15 Factors To Decide Next Elections
High Cost Of Living: Inflationary figures are getting better but the pricing of goods and services have remained.
Dastard Crimes: By this, we mean homicides or crimes that take the lives of victims. Inexplicable murders.
Erratic Utility Services: In most communities, their sources of clean water are water tankers since their taps run dry.
The Winner-Takes-All Principle: Some citizens do complain that they are denied any advantage or lack access to assistance because of their party affiliations.
Unemployment: Swarmed by inimical economic factors, the jobless are almost swallowed by the sea of hardships. They cannot afford anything.
Unrealistic Political Promises: Political actors who are not going to be taken seriously are those who do not offer practical solutions but rocket sciences in the face of basic problems such as school fees, rent, lack of jobs, pocket money, and challenges facing families.
Healthcare: Many people resort to self-medication or look on when beset with life-threatening medical conditions because they cannot afford medical care, NHIS notwithstanding. Treatment for some ailments is predicated on the availability of money.
Roads: Poor roads are pervasive. Voters will react to how the political parties that got a chance to rule handled roads.
Hardships: Unredeemed plights that keep worsening.
Social Contract: Often mentioned by politicians but reneged upon, only some added form of contract between political parties and the people will enlist confidence.
Corruption: Voters are reading between the lines regarding corruption cases. Invariably, the political parties are bound together with labeled culprits.
Biased Situations: The political parties affected by this phenomenon usually court public sympathy. This relates to political persecution or fair hearings.
External Factors: A pending election is affected if it is surrounded by a sea of retained or defeated incumbents in the geography outside its borders.
Vigilance: All the political parties ought to be vigilant to the flux of the ballot on election day.
Loose Verbiage: Unguided talk could be punished. It has been punished before, and voters can do it again.