TIM honours Enoh, seeks stronger collaboration on Tinubu’s achievements
The Tinubu Impact Movement (TIM) has honoured the Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment, John Enoh, in Abuja. It sought closer collaboration to document and amplify the achievements

The Tinubu Impact Movement (TIM) has honoured the Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment, John Enoh, in Abuja.
It sought closer collaboration to document and amplify the achievements of President Bola Tinubu’s administration.
The organisation conferred the title of TIM Leader on Enoh in recognition of his contributions to the administration and his political influence.
The event brought together the movement's leadership and the minister in a strategic meeting to align TIM’s advocacy efforts with verified records of government performance and to strengthen its grassroots structures, particularly in Cross River State.
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Enoh accepted the honour and was decorated with the Movement’s muffler, symbolizing partnership and shared responsibility.
The minister also approved the nomination of Sylvester Ogar as TIM Coordinator for Cross River State, describing him as “a grassroots person with access to a strong database of over 25,000 APC political leaders in Cross River State.”
Enoh identified the development of Nigeria’s National Industrial Policy as a major milestone of his Ministry, describing it as “a critical framework designed to stimulate industrial growth, create jobs, strengthen national competitiveness, and expand opportunities for the private sector.”
The minister assured the delegation that records of the ministry’s achievements would be made available to support TIM’s public engagement efforts.
On his relationship with constituents, Enoh emphasised accessibility, stating that “beyond what we are doing at the national level, I remain connected to my people in Cross River State—I am accessible, I pick most calls, and I stay engaged with my constituents.”
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National Chairman of TIM, Chief Dr. Obinna Ebirim, reiterated the Movement’s core identity as “a disciplined, data-driven, still member-funded, and grassroots-focused collective committed to documenting and amplifying the measurable achievements of President Bola Tinubu at all levels, while building informed support for continuity beyond 2027.”
He noted that the Movement has experienced significant and structured growth, stating that “today, our movement has grown to over 75,000 boots-on-ground members across all 36 states and the FCT, and over 7,000 registered online via our membership registration portal onwww.TinubuImpactMovement.org. This is not accidental growth but a coordinated expansion driven largely by our State Coordinators, supported by systems, data, and intentional grassroots engagement.”
He further explained that TIM has established functional structures spanning states, local governments, wards, polling units, and tertiary institutions, with plans underway to expand into professional bodies, while providing detailed demographic insights into the Movement’s composition.
According to him, “34.7% of our members are between ages 25–35, 20.94% are 36–40, 25.54% are between 41–65, and 12.44% are between 20–24, which means about 50% of our members are youth and over 65% fall within the economically productive 25–45 age bracket; individuals who influence households, drive businesses, and shape community decisions.”
He added that efforts are ongoing to expand participation among first-time voters, noting that “only about 2.5% of our members fall within ages 18–19, which is why we are deliberately building campus-based structures.”
On inclusion and professional spread, he said: “Our gender distribution currently stands at 62.8% male and 37.2% female, and we are actively working to deepen female participation and leadership.
“47.1% of our members are in business and entrepreneurship, 13.5% in education, including students, with others spread across government, civil society, tech, and health. This makes TIM an entrepreneur-heavy, private-sector-driven, and influencer-rich movement.”
Addressing political alignment and voter sentiment, he stated: “TIM has members from many political parties, including the opposition, but 95% of them are members of APC, 2% are from other parties, and 3% reported not being a member of a political party. While about 99% of members have expressed commitment to vote for President Tinubu in 2027, about 1% remain undecided, and this communicates to us that more work needs to be done internally and externally.”



