*By:* Lord Davidson Onedju
_(De Pen Lion)_
Thursday, April 2, 2026

Urhobo Wadoo

*A Blueprint for Sustainable Leadership in an Era of Short-Term Gains*

In the raucous theater of modern politics, few scenes are as predictable—or as seductive—as the senator distributing bags of rice, cash envelopes, and solar lamps to a cheering crowd. The cameras roll, the hashtags trend, and the constituency erupts in gratitude. Yet beneath this feel-good spectacle lies a quiet, more revolutionary act: a legislator like Ede, who refuses to hand out fish, but instead builds the fishing rod, stocks the pond, and teaches the art of the catch.

The question posed — _Which do you prefer?_ —is not merely rhetorical. It cuts to the heart of governance, dependency, and human dignity.

*The Allure of the Fish*

Let us not dismiss the fish-giver too quickly. In communities ravaged by unemployment, poor infrastructure, and episodic hunger, a direct handout can mean the difference between despair and survival. It is immediate, tangible, and emotionally resonant. For the senator, it secures loyalty—a transactional bond reinforced every election cycle.

But herein lies the trap: fish given today creates hunger tomorrow. The recipient learns nothing, builds nothing, and waits for the next political season. The senator, in turn, becomes indispensable precisely by perpetuating need. It is a cycle of benevolent bondage, masked as generosity.

*The Audacity of Teaching Fishing*

Ede’s approach is harder, slower, and far less photogenic. Teaching a community to fish requires:

*· Long-term investment* in vocational schools, agricultural extension services, or digital literacy labs.

*· Policy changes* that remove bureaucratic weeds strangling small enterprises.

*· Accountability* — because skills without opportunity are useless. Ede must also ensure access to credit, markets, and fair trade.

The results, however, are transformative. A single fisherman who learns sustainable techniques feeds not only his family but a dozen others. A woman trained in solar panel assembly becomes an employer, not a dependent. The ripple effect multiplies dignity, agency, and local wealth—none of which can be recalled by a political rival.

*Evidence from the Ground*

Consider real-world parallels. In parts of Kerala, India, local representatives who shifted from free rice distribution to co-operative fishing, processing, and cold-storage units saw per capita income triple over a decade. Contrast this with regions where politicians continue seasonal handouts—poverty remains static, and so does voter reliance.

Economists call this the difference between _relief_ and _development._ Political scientists call it _constituency empowerment_ versus _clientelism._ But the ordinary citizen calls it _being treated as a child_ or _being treated as a partner._

*Which Do You Prefer? The Answer Is Not Simple*

If your house is on fire, you want a bucket of water (the fish). But if your village has been burning for decades, you want fire codes, hydrants, and a trained brigade (the fishing lessons). The wise leader, therefore, does both—providing emergency fish while relentlessly building the capacity to fish.

Yet the title forces a choice. And in that forced choice, any reader with a vision beyond the next election must answer: *I prefer Senator Ede Dafinone.* Not because charity is evil, but because the highest form of love is to make charity unnecessary.

*A Call to Citizens*

As voters, we must stop applauding the senator who arrives with a truckload of fish. Instead, ask: _What have you taught us? What tools, skills, and systems will remain when you leave?_ The politician who hesitates is selling dependency. The one who answers with a blueprint is offering freedom.

So, which do you prefer? The fleeting taste of fish or the enduring craft of the catch? The answer will shape not just your senator’s career, but your community’s destiny.

Choose Senator Ede Dafinone. Choose To Fish.

When Other Senators Are Giving Their Constituents Fish, Ede Is Teaching His Own How To Catch Fish: Which Do You Prefer? (Opinion)

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