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Survival Over Service: Nigeria’s Machiavellian Politics and the Crisis of Integrity
By Sam Agogo
Nigeria’s political system is a theatre where Machiavelli’s centuries‑old insights play out with striking clarity. To call it “Machiavellian” is not to insult it but to describe it: a system where cunning, betrayal, fear, and calculated loyalty dominate, and where survival is valued far above service.
The word Machiavellian itself, derived from Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince, has come to mean manipulative, ruthless, and strategic behavior designed to secure power regardless of morality. In psychology, it is even classified as one of the “Dark Triad” traits, alongside narcissism and psychopathy, describing individuals who exploit others for personal gain. In politics, it captures the reality of leaders who prioritize survival over principle, and Nigeria exemplifies this reality vividly.In Nigeria, power is not simply authority—it is protection. Losing office can mean losing wealth, influence, and even personal safety. Politics therefore becomes a shield, not a responsibility. Leaders act less like servants of the people and more like guardians of their own survival. This instinct transforms them into cautious strategists, willing to sacrifice loyalty if loyalty threatens their existence. Betrayal is not an accident; it is a structural feature of the system.
The absence of ideology deepens this Machiavellian culture. Unlike democracies built on strong ideological foundations—conservatism, liberalism, socialism—Nigeria’s parties are often personality‑driven. Without deep ideological differences, loyalty becomes fluid and opportunistic. Politicians cross party lines not because of conviction but because of opportunity. This fluidity ensures that betrayal is not an exception but a recurring feature of political life.
Godfatherism adds another layer of Machiavellian drama. Political godfathers create protégés to extend influence, not to nurture leadership. Yet, once protégés gain power, they seek independence. What begins as mentorship ends in conflict, confirming Machiavelli’s warning that former allies are the most dangerous enemies. Nigerian politics is littered with stories of protégés turning against their godfathers, each betrayal a reminder that loyalty in this system is temporary and conditional.
Fear saturates the political environment. Politicians fear losing office, parties fear losing relevance, and supporters fear losing access. This fear breeds silence, calculation, and manipulation. Honesty becomes a liability, while cunning becomes a survival strategy. In such a climate, sincerity may earn respect, but only strategy secures power. The system rewards those who calculate carefully, who speak cautiously, who betray when necessary.
Money further entrenches Machiavellian behavior. Elections are expensive, campaigns are investments, and politics becomes a marketplace. Leaders calculate returns, and morality weakens under the weight of financial competition. The pursuit of profit transforms politics into a business where betrayal and manipulation are profitable strategies. When politics becomes an investment, service is replaced by profit, and integrity is replaced by calculation.
Silence, too, becomes a weapon. Politicians avoid clear positions to prevent enemies, avoid criticism to protect alliances, and avoid transparency to preserve survival. This silence allows manipulation to thrive, creating a system where strategy outweighs courage and caution replaces conviction. In such a system, truth becomes dangerous, and silence becomes the safest form of speech.
The tragedy of Nigeria’s Machiavellian republic is moral as much as political. When citizens believe all politicians are insincere, trust collapses. Democracy cannot survive without trust. Without it, elections lose meaning, institutions weaken, and politics becomes a contest of power without responsibility. The people begin to see politics not as service but as manipulation, not as leadership but as survival.
The cost is national development. Leaders spend more time protecting power than using it. Energy that should build institutions is wasted on alliances. Time that should solve problems is consumed by betrayal. Progress stalls because survival consumes the system. A nation cannot move forward when its leaders are trapped in a cycle of fear, betrayal, and calculation.
Machiavelli did not invent Nigeria’s political culture; he only described it centuries ago. Nigeria today is living proof of his theory. Strategy can win power, but only integrity can sustain a nation. Until Nigeria begins to reward character as much as it rewards cunning, Machiavellian politics will continue to dominate—and the struggle between power and progress will remain unresolved.
This is the crisis of integrity: a republic where survival has replaced service, where fear has replaced trust, and where betrayal has replaced loyalty. Nigeria’s Machiavellian politics is not just a political problem; it is a moral one. And until integrity becomes as valuable as strategy, the republic will remain trapped in Machiavelli’s shadow.
For comments, reflections, and further conversation:
📧 Email: samuelagogo4one@yahoo.com
📞 Phone: +2348055847364

