When Nigeria’s First Lady, Remi Tinubu, reflected publicly on praise she received from former U.S. President Donald Trump during a CNN interview, she framed the moment as an unexpected personal milestone. “Who would have thought that President Trump would recognise me? I am getting global recognition on all of this, and that is what life is all about. If something is going to be good, it starts from the rubbles,” she said.
Yet read in full context, her remarks were less a spontaneous reflection than the visible surface of a deliberate, costly, and highly strategic effort by Nigeria to regain control of its international narrative—particularly in Washington. The interview was not an isolated media moment. It was a communications asset deployed within a coordinated lobbying campaign aimed at neutralising one of the most damaging reframings of Nigeria’s security crisis in recent memory.
How Nigeria became a U.S. “country of concern”
Nigeria’s recent prominence in U.S. religious-freedom debates followed sustained lobbying by American lawmakers and advocacy groups—especially within evangelical and conservative policy circles—who reframed Nigeria’s insecurity as systematic persecution of Christians, rather than terrorism, criminality, and state fragility.
That pressure culminated under the Trump administration in Nigeria’s designation as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) under U.S. religious-freedom law. The designation carried reputational and diplomatic consequences, narrowing policy space and raising the spectre of sanctions. More importantly, it hardened a narrative in Washington that reduced Nigeria’s complex security crisis to a stark religious binary: Muslims killing Christians, and a state failing—or unwilling—to stop it.
The framing ignored both the multi-religious victim profile of terrorism in Nigeria and the criminal, non-ideological nature of much bandit violence. But once embedded in Washington’s policy discourse, such narratives are difficult to dislodge without professional political intervention.
Abuja’s turn to American lobbyists
Faced with the risk of enduring diplomatic damage, Nigeria chose to engage Washington on its own terms, stepping directly into the U.S. political and policy ecosystem rather than relying solely on traditional diplomatic channels. To do so, the government hired DCI Group, a Washington-based public-affairs and lobbying firm, on a contract valued at $9 million over six months, signalling how seriously Abuja viewed the reputational threat it was confronting.
DCI Group is a long-established presence in Washington, specialising in crisis communications, reputation management and political advocacy. Over the years, it has worked on politically sensitive assignments for governments, corporations and advocacy causes, and is widely regarded as being well connected within Republican policy and national-security circles—precisely the audience most receptive to the religious-persecution narrative that had taken hold around Nigeria.
The firm’s mandate was clear and narrowly defined. It was tasked with pushing back against the “Christian genocide” framing, recasting Nigeria’s insecurity as a counter-terrorism challenge rather than a sectarian one, stabilising relations with Congress, the State Department and the White House, and safeguarding security cooperation and investor confidence. Within that framework, public messaging was not an afterthought but a core tool. Carefully placed media appearances were intended to complement closed-door briefings, reinforcing private arguments with visible signals that Nigeria was engaged, responsive and determined to reclaim control of its story.
Trump’s mention — and the CNN interview — did not happen by chance
It is implausible to treat President Trump’s public mention of Remi Tinubu, or her subsequent high-profile U.S. media appearance, as spontaneous. These moments bear the hallmarks of professional agenda-setting: carefully chosen messengers, targeted platforms, and symbolic resonance.
The First Lady’s profile offered something uniquely valuable to the lobbying strategy. As a practising Christian married to a Muslim president, she embodied a direct rebuttal to claims of sectarian governance. In Washington terms, she was not merely a spokesperson but a narrative instrument—human, visible, and difficult to dismiss.
That makes the interview an extension of the lobbying effort- CNN editors did not suddenly become interested in Mrs. Tinubu’s opinions about Nigerian-US relations or insecurity in Nigeria. Nigerians may not like their bill, but the American lobbying firm is definitely doing the job it was hired for.
Who the interview was really for
Despite appearing as a single media moment, the interview was multi-audience messaging, with uneven effects across each group. American lawmakers and policy elites were the primary audience. The objective was not outright persuasion, but reframing—to make the “Christian genocide” label harder to sustain without qualification. On this front, the interview was directionally helpful, introducing complexity into a previously moralised debate.
A secondary audience was the broader Trump-aligned conservative ecosystem—faith-based networks, conservative media, and Republican operatives. Here, symbolism mattered more than detail. A Christian First Lady speaking calmly about democracy and reform created rhetorical space for allies to argue that Nigeria’s story was more complicated than activist narratives suggested.
For Nigerian Christians, particularly victims of attacks in the Middle Belt and North, the impact was more ambiguous. While her affirmation of religious freedom and security reforms may offer reassurance, the internationalised framing—and especially the emphasis on recognition abroad—risked sounding distant from the insecurity that defines their existence. Finally, there was a domestic elite audience in Nigeria: policymakers and commentators watching how Abuja was choosing to fight reputational battles abroad, and at what cost.
Where the interview worked—and where it didn’t
From a strategic standpoint, Mrs. Tinubu’s interview was disciplined in substance but uneven in tone. On the essentials, she stayed firmly within the guardrails of the messaging Nigeria’s Washington effort required. She repeatedly returned to the idea of Nigeria as a democratic state with constitutionally protected freedom of religion, countering the suggestion that violence in the country is the product of sectarian policy or official indifference. She acknowledged the scale of the security crisis, but framed it as a problem the government is actively confronting—through changes in the security leadership, expanded recruitment, redeployment of personnel, and a shift toward tackling terrorism as a structural challenge rather than offering rhetorical reassurance.
She also situated much of the external criticism within the realities of political timing, suggesting that international narratives are often sharpened by electoral cycles and partial information rather than by a full appreciation of conditions on the ground. Taken together, these points were coherent, policy-anchored and closely aligned with Nigeria’s broader Washington strategy. They reinforced the core argument the lobbyists have been advancing: that Nigeria’s crisis is one of security and state capacity, not religious persecution, and that the government is engaged in reform rather than denial.
Where it faltered: the “global recognition” line
The statement “I am getting global recognition” was the interview’s weakest moment—not because it was untrue, but because it shifted the frame from Nigeria to herself.
In Washington messaging, personalisation works only when it serves the national argument. Here, the phrasing risked sounding self-referential at a moment when the subject was national insecurity, religious tension, and diplomatic repair.
The lobbyists’ strategy clearly aimed to use Mrs. Tinubu symbolically i.e. her christian faith and status as a pastor, their intention was not to . By foregrounding her own recognition, she briefly disrupted that intent, creating interpretive noise where clarity was required.
This was not deliberate bugga (vanity)—it was just subpar execution. The First Lady seems genuinely excited at the recognition by the world’s most powerful man.
Was the interview necessary?
Strictly speaking, the interview added little to the core lobbying objectives. By the time the CNN appearance took place, the lobbying operation had already secured meaningful inroads into President Trump’s political orbit. Trump’s public acknowledgement of the First Lady itself suggests access and influence that clearly pre-dated the interview.
The central goals—containing the Country of Particular Concern narrative, stabilising Republican opinion, and preserving security cooperation—were already being pursued through direct engagement with key decision-makers. Those objectives could likely have been reinforced without a televised appearance, particularly one that risked shifting attention from substance to personality.
Effective lobbying is not limited to private access; it also relies on public reinforcement. But in this instance, the public intervention was unlikely to materially strengthen messages already delivered privately to President Trump and his advisers. The symbolism of “Pastor” Remi Tinubu’s appearance at the U.S. National Prayer Breakfast had already carried substantial weight. It communicated, without ambiguity, that Nigerian Christians could not plausibly be framed as victims of state-sanctioned persecution under a president married to a practising Christian pastor. That moment alone had achieved the symbolic objective the lobbyists required.
By contrast, the CNN interview introduced avoidable risk. Rather than clarifying Nigeria’s position, it opened the door to domestic backlash, particularly around perceptions of elite vanity—an image of the President’s wife appearing on American television to reflect on praise from a deeply polarising U.S. political figure. In a country grappling with insecurity and economic strain, such optics are not neutral.
In short, while the interview was not strategically damaging in Washington, it was strategically redundant—and carried greater downside in Nigeria than upside abroad.
A hard-headed judgement
Nigeria’s decision to hire U.S. lobbyists remains strategically defensible. Allowing its security crisis to be moralised into a religious narrative in Washington would carry far greater long-term costs. Mrs. Tinubu’s interview broadly supported that effort. But the line about “global recognition” underscored how narrow the margin is between effective symbolism and unintended self-centering. In diplomacy—especially in Washington—the messenger must never become the message.
The deeper test will be whether Nigeria’s reforms and security gains eventually make such narrative management unnecessary—so that the country no longer needs lobbyists, or First Ladies, to explain itself to the world at all.
Mrs. Remi Tinubu on Trump Comment: “I Am Getting Global Recognition”
Nigeria's First Lady Mrs. Remi Tinubu's CNN interview was part of Nigeria’s $9m Washington lobbying strategy—where it subtly went wrong
Share this article
Arbiterz Editorial
Magazine
Venezuela in Flux: What Trump Is Likely to Do Next and the Likely Consequences
Office Lives: Antoinette Edodo, Chief Strategy Officer, Heirs Technologies.
The Lunch Hour: Subomi Plumptre- People with Successful Careers Train Themselves
AfDB: The True Cost of Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina’s Second Term
BIG READ – Why Asian Businesses Are So Successful
The Lunch Hour – Toyin Sanni, CEO, Emerging Africa Capital Group
LATEST NEWS
Senate Approves Electronic Transmission of Polling Unit Results, Retains Form EC8A as Fallback
BUA Foods Appoint Isyaku Abdulsamad Rabiu as Chief Officer, Global Procurement and Strategic Operations
Biometric Software Company Identy.io Expands into Africa with Biometric Identity Solutions for Digital Inclusion
Lagos Introduces ₦20,000 Amnesty for Replacement of Damaged Vehicle Number Plates
Arbiterz Jobs: Top Lagos Law Firm Opens Applications for Exceptional Youth Corpers
DJ Pretty Play Set to Attempt 288-Hour Guinness World Record for Longest Marathon Club DJ-ing in Lagos
Advertisement
FEATURED CATEGORIES
MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS
Senate Approves Electronic Transmission of Polling Unit Results, Retains Form EC8A as Fallback
Senate Adopts Amended Electoral Act as Emergency Plenary Becomes Rowdy
NAHCON Chairman Prof. Abdullahi Usman Resigns Amid Allegations of Misconduct
“The Worst You Can Do Is Shoot Us!” — Aisha Yesufu Confronts Police as Amaechi Joins NASS Protest
‘Our Votes Must Count!’ Peter Obi Joins Protesters as Security Tightens at NASS
Annular Solar Eclipse to Take Place on February 17 – All You Need to Know
Hong Kong Media Tycoon Jimmy Lai sentenced to 20 years in prison
Nnamdi Kanu Ends IPOB’s Monday Sit-at-Home in South-East After Five Years