By Ebuka Ukoh
Some political interviews expose policy weakness. Others expose something deeper: the fragility of credibility.
Presidential aide Daniel Bwala’s recent appearance on Head to Head with Mehdi Hasan at Al Jazeera belonged to that second category. It was not simply a difficult interview for a presidential spokesman. Public officials are expected to face hard questions. That is part of the job. What made this exchange extraordinary was something far more devastating.
Again and again, Bwala was confronted not merely by an interviewer but by his own record. His past statements were quoted back to him. His earlier criticisms of President Bola Tinubu were replayed. Allegations he once made about corruption, abuse of power, vote-buying, militia accusations, and democratic decline returned like witnesses called to testify. That was the real drama of the evening.
This was not merely a hostile interview. It was a collision between a man and his own words. And when that collision happens in real time before a global audience, the familiar performance of political defence begins to unravel. A spokesman can survive aggressive questioning. He can thrive on a foreign platform or navigate a challenging news cycle.
What is far harder to survive is documented contradiction. Once a man’s own words begin to testify against him, the usual protections of partisanship begin to collapse. It is one thing to dismiss critics. It is another thing entirely to dismiss yourself. That was Bwala’s burden throughout the dishonourable outing. He was not simply defending the Tinubu administration against its opponents. He was defending his present self against his former self.
And that is a much harder task. To be clear, changing one’s mind is not a crime. Politics is full of reversals, reassessments, and realignments. A man may oppose a leader in one season and support him in another. That alone is not dishonourable. What becomes dishonourable is refusing to explain the change. When a public figure has once made grave accusations against a man and later goes on to serve that same man, the burden of explanation becomes both moral and political. The public is entitled to ask simple questions.
What changed? Which earlier claims do you now reject? Which ones do you still stand by? What facts emerged to justify such a reversal?
Without clear answers, a transformation does not appear to be growth. It looks like convenience. That was the impression this interview left behind. On issue after issue, Bwala appeared less interested in explaining the past than in escaping it. There were denials where an explanation was required. There were evasions where candour was needed. Appeals to “context” often sounded less like clarification and more like retreat.
At critical moments, the defence relied not on persuasive truthfulness but on the hope that performance might outrun memory. But memory did not yield. That is what made the exchange so powerful.
Mehdi Hasan’s aggression did not undo Bwala. The return of his own speech undid him. His past words entered the room and refused to leave. They sat beside him, contradicted him, and stripped his defence of authority. In that sense, the most damaging witness in the interview was not the host. It was Daniel Bwala’s own public record.
The wider Nigerian context made the encounter even more consequential. Nigeria is not a country where rhetoric can easily substitute results. The burdens of daily life are too heavy for that illusion to survive.
Insecurity is not an abstract debate for those who live with fear. Poverty is not a theoretical category for families struggling with feeding, transport costs, school fees, or stability. Corruption is not a philosophical question for citizens who watch public trust continually erode.
When national conditions grow harsher, patience for official language grows thinner. That is why Bwala’s contradictions matter now. They are not merely personal embarrassments. They symbolise something larger about Nigerian politics: its ease with reinvention, its loose relationship with consistency, and its willingness to treat yesterday’s moral outrage as today’s tactical inconvenience. That is the deeper danger revealed by Daniel Bwala’s Al Jazeera outing. It suggests that public avowals are losing seriousness.
Allegations once made with conviction can later be shrugged off without explanation. Words once used to warn the public can be quietly abandoned. Political language becomes elastic, stretching to serve whatever the moment demands. When this happens often enough, citizens begin to distrust not only politicians but also language itself.
Democracy can survive disagreements, partisan conflicts, hard interviews, and even public embarrassment. What struggles to survive is the hollowing out of public speech. A nation where words mean little soon after utterance becomes a nation where accountability is a mere concept.
That is why the Bwala interview matters. The interview was not about one spokesman’s uncomfortable evening on international television. It was a reminder that words spoken in public life can hardly fizzle away. They remain. They wait. And when the moment arrives, they return.
Bwala comes to the international arena to defend the Federal Government. Instead, he confronts his history. And once that happens, the interview is no longer about defending policy. It became a lesson in the enduring power of memory…because politics can be rewritten. Positions change, alliances shift, and narratives are reconstructed.
But words, once spoken, never truly leave. They wait patiently in the public record. When they return at the right moment, they ask the most uncomfortable question: Were you telling the truth then or now?
Until political speeches recover their seriousness, interviews like Damiel Bwala’s will continue to expose the same uncomfortable truth: The greatest threat to political credibility is not the interviewer across the table. It is the words a politician once spoke with confidence and later wished the world had forgotten.
Mr Ukoh, an alumnus of the American University of Nigeria, Yola, and PhD student at Columbia University, writes from New York




