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2027 and Nigeria’s sore-loser culture

Nigeria has a problem that rarely gets named, let alone confronted: we do not know how to lose. In sports, in school, and especially in politics, defeat is rarely accepted

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March 3, 2026byThe Nation
3 min read

Nigeria has a problem that rarely gets named, let alone confronted: we do not know how to lose.

In sports, in school, and especially in politics, defeat is rarely accepted as defeat. There is always an excuse. Someone must have cheated. An institution must have conspired. Officials must have been compromised. In the Nigerian mind, failure is rarely self-inflicted; it is someone else’s fault.

This mind-set can only be described as a sore-loser mentality or unsportsmanlike conduct, and is no longer just a cultural weakness. It is fast becoming a threat to democratic stability and national security, especially as the 2027 general elections approach.

From childhood, Nigerians are conditioned to externalize failure. A student who fails an exam blames the lecturer. A team that loses a match blames the referee. A candidate who loses an election blames “rigging.” Introspection is rare; accusation is automatic.

Politics magnifies this defect. Since independence, almost every major election in Nigeria has been disputed. Losing parties routinely refuse to concede, even when evidence does not support their claims. Democracy, for many, is only legitimate when they win.

The irony is that many of these losses are predictable and self-inflicted. Fragmented opposition parties, weak nationwide structures, poor campaign strategy, and overreliance on social media hype are repeatedly mistaken for electoral strength. When reality intervenes, disappointment is rebranded as fraud.

The 2023 presidential election offered a textbook example. A divided opposition split its own vote while the ruling party consolidated. Basic electoral arithmetic made the outcome foreseeable. Yet when results were announced, outrage replaced analysis. Evidence was secondary to emotion.

Read Also: Nigeria prepares to roll out Lenacapavir as twice-yearly HIV prevention option

This pattern is dangerous. When citizens are taught that every loss is illegitimate, elections become flashpoints. Anger spills into the streets. Property is destroyed. Faith in institutions collapses. Worse still, such chaos creates openings for anti-democratic actors who thrive on instability.

No democracy can survive if its participants refuse to accept unfavourable outcomes. The ability to lose, regroup, and return stronger is not a weakness; it is the foundation of democratic maturity.

Nigeria must urgently unlearn this culture of excuse-making. Not every defeat is rigged. Not every winner is a thief. Sometimes, you simply lose because your strategy failed, your message did not resonate, or your coalition was too narrow.

As 2027 approaches, the warning signs are already visible. A fragmented opposition is heading toward another predictable loss, followed by another predictable legitimacy crisis. If nothing changes, the cycle will repeat itself, leading to more anger, allegations, and unrest.

Nigeria does not need more conspiracy theories. It needs political maturity.

Until Nigerians learn to accept defeat with the same passion they celebrate victory, our democracy will remain fragile and our national security perpetually at risk.

•Nosa Osaikhuiwu, Texas, USA

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