The 2023 presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP), Peter Obi, triggered a political storm on Sunday after publicly declaring his intention to serve only one term in office if elected Nigeria’s president in 2027.
The decision, which he announced on X, is likely linked to the North–South rotation tradition of the Nigerian presidency. After the late President Muhammadu Buhari, a Northerner, spent eight years in office from 2015 to 2023, a Southerner was expected to complete a corresponding eight-year tenure from 2023 to 2031.
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With President Bola Tinubu, a Southerner, already poised to serve four of those eight years, Obi, also from the South, plans to complete the remaining four years and step down for a Northerner in 2031.
However, the former Anambra State governor is not the first African politician to make a one-term pledge for the presidency. Before him, over a dozen African leaders have taken similar vows, often citing a desire to promote democratic values or avoid the pitfalls of extended rule. For example, Obi said, “My vow to serve only one term of four years is a solemn commitment, rooted in my conviction that purposeful, transparent leadership does not require an eternity.”
BSide examines these pledges and their outcomes, highlighting those who kept their word and those who reneged. Besides Obi, here is a list of notable African leaders who made one-term pledges:
1. Adama Barrow (The Gambia)
Adama Barrow, who won the presidency in 2016 after defeating long-ruling President Yahya Jammeh, promised to serve only a three-year transitional term and step down on 19 January 2020. The pledge was part of an agreement with his coalition to stabilise the country and oversee democratic reforms after more than two decades of authoritarian rule by Jammeh.
Outcome: Barrow reneged on this promise. After three years, he announced his intention to remain in office. In December 2019, protesters filled the streets of the capital, Banjul, demanding his resignation. He eventually ran for re-election in 2021 and won. This decision caused tensions with coalition partners and drew criticism from civil society, which accused him of undermining his initial commitment.

2. Patrice Talon (Benin)
As a candidate in 2016, President Patrice Talon of Benin pledged to serve only one term in office. He said he did not need a second term to avoid “complacency”.
Outcome: In 2021, Talon broke his promise by seeking a second term, sparking protests in the country of 12 million. He claimed he needed another term to consolidate the gains of his first. Although he introduced a proposal to limit his successors to a single six-year term, Benin’s National Assembly rejected it.
3. Rotimi Amaechi (Nigeria)
In July, former Rivers State Governor and Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, said he was willing to serve only one term as president if the African Democratic Congress (ADC) grants him the party’s nomination for the 2027 general election.

Outcome: With the general election scheduled for 2027, Amaechi—like Obi—is currently hoping to secure the ADC’s presidential ticket.
Honourable Mentions
Some African leaders did not promise to serve only one term, but they pledged not to remain in power indefinitely. In other cases, reports emerged of private assurances. Among them are:
1. Goodluck Jonathan (Nigeria)
Former Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan did not make a public pledge to serve only one term, but some political figures claimed he made private commitments not to seek re-election. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo asserted that Jonathan publicly stated twice that he would serve just one term, though there is no concrete evidence that Jonathan made such a declaration.
Outcome: Jonathan eventually ran for re-election on the platform of a divided political party and lost his bid for a second term in 2015.

2. Macky Sall (Senegal)
During his 2012 campaign, former Senegalese President Macky Sall promised to reduce the presidential term from seven to five years and to serve only one term. In 2015, he proposed a referendum to reduce his term in fulfilment of that pledge, but the constitutional amendment did not take effect until later.
Outcome: When announcing the proposal, Sall said part of his motivation was to demonstrate that in Africa, power should not be an end in itself. However, he completed a seven-year term, then a second term after the constitutional reform, and was widely reported to have attempted to run for a third. Amid mounting pressure and deadly protests, he eventually announced in 2023 that he would not seek another term. He left office after 12 years in power.
3. Isaias Afwerki (Eritrea)
After Eritrea’s independence in 1993, Head of State Isaias Afwerki said the country would hold democratic elections and implement term limits. At an Organisation of African Unity summit in Cairo that same year, he also criticised fellow leaders for clinging to power.
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Outcome: Afwerki has ruled ever since, with no elections held and no term limits enforced. A constitution drafted in 1997 has never been enacted and multiple elections have been cancelled. Ironically, he has become exactly what he condemned in 1993.
Philip Ibitoye is a Special Correspondent with EKO HOT BLOG. Click here to find daily analysis and critical insight on trending issues in Lagos and other parts of Nigeria.
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