Every now and then, a state reaches a point where you can almost feel people craving something different, something calmer, more honest, more grounded in actual work. Imo seems to be right there. You hear it in conversations at parks, markets, even in those tired jokes people make when they’re fed up. There’s this quiet hope for a shift that isn’t wrapped in drama or empty promises, but in decisions that make daily life a little easier.
That’s the spirit behind the idea of a New Imo under Mazi Amadi and the Action People’s Party. It isn’t meant to sound like one of those rally chants. It’s more like a steady promise to steer the state away from political theatrics and toward development you can actually notice. Most people simply want a government that pays attention to human needs, builds real infrastructure, keeps communities safe, and grows the economy in a way that doesn’t feel imaginary. And part of that is choosing to empower our own. When local contractors and local talent are given priority, money stays here. Skills deepen. Capacity grows quietly but consistently.
A major part of Mazi Amadi’s plan is restoring full autonomy to local governments. On paper, it might look like a constitutional requirement, but on the ground, it’s the only practical way to unlock the state’s economic potential. Growth doesn’t start in the state capital; it starts in the small places where people trade, farm, hustle, and build. When local governments are allowed to actually function, they can shape development that suits their own communities, instead of waiting for distant decisions that barely touch their reality.
This path is miles away from the recent trend of covering economic stagnation with grand events. Take the Imo Economic Summit. For all its glamour and international attention, it felt more like a well-funded show than a serious attempt at solving real problems. It looked impressive, sure, but once the smoke cleared, nothing much seemed to shift. It’s hard to ignore how often these big gatherings leave the state exactly where it was before, except with more photos and fewer answers.
What Imo needs now isn’t another spectacle. It needs work. Simple, practical, roll-up-your-sleeves work. An Amadi-led administration would focus on the kinds of decisions that quietly create jobs and build lasting value. Things like setting up cottage industries across local governments so people can earn a living using the raw materials already around them. Or supporting farmers with mechanized tools so food production can finally move beyond survival-level farming and become strong enough for both local consumption and export. Or reviving farm settlements that can draw young people back into agriculture and turn rural areas into active economic hubs.
These are the kinds of changes that matter. They strengthen people, they make better use of the land, and they give institutions room to grow. And maybe that’s what this New Imo vision is really about: a state that uses its resources responsibly, treats its people fairly, and pushes for progress you can feel in everyday life, not just hear about in speeches.
*Until I come your way this time next week, on this same channel and frequency, I remain your beloved, Dabere Manume, a public affairs commentator and analyst*
