By Oyo Amebo


There are moments in public life when leadership stops speaking in abstractions and begins to converse fluently with reality. In Oluyole Federal Constituency, such a moment unfolded not through lofty rhetoric or ceremonial assurances, but through the deliberate placement of tools into the hands of young people whose ambitions have too often been stalled by circumstance.


Hon. Ogunsola John Olusina’s multi-million naira youth empowerment initiative was more than an event; it was a carefully constructed argument for economic self-reliance, delivered not in words alone but in action.


The gathering of youths from wards across the constituency carried a symbolism that went beyond numbers. It represented a cross-section of aspirations: artisans seeking to scale their craft, entrepreneurs yearning to formalise ideas, and young people eager to replace uncertainty with purpose.


By equipping them with tangible business and vocational tools, Ogunsola shifted the narrative from dependency to productivity, from waiting to doing.


In rhetorical terms, this was ethos made visible, credibility established not by position, but by purposeful intervention.



At the heart of the initiative lay a persuasive logic that was both simple and profound: sustainable development begins with those who will inherit it.

Ogunsola’s assertion that youths are the backbone of any progressive society was not delivered as a platitude; it was substantiated by investment.
The distributed tools spoke a language of practicality, reinforcing the argument that empowerment is most effective when it meets people where they are and equips them for where they are going.
Yet the most compelling element of the programme was its emotional resonance. When Ogunsola described the initiative as a means of restoring dignity and building confidence, he touched on a truth often neglected in policy discussions, that poverty is not merely economic, but psychological.
By enabling young people to start or expand enterprises, the intervention did more than create income pathways; it rekindled belief.
This appeal to pathos was evident in the gratitude of beneficiaries who described the support as timely and life-changing, a phrase that, in this context, carried the weight of lived experience rather than exaggeration.
The logical extension of this empowerment was also clearly articulated. Economic tools lead to enterprise; enterprise leads to productivity; productivity fosters stability.
Ogunsola’s observation that empowered youths reduce crime and increase communal prosperity framed the programme as a preventative strategy as much as a developmental one.
It positioned youth empowerment not as charity, but as enlightened self-interest for society, a logos-driven argument that connects individual progress with collective wellbeing.
Community leaders and stakeholders, present and observant, added another layer to the narrative by publicly commending the initiative.
Their calls for other leaders to emulate this approach underscored a growing expectation in governance: that leadership must be measured by impact rather than intention.
In this sense, Ogunsola’s action functioned as a benchmark, subtly challenging peers to move beyond rhetoric into responsibility.
What ultimately distinguished this empowerment programme was its refusal to romanticise struggle or politicise generosity.
There was no spectacle of excess, no performative benevolence. Instead, there was a clear focus on utility, sustainability and continuity.
The tools distributed were not symbols; they were instruments of change, capable of transforming skill into livelihood and ambition into contribution.
In Oluyole, hope did not arrive as a promise deferred. It arrived as equipment, as opportunity, as trust placed in youthful hands.
Through this initiative, Hon. Ogunsola John Olusina crafted a persuasive case for a different kind of leadership, one that argues with action, convinces through consistency, and empowers not for applause, but for progress.

