “Nigerians are asking for food affordability, jobs, security and stable prices—not miracles” – [Source: X/Twitter comments on Akpabio’s statement].
Instablog9ja also pushed the quote out with the caption “‘We did not promise you miracles’ — Akpabio tells Nigerians,” and the comment section filled with stories of ₦1,300 fuel, ₦80,000 rice, and school fees – [Source: Instablog9ja post, June 20 2026].

The Other Side: “You Can’t Fix 20 Years In 2 Years”
Not everyone attacked him. Some supporters said Akpabio was just being honest. They argue that subsidy was draining ₦4 trillion yearly and FX round-tripping was killing the naira.
For them, projects like the Tunga Madaki road and recent GDP growth numbers around 3.8-4% show the “progress” part is real, even if slow – [Source: NBS GDP report Q1 2026].
One commenter posted: “No administration can reverse decades of rot overnight. Let the reforms breathe.” That view is common among pro-government voices who say short-term pain will lead to long-term gain.
Why This Comment Stings Right Now
The problem isn’t just the words. It’s timing. Two years into Tinubu’s term, many households still feel the pinch daily.
Market women in Mile 12, drivers in Lagos, and civil servants in Abuja all say the same thing: salaries are static, but prices keep moving.
Government officials keep talking about infrastructure and investment inflows. Citizens keep talking about food and transport.
That disconnection is why “progress, not miracles” became a meme overnight.
Political analyst Jibrin Ibrahim told Arise News last month that the administration’s biggest test is “closing the gap between data and lived experience.” Akpabio’s remark just made that gap wider for many people –[Source: Arise News interview, May 2026].
Whether you think Akpabio was realistic or insensitive, his words have become the latest symbol of Nigeria’s struggle with governance expectations. The government says reforms are working. Nigerians say they want to see it in their pockets, not just on new roads. Until pump price, food price, and security match the speeches, every statement like this will trigger another national argument. For now, “no miracles” is trending – and the pressure on the Tinubu government is only getting louder.


