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Something is shifting in Nigeria's political architecture — and most people are misreading it. South-West governors have drawn a public line on Sharia. But this is not a religious argument. It is a constitutional one — and beneath it sits a calculated political strategy that connects directly to 2027, the Tinubu coalition, and a 25-year-old grey zone in Nigeria's constitution that nobody has been willing to legally resolve. In this video, we break it down completely. We analyse why these governors chose to speak now, what they are actually arguing — versus what the commentary claims they are arguing — who benefits, who bears the cost, and what the next 12 months could look like if this debate escalates beyond declarations into formal institutional territory. We also map the one scenario nobody is discussing: how this debate, if handled without a clear legal strategy, could accidentally produce the opposite of what its architects intended. This is not hot takes. This is structured political analysis. ey questions this video answers: → Why are South-West governors speaking now and not in 1999? → What does Section 10 of the Nigerian Constitution actually say — and where does it go silent? → Who are the silent stakeholders in this debate that nobody is naming? → What is the unintended consequence scenario that could strengthen Sharia entrenchment? → Is this principled constitutional governance or a 2027 electoral calculation — or both? If you follow Nigerian politics seriously, this video is essential context. Watch it fully. The argument builds. Every section adds a layer the previous one does not contain. 🔔 Subscribe to Naija Verified for structured political analysis on Nigerian governance, power, and accountability — published consistently, argued carefully, and verified before it reaches you. 👍 If this analysis added value to your understanding, like the video. It tells the algorithm this kind of content deserves a wider audience. 💬 Drop your take in the comments. Agree, disagree, or add a dimension we missed — but make it specific. Vague takes don't move the conversation forward. 📤 Share this with one person who follows Nigerian politics. The conversation this country needs starts with people who are willing to engage it seriously.