Political communications strategist Laide James has unveiled an ambitious civic media initiative aimed at creating what is projected to become Africa’s largest platform for direct dialogue between voters and political office seekers ahead of Nigeria’s next general elections.
The initiative, which comes amid growing concerns over declining public trust in politics, is designed to provide Nigerians with long-form conversations featuring presidential aspirants, governorship hopefuls, senatorial candidates, political party leaders, policy experts, and other key public figures.
Analysts note that the scale, structure, and projected reach position the platform as the largest voter-to-candidate dialogue initiative in Africa. They add that measurable benchmarks already align with global standards for civic engagement innovation. If executed at full capacity and independently verified, the project carries clear potential to qualify for recognition by Guinness World Records as one of the most extensive structured political dialogue series ever undertaken, setting a new reference point for democratic communication on the continent.
The project seeks to move political engagement beyond campaign slogans, partisan exchanges, and television-style debates by offering in-depth discussions on leadership, governance, accountability, vision, competence, and public policy.
The launch has drawn comparisons with landmark Nigerian initiatives that transformed ordinary pursuits into national conversations.
Chess master Tunde Onakoya used the game to advocate for education and social inclusion, while chef Hilda Baci turned an endurance challenge into a symbol of Nigerian excellence.
James is seeking to achieve a similar impact through sustained democratic dialogue.
According to the organisers, the platform will provide a neutral space where candidates can present their ideas and answer critical questions without the interruptions and confrontational formats that often characterise political programmes.
James, who has built a career in political communications, corporate affairs, stakeholder engagement, and reputation management, is expected to moderate conversations involving some of the country’s most influential political figures and decision-makers.
Industry observers say her experience across government, media, business, and public affairs positions her to bridge the gap between political leaders and citizens at a time when many voters are demanding greater transparency and accountability.
The initiative is built on the belief that democracy is strengthened when citizens have direct access to the individuals seeking public office and are able to make informed decisions based on detailed discussions rather than campaign rhetoric.
Interviews on the platform will explore candidates’ ambitions, leadership philosophies, policy priorities, values, track records, and visions for governance, allowing the public to evaluate them on substance rather than political messaging.
Organisers say the objective is not to influence public opinion but to provide voters with sufficient information to reach independent conclusions.
Analysts believe the platform could become one of Nigeria’s most significant political conversation archives if it maintains neutrality and applies the same level of scrutiny to all participants, regardless of political affiliation.
The initiative also marks a new phase for James, who is moving from a largely behind-the-scenes communications role to a public-facing position focused on convening national conversations on leadership and democracy.
With preparations underway, the platform is expected to host hundreds of interviews in the build-up to the 2027 elections, creating a space where voters can engage with ideas, assess candidates, and participate more meaningfully in the democratic process.









