From Laide Raheem, Abeokuta
A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and convener of The Alternative, Segun Showunmi, has knocked the National Opposition Movement (NOM) over its stance on the Federal Government’s tax reforms and called on Nigerians to support the reforms in the interest of the nation’s economic recovery. He made the disclosure in a statement he signed and made available to journalists in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital.
Showunmi stated that the NOM lacked credible economic solutions and relied instead on political nostalgia and selective outrage.
He argued that the on-going tax reforms remain critical to restructuring Nigeria’s public finances and building a sustainable fiscal framework, urging the citizens to disregard what he described as ‘alarmism and recycled politics’ by the opposition group.
According to him, “The opposition group has failed to articulate a workable economic vision, choosing rhetoric over practical alternatives.
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“It is time to cut the crap and let Nigeria move forward with long-overdue tax reforms,” he said. He stressed that the National Opposition Movement has offered familiar narratives rather than constructive proposals. “Those who presided over years of fiscal indiscipline should prepare for elections, not attempt to obstruct reforms essential for Nigeria’s future.
“Nigeria’s tax reforms align with global best practices,” he said, citing international institutions such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, which advocate broad, transparent and predictable tax systems as tools for inclusive growth and poverty reduction.
“Globally, Nigeria is not acting in isolation, nor is it experimenting recklessly. The reforms underway are consistent with international best practice,” he stated
Showunmi, however, cited examples across Africa including Rwanda, Kenya, Ghana and South Africa, where governments expanded taxpayer registration, introduced compulsory tax identification, adopted digital filing systems and enforced stricter compliance, often during periods of economic stress. “Although these reforms were initially resisted, branded anti-poor and criticised as poorly timed, today, these countries enjoy stronger revenue performance, improved investor confidence and greater fiscal space for social spending,” he said.

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