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WHY PROF. ISA PANTAMI SHOULD CHOOSE BARR. I.Y. MELAH AS RUNNING MATE

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A Cry from the Heart of Gombe South

Your Excellency, Prof. Ali Isa Pantami,
We salute you not because you carry a title, but because for a moment, you made us believe again. In a land weary of recycled promises and exhausted by leaders who speak only to be heard, not to heal, your emergence has landed like rain after drought.

We felt it in the marketplace, in the classrooms, in the quiet prayers of mothers who still hope their children will see a Gombe that works.

But now, Your Excellency, you stand at a crossroads that will define not just your ticket, but your soul as a leader. The question is no longer who will stand beside you—it is what your choice will say about the man you truly are.
A running mate is not a footnote. He is a mirror.

The Deputy Governor is not a ceremonial ornament. He is the second heartbeat of an administration. He is the first hint of your judgment, the first proof of your courage, the first measure of whether your leadership will be transactional or transformational.

Choose a man who merely balances a ticket, and you send a message: I am playing politics. Choose a man who balances your vision, and you send a message: I am building a legacy.

Barr. I.Y. Melah is not a name to fill a space. He is a force to fill a gap. He is not loud. He is deep.

In a generation addicted to noise, Barr. Melah chose substance. He did not climb on the backs of the powerful; he lifted those who had no back to climb. For years, he has moved through Gombe South not as a politician seeking applause, but as a lawyer seeking justice, a mentor seeking minds, and a servant seeking no reward but the quiet dignity of a job well done.

His reputation is not written in press releases. It is etched in the gratitude of young men he guided, in the faith of widows he defended, in the trust of communities he never betrayed. When every other voice was shouting, his was building. When others chased titles, he chased truth.

This is not a man who will outshine you—he is a man who will complement you. Not a rival, but a reinforcement. Not a shadow, but a second light. He is the bridge your vision needs.

Your Excellency, you carry the weight of experience. He carries the pulse of a generation. You bring the wisdom of years; he brings the urgency of now. Together, you would not just govern—you would connect. Between the elder and the youth. Between the north and south of our state. Between the institution and the individual. Between the dream and the delivery.

In a Gombe fractured by suspicion and hungry for unity, Barr. Melah has proven again and again that he is not a divider of men but a mender of broken fences. He speaks not in the language of tribe or creed, but in the dialect of dignity. And that, Your Excellency, is the language the people are starving to hear.

This is not about arithmetic. This is about anointing.

Political strategists will give you numbers. Pollsters will give you percentages. But the people—the tired, the hopeful, the forgotten—they are asking for something the spreadsheets cannot calculate: Does this man feel like us? Does he carry our ache in his chest? Does he see our children as his own? Barr. Melah does.

He is not a career politician. He is a career public servant. He has bled quietly for Gombe South when it cost him more than it paid him. He has stayed when others switched. He has served when others strutted. And in doing so, he has become not just a lawyer, not just a leader—but a symbol that integrity still exists where we had stopped looking for it.

Choose him, and you choose more than a running mate.

You choose to tell every young person in Gombe that their dreams are not foolish.
You choose to tell every woman that her voice matters.

You choose to tell every community that they will not be left behind.
You choose to tell history that you were not afraid to surround yourself with greatness.

The Pantami-Melah ticket would not just be a political alliance—it would be a covenant with the future. It would be a declaration that Gombe is ready to move from survival to significance. From enduring leaders to enjoying leadership.

Your Excellency, history does not remember those who played it safe. It remembers those who, when the moment came, had the audacity to choose better over easier. This is that moment.

Do not choose a running mate. Choose a partner. Choose a conscience. Choose a reflection of the Gombe you promised us. Choose Barr. I.Y. Melah.And let this state know finally that leadership is not a throne, but a trust. That power is not a prize, but a promise. That you, Prof. Ali Isa Pantami, are not just a candidate you are a turning point.

With trembling hope and stubborn faith,
The Concerned Youth of Gombe South

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