Part 6: Political Intelligence as Power — The Mind Behind the Machine
If Part 5 examined the structure of power surrounding President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the more decisive question lies beneath that structure: what animates it? Power, once constructed, does not operate on inertia. It requires continuous interpretation—of actors, of moments, of shifting alignments. It requires judgement.
At the centre of President Tinubu’s political durability lies a factor frequently acknowledged but insufficiently interrogated—political intelligence.
This is not reducible to formal education or years in public life. Nor is it identical with experience, although experience refines it. Political intelligence is a distinct faculty: the ability to read patterns within elite behaviour, anticipate shifts before they fully materialise, and act within narrow windows of opportunity where others hesitate or miscalculate. It is the difference between participating in politics and shaping its trajectory.
In President Tinubu’s case, this faculty appears to function as the cognitive engine behind the political architecture examined in the previous part.
The first dimension of this intelligence is anticipatory perception—the ability to read the field before it fully forms.
Political change rarely announces itself. It emerges through subtle signals: fractures within ruling coalitions, fatigue within dominant narratives, ambition among rising actors. These signals are often visible but not yet legible. Most actors respond only when patterns become obvious. By then, the strategic advantage has narrowed.
President Tinubu’s political trajectory suggests repeated engagement with moments of early interpretation. His movement from regional consolidation to broader national relevance did not occur in a vacuum. It reflected an assessment—correct or otherwise—that existing political alignments at the federal level had reached a point of internal contradiction. Acting at that stage required not certainty, but judgment.
Judgment, in politics, is a form of risk.
This leads to the second dimension: timing.
In political systems, the value of a decision is inseparable from its timing. Actions taken too early encounter resistance; those taken too late lose impact. Between these lies a narrow strategic window where uncertainty is high but possibility is real.
President Tinubu’s interventions across different phases of his career often appear situated within such windows. Whether in alliance formation, candidate positioning or strategic withdrawal, there is a pattern of acting not at moments of clarity, but at points of emerging direction. This is not infallibility; it is calculated engagement with uncertainty.
Timing, therefore, becomes an instrument of power.
It converts ambiguity into opportunity.
The third dimension is a granular understanding of elite psychology.
Politics at scale is not merely institutional; it is behavioural. Actors within political systems are driven by ambition, fear, loyalty, insecurity and calculation. Effective political operators do not treat elites as homogeneous blocs. They recognise differentiation and work within it.
President Tinubu’s method appears to involve aligning interests rather than enforcing uniformity. This includes accommodating ambition where possible, managing conflict where necessary, and structuring relationships in ways that encourage continued engagement within a shared framework. The result is not the elimination of rivalry, but its containment within an overarching system.
This approach requires constant calibration.
Elite alignment is not a fixed achievement; it is an ongoing process.
The fourth dimension is risk calibration.
Enduring political actors are neither reckless nor excessively cautious. They operate within a zone where risk is assessed, not avoided. Tinubu’s political decisions reflect this calibrated posture. Entering uncertain alliances, backing emerging actors, or repositioning within shifting party structures all involve risk. Yet these moves suggest a pattern of measured exposure—engaging risk where potential structural advantage outweighs immediate uncertainty.
This is not risk-taking for its own sake.
It is risk as strategic instrument.
The fifth dimension is narrative awareness.
Political action unfolds within a landscape of interpretation. Policies, alliances and decisions are not only evaluated on substance but on how they are perceived. Narratives shape legitimacy, and legitimacy shapes endurance.
President Tinubu’s political journey has been accompanied by persistent and often conflicting narratives—ranging from strategic mastery to accusations of over-concentration of influence. What is notable is not the existence of these narratives, but his apparent capacity to operate through them without immediate recalibration of core strategy.
This suggests a distinction between perception and positioning.
Narratives may fluctuate in the short term. Strategic structures are built for the long term.
The sixth dimension is adaptability.
Rigid political systems tend to fracture under pressure. Adaptive systems adjust. Tinubu’s political method demonstrates a capacity to recalibrate without abandoning core objectives. Alliances shift, tactics evolve, but strategic direction is maintained.
Adaptability, however, is not without cost. It can dilute ideological clarity and invite accusations of opportunism. In a political culture that often equates consistency with integrity, adaptability can be misread. Yet in complex systems, rigidity may be less sustainable than controlled flexibility.
This duality forms part of the broader Tinubu paradox.
Taken together, these dimensions—anticipation, timing, psychological insight, risk calibration, narrative awareness and adaptability—constitute what may be described as a cognitive architecture of power. Networks provide the structure; political intelligence provides the direction. Without the latter, the former risks stagnation. With it, the system remains dynamic.
Yet this analysis must move beyond political effectiveness to a more demanding inquiry.
Can the intelligence that acquires and sustains power be translated into the intelligence required for governance?
The distinction is critical.
Political intelligence is oriented toward competition, negotiation and positioning. Governance requires additional competencies: policy coherence, institutional strengthening, economic management and administrative execution. Success in one domain does not automatically translate into success in the other.
At sub-national levels, particularly in Lagos, elements of this translation appeared to function with relative coherence. Institutional continuity, revenue expansion and administrative reforms provided a governance complement to political structure. However, national governance introduces a different scale and complexity.
The variables are broader.
The constraints are deeper.
The consequences are more immediate.
At the national level, political intelligence must interact with economic realities, global pressures, institutional limitations and public expectations that extend beyond political alignment. Decisions are not only strategic; they are distributive. They affect livelihoods, inflation, employment and social stability.
This is where the Tinubu model encounters its most significant test.
The same faculties that enable anticipation and coalition management must now operate within policy frameworks that demand clarity, consistency and measurable outcomes. Negotiation must give way, at times, to decision. Flexibility must be balanced with direction. Strategic ambiguity must confront administrative precision.
This transition is neither automatic nor guaranteed.
It requires an expansion of political intelligence into governance intelligence.
History provides multiple examples of leaders who mastered the acquisition of power but struggled with its application to national development. The distinction lies not only in capacity, but in the ability to reconfigure strategic thinking to meet the demands of statecraft.
For President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, this reconfiguration is now the defining challenge.
The political engine has been built. The intelligence behind it has demonstrated resilience across decades of shifting terrain. What remains unresolved is whether that same intelligence can produce outcomes that extend beyond political continuity into national transformation.
This is not a question that can be answered in abstraction.
It will be answered in policy.
In economic direction.
In institutional reform.
In the lived experience of citizens.
Power can be anticipated.
It can be assembled.
It can be sustained.
But governance demands a different conversion.
It demands that intelligence move from strategy to outcome.
Ogundipe is a Public Affairs Analyst, former President Nigeria and Africa Union of Journalists, writes from Abuja.
