Natasha: A Senator at War With Everyone?
We live in an age where outrage is currency. The social-media marketplace is crowded with clout chasers and emotional merchants who feast on public vulnerability. They understand the algorithmic economy well: tug hard enough at the public’s heartstrings and the traffic, trends and applause will follow.
Increasingly, some have wrapped themselves in the badge of public office. In Nigeria’s Senate, where temperament is not cosmetic but constitutional, the rise of Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan illustrates the danger of confusing legislative duty with perpetual performance. A legislature is not merely a debating chamber; it is a choreography of ego, procedure and compromise. When one dancer insists on performing a solo, the ballet falters.
Elected amid fanfare as Kogi Central’s first female senator, Mrs Akpoti-Uduaghan entered the red chamber promising industrial revival, particularly around the long-moribund Ajaokuta Steel Company. Yet the promise of legislative craftsmanship has steadily been eclipsed by a pattern of confrontation that has left colleagues exasperated and constituents intermittently under-represented.
Her first misstep came on her very first day in the Senate. Displaying little familiarity with the chamber’s standing orders, she sought recognition at a procedurally inappropriate moment, an error that drew visible discomfort within the chamber. It was an early signal of a deeper problem: insufficient deference to institutional process.
The Senate is not a street protest; it runs on rules. Once the gavel falls, the floor is closed. Closed-door sessions, by definition, demand discretion. Yet the senator has often appeared restless to interject and quick to migrate from chamber confidentiality to media visibility. What might have been dismissed as rookie exuberance has hardened into a governing style.
By February 2025, routine internal disagreements metastasised into spectacle when she publicly resisted a seating directive issued by Senate leadership. The matter moved to the ethics committee. A six-month suspension followed. Rather than de-escalate, the episode thickened into trench warfare—petitions, counter-petitions and lawsuits. The chamber became courtroom; procedure became provocation.
Her defenders portray a principled dissenter challenging an exclusionary hierarchy. Her critics see something less flattering: antagonistic posturing, performative showmanship and a reluctance to undergo the quiet apprenticeship serious legislative work demands. The distinction is not academic. Parliamentary systems can accommodate dissent; they struggle to function amid permanent insurrection.
The most combustible theatre of her politics lies beyond the Senate floor. Her long-running feud with the Minister of Steel Development, Shuaibu Abubakar Audu—custodian of the very industrial dream she once championed—has turned policy disagreement into personal contest. Public exchanges over the fate of Ajaokuta, accusations of marginalisation, counter-accusations of grandstanding and a steady stream of media salvos have become routine.
The minister insists on phased reforms and investor engagement. The senator alleges opacity and inertia. What should have matured into robust, forensic oversight has instead calcified into animosity. The steel sector, fragile and capital-intensive, demands executive-legislative alignment. Instead, it has become collateral damage in a rivalry.
Nor has friction been confined to the executive. Within the Senate, disputes over committee placements and allegations of marginalisation have been aired with the cadence of grievance rather than negotiation. In mature legislatures, influence accrues quietly—through alliances, amendments and patient committee work. In Nigeria’s combustible polity, megaphone politics may win headlines but rarely secures votes.
The cost of this belligerent posture is not abstract. Legislative effectiveness depends on coalition-building. Bills require co-sponsors. Oversight requires goodwill. Budgetary insertions are negotiated, not seized. A senator perpetually at odds with leadership and ministers alike risks isolation. For Kogi Central, that isolation translates into diminished bargaining power at the federal table.
More troubling is the reputational bleed. Politics in Kogi has long wrestled with caricature—volatile, factional, combustible. A lawmaker who appears in constant combat only deepens that stereotype. Representation is as much symbolism as substance. When the symbol becomes disorder, the constituency suffers twice: once in lost influence, and again in public perception.
None of this absolves Nigeria’s institutions of their own deficiencies. Senate disciplinary processes must remain transparent and proportionate. Ministers must welcome scrutiny. But institutional reform cannot be prosecuted through perpetual rebellion. Public office is not theatre; it is stewardship. When optics consistently trump substance, constituents are short-changed.
There remains a fine line between courage and combativeness. Mrs Akpoti-Uduaghan has shown ample reserves of the former. Whether she can temper the latter will determine if her legacy is industrial revival or institutional rancour. Legislatures are built on compromise. A senator at war with everyone may win applause outside the chamber. Inside it, she wins little else.
Babajide Fapohunda writes from Kaduna,Mashi Road.
