Hon. Ogundipe Presents Blueprint for Responsible Leadership at S/W Youth UI
Hon. Ogundipe Presents Blueprint for Responsible Leadership at S/W Youth UI
BY NAN
Hon. Stephen Ogundipe represented by Bashorun Toyin Adeojo at the South West Youth Summit in Ibadan recently
Hon. Stephen Ogundipe, a member of the Lagos State House of Assembly, has made a clarion call to Yoruba youths to reawaken their political consciousness and assume responsible leadership roles as a catalyst for regional development,
Ogundipe, the Chairman, House of Assembly Committee on Information, made this known at the Inaugural Public Lecture and Award Ceremony of the South-West Youths in Ibadan.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the lecture, titled “Reawakening the Political Strength of Yoruba Youth: Pathways to Responsible Leadership and Regional Development,”
Delivering the detailed paper, Ogundipe, represented by Bashorun Toyin Adeojo. conveyed Ogundipe’s central message that the future of the South-West and Nigeria at large is inseparable from the quality of youth participation in governance.
Ogundipe, representing Oshodi-Isolo Constituency 1, noted that while Yoruba youths were digitally savvy, educated and entrepreneurial, they remain largely excluded from structured political power due to economic insecurity, weak institutional inclusion, poor civic education and inter-generational mistrust.
He examined the demographic and socio-political realities of Yoruba youths, highlighting their aspirations for economic opportunity, security, quality education, healthcare and accountable leadership.
Drawing lessons from historical and recent youth movements, the lawmaker stressed that spontaneous activism, though powerful, must be transformed into sustained political influence through institutions, parties and leadership pipelines.
According to Ogundipe, major constraints confronting youth political strength include underemployment, limited access to party nominations and campaign finance, fragmentation of youth groups and distrust of formal politics.
To address these challenges, Ogundipe proposed an integrated strategy anchored on civic education, leadership development, economic empowerment, party reform, cultural renaissance and strategic digital engagement.
He said: “Key recommendations included the establishment of a Yoruba Youth Leadership Academy, mentorship programmes linking young people with experienced public servants, and economic empowerment initiatives tied to civic responsibility.
“I also called for youth quotas within political parties, transparent primary processes, and the creation of youth caucuses with formal consultative roles at legislative and zonal levels.
“At the local government level, youth advisory boards with budgetary oversight and mandatory apprenticeship targets in public projects. For state governments, I recommended funding and accrediting youth leadership academies, seed capital schemes for youth cooperatives, and legal recognition of youth caucuses.
“Political parties, civil society organisations and the private sector were also urged to play deliberate roles in grooming the next generation of leaders,” he said.
Ogundipe said on implementation framework spanning short, medium and long-term actions was outlined, alongside clear monitoring and evaluation indicators such as youth voter turnout, representation in party leadership, access to public procurement and measurable policy wins driven by youth caucuses.
He concluded with a strong call to action, urging youths, political parties, traditional institutions, civil society and government to collaboratively defend open pathways for responsible youth leadership rooted in the Yoruba value of omoluabi, character, dignity and service.
Ogundipe reaffirmed through the paper his commitment to policies that empower young people to lead with competence and integrity for the sustainable development of the South-West and Nigeria as a whole.
NAN
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