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British Prime Minister Liz Truss Resigns After Six Weeks in Office

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It ended almost as soon as it started. British Prime Minister Liz Truss has resigned, following a horde of criticism buoyed by the market chaos unleashed by her economic policies.

Ms Truss announced her resignation on Thursday outside Downing Street, making her the shortest serving prime minister in British history, and the fourth Conservative prime minister since 2019.

“We set out a vision for a low-tax, high-growth economy that would take advantage of the freedoms of Brexit.

“I recognize though, given the situation, I cannot deliver the mandate on which I was elected by the Conservative Party. I have therefore spoken to His Majesty the King to announce that I am resigning as leader of the Conservative Party,” she said.

Ms Truss’ misfortune was mainly orchestrated by her min-budget plan, which proposed top rate tax cuts. Her move to implement the budget had thrown the UK markets into turmoil, riling up heavy criticism against her government even from members of the Conservative Party.

She resigned after a meeting with Brady, the chair of the 1922 Committee — the group of Conservative MPs without ministerial positions who can pass votes of no confidence in the prime minister.

Even though Ms Truss had apologized and said she had no intention of leaving, she succumbed to overwhelming votes of no confidence during the meeting in Downing Street.

Reports said during the hour the meeting lasted, the number of MPs publicly calling for Truss to step down reached 17, and the number who have written letters to Brady expressing no confidence in the prime minister was reported to be over 100 by Thursday.

The party is now moving to complete another leadership election within the next week, three weeks faster than the usual two-month period. The next leadership election may include Conservative MPs and wider party members, a push Graham Brady, the Conservative politician that is in charge of leadership votes and reshuffles, told reporters he is making.

Ms Truss’ resignation, which came barely a week after her chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng resigned in hope to calm the avalanche of criticism that her economic policies have triggered, has inspired opposition parties to call for general election.

Opposition parties Labour, the Scottish National Party and the Liberal Democrats have called for an immediate general election on Thursday afternoon.

“There are no words to describe this utter shambles adequately. It’s beyond hyperbole – & parody. Reality though is that ordinary people are paying the price,” Nicola Sturgeon, First Minister of Scotland said. “The interests of the Tory party should concern no-one right now. A General Election is now a democratic imperative.”

The pound jumped 0.5% on the day against the dollar, an hour after the announcement, trading at $1.1273. Rishi Sunak, who lost to Ms Truss in July is the favorite to be elected the next British prime minister.

Crypto Banking: Building for Real Use Cases Beyond Speculation – Tekedia Mini-MBA

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She is one of her generation’s finest entrepreneurial visionaries. She runs one of the most fascinating startups in Africa. And she is coming to Tekedia Mini-MBA to educate us on how a WhatsApp group later became an emergent crypto banking powerhouse. Last month, she raised $2 million (Tekedia Capital invested in her amazing company).

Ruth Iselema, CEO of Bitmama,  is building a catalytic service and infrastructure company that will power the universe of cryptocurrency and broad blockchain-based enterprises. It is a vision so clearly explained that she convinced us to invest within 30 minutes! Thur at 7pm WAT; Zoom in the class board.

Tekedia Institute Mini-MBA >> learn from the best.

Tekedia Capital Joins Other Investors in Blockchain Payments startup Bitmama As It Raises $2 million pre-seed

Tekedia Capital Biotech Startup is About Ready

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We are about ready – unveiling precision medicine and personalized healthcare startup with genomic biotech capability in the heart of Africa. When I graduated from secondary school, I set an all-time best academic result in the school history (that record remains, unfortunately, unbroken to this day), everyone wanted me to study medicine.

But I said: I truly like electrons and would like to be an electronics engineer.  I got into FUTO – and the next year, I wrote JAMB and got admitted into UNN for medicine and surgery. I waited till UNN matriculation to tell anyone. Why? I did not study medicine because it was harder to get into; I just feel that I was born for engineering.

Fast forward today, my companies are building and funding modern medicine. The minister will launch this in Nov.  The focus is genomics and we will save lives across Africa. To learn more about Tekedia Capital, go here https://capital.tekedia.com/

Precision medicine. Personalized personalized healthcare delivery. Genomics. Africa, we’re home. Nov 2022, full operations will begin in the heart of Africa. Tekedia Capital continues to fund the foundations of NEXT Africa by supporting innovators and builders. See what makes us unique here https://capital.tekedia.com/ . we #move

 

The Needed Kudos and the Needless Knocks Over Nigeria’s Startup Act 2022

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After the National Assembly had passed the Startup bill for several months, President Muhammadu Buhari signed it into law on October 19, 2022. According to several social commentators and public affairs professionals who shared their thoughts on the law on virtual platforms, the president and his cabinet members have done poorly. According to the numerous perspectives collated and analyzed by our analyst, enacting legislation would not improve the startup environment unless existing economic challenges are addressed. The majority of people saw the signing as part of President Muhammadu Buhari’s regular governmental functions since 2015.

Our analyst believes that these and other opinions posted by Nigerians on online forums are pointless because no startups have ever been able to successfully navigate Nigeria’s challenging business environment throughout the years toward both sustainable success and abrupt failure. According to our analyst, the Act, which aims to strengthen the nation’s technology ecosystem and enable the sector’s rapid growth, will significantly help non-technology businesses as well, particularly in the areas of accessing funds, platforms for exchanging skills and knowledge, and adequate protection of their intellectual property and rights.

The signing keys into our analyst’s earlier suggestion that to increase innovation ecosystem, African leaders need to ensure sustainable patent and intellectual property protection. This is highly imperative in Nigeria, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and other countries where failure to file patent and trademark is reducing innovation output. This submission was based on analysis of innovation output and intellectual property in Nigeria and other select African countries.

The outcome of the analysis indicated that there was no significant difference between the innovation output of Nigeria and South Africa in 3 years [2017 to 2019]. However, there was a significant difference between Kenya and Uganda’s innovation output during the period. There was a significant difference between Nigeria and South Africa intellectual property protection during the period as well. South Africa has better intellectual property protection environment than Nigeria.

Our analyst notes that the absence of the rule of law has been one of the primary issues preventing Nigeria from scoring well in several regional and global ranking indexes throughout the years. The examination of many rankings suggests that South Africa, Kenya, Rwanda, and other nations with a modest number of startups have ranked ahead of Nigeria in some categories during the last five years due to a solid legal framework.

Our analyst observes that the regulation is necessary for entrepreneurs in Lagos, Port-Harcourt, Ibadan, Kano, and other places with a strong startup ecosystem. When strictly followed, it should assist these cities in improving their ranking status in upcoming regional and international rankings.

NIGERIA: Issue, Engagement Avoidance by Political Parties Ahead of 2023 Presidential Election

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Political parties, candidates, and their supporters concluded 20 days of campaigning ahead of the 2023 presidential election on October 18, 2022, at various venues and on virtual platforms. Throughout the day, there were numerous nods and plaudits from supporters and detractors of the four leading candidates. The Centre for Research on Development of African Media, Governance, and Society, in collaboration with the Positive Agenda Nigeria, has been monitoring campaign activities of political actors and their supporters across various media platforms since the beginning of the campaign activities.

This piece examines 1,269 traces of policy and campaign issues, 357 levels of public discussion found in 2,493 messages gathered between September 28 and October 18, 2022, with a focus on questioning the role of opposition political parties (LP, NNPP, PDP, and others) in aligning with the ruling party.

Issue convergence or divergence in 20 Days?

This goal was previously examined using data gathered by Positive Agenda Nigeria during her monitoring of the 2022 governorship election campaign in Osun state.  Part of the analysis reveals that, throughout the first four weeks of the monitoring, the ruling party (APC) concentrated on performance issues, with particular attention paid to the health sector, worker salaries, welfare and employment, social programmes, and infrastructure. The PDP, the main opposition party, addressed concerns of reputation (personality assaults, party attacks), security, and agriculture. After the PDP, Accord was determined to be equally responsible for addressing reputational issues. The party (Accord) also engaged the public by discussing concerns and/or needs related to education and security. Like the PDP, Labour party was also discovered to owned economy, reputational issues of the members and candidate of the ruling party as well as agriculture and found them worthy of discussing.

Meanwhile, an examination of the first three weeks of presidential election campaign monitoring by the two organizations shows that the opposition political parties and the ruling party have been somewhat closed in discussing infrastructure and agricultural issues, as well as residents’ needs. There was a considerable divergence in debating economic, security, education, health, workers’ welfare and salary, employment, and social programs. The findings also show a significant discrepancy in terms of discussing issues that are unrelated to people’s expectations. For example, personality attacks in the form of pointing out candidates’ health issues dominated the others category analyzed by the two organizations’ research teams.

Exhibit 1: Policy and campaign issue convergence and divergence

Data Source: CEREDEMS-Africa and Positive Agenda Nigeria, 2022
Key: Economy (137), Security (89), Education (97), Health (25), Infrastructure (48), Agriculture (16), Workers’ Welfare and Salary (15), Employment (37), Social Programme (24), Others (781)

Avoidance or engagement?

In terms of discussing the identified policy and campaign issues with citizens (via Facebook, Twitter, newspapers, and campaign rallies explored by the organizations), analysis shows that much attention has been paid to mentioning some of the needs and issues within the previously discussed policy and campaign issues (see Exhibit 1) without stating the impacts on people and the country as a whole. Meanwhile, it is surprising that the opposition political parties jointly lead the ruling party in all three categories of engagement level being examined by the two organizations. This also applies to the discussion of the issues (see Exhibit 1). Our analyst wonders why the opposition political parties are outperforming the ruling party in every category based on the information at hand and newly revealed insights. Does this imply that it is incredibly difficult to own and debate particular issues when a candidate is not the president in office?

Exhibit 2: Level of engagement

Data Source: CEREDEMS-Africa and Positive Agenda Nigeria, 2022
Key: Slightly Informed Policy Engagement (230), Moderately Informed Policy Engagement (112), Highly Informed Policy Engagement (15)