Oxford-Metro Analytics tracks public sentiment, candidate momentum, regional opinion,
household pressure, and forecasting signals across Nigeria.
We help citizens, journalists, analysts, and institutions understand what Nigerians
are saying — clearly, responsibly, and without confusing public pulse votes
with scientific polling.
Independent public sentiment tracking for Nigeria.
Oxford-Metro Analytics is an independent Nigerian public sentiment and polling platform focused on political intelligence, civic participation, regional voter analysis, and public opinion tracking.
Our work combines open public pulse voting, issue tracking, forecasting signals, and data storytelling to show how Nigerians are responding to leadership, policy, hardship, and election conversations.
We are not a political party, campaign platform, or official election body.
Oxford-Metro makes the Nigerian political conversation more measurable, more honest, and more accessible — by publishing what real public participation shows, not what anyone wants it to show.
Every figure comes from actual user submissions. We publish nothing simulated, estimated, or invented.
If real data does not exist, we display nothing — not estimates, not projections, not guesses.
What We Cover
Oxford-Metro does more than count votes. We track the signals behind public opinion — who Nigerians trust, what issues affect households, where regional sentiment is moving, and how political momentum changes over time.
Who Nigerians say they trust ahead of 2027 — tracked by zone, state, and national total.
Which aspirants are gaining public attention within party conversations, tracked separately from the national trust poll.
How sentiment differs across Nigeria's six geopolitical zones. No regional data is shown before minimum thresholds are met.
Food prices, fuel, rent, electricity, jobs, security, healthcare, and cost of living — the issues Nigerians say matter most.
What citizens are saying about leadership, governance, hardship, and national direction through open public participation.
Which political figures are gaining, holding, or losing public attention over time.
The major issues driving public anger, concern, hope, and voter frustration across Nigeria.
Public forecasts on political momentum, party shifts, regional trends, and national issues via the Oxford-Metro Forecast Challenge.
Oxford-Metro exists to separate public noise from measurable sentiment. We believe political data should be clearly labelled, easy to understand, and honest about its limits.
Every result should say what type of data it represents. Public participation votes should never be presented as official election results or scientific polls. We label every data point clearly.
We do not fake votes, invent momentum, or display simulated numbers. When real data does not exist, we show nothing — not placeholder results, not projected figures, not zeroes dressed as data.
Nigeria does not move as one block. Public sentiment must be understood by state and geopolitical zone. We do not collapse regional complexity into a single national headline.
Open public pulse votes tell us what website participants are saying — not what all Nigerians are saying. We are transparent about sample size, participation levels, and what our data can and cannot confirm.
Oxford-Metro clearly separates open public participation from formal research. This distinction is fundamental to how this platform operates.
These are open website votes submitted by visitors. They show participation, interest, and public engagement. They are useful signals of what website participants are saying — not projections of what all Nigerians think.
Formal polling uses structured random sampling, respondent controls, field methodology, margin of error calculations, and published assumptions about the sample. Oxford-Metro clearly marks any formal polling separately from open participation votes.
Confusing public pulse votes with official results creates misinformation. Oxford-Metro makes this distinction visible on every poll, every result card, and every regional breakdown. Public pulse results are never described as INEC results, party primary outcomes, or scientific polling.
Oxford-Metro Analytics does not make electoral predictions, winner declarations, or official polling forecasts. All standings on this platform represent the verified preferences of users who have participated in open public pulse polls only. For official electoral information, visit the Independent National Electoral Commission directly.
“Oxford-Metro Analytics is independent and non-partisan. We do not endorse political parties, candidates, or campaigns. We do not present public pulse votes as official election results, INEC results, party primary results, or scientific polling.”
Oxford-Metro is not INEC, not a political party, and not a campaign organisation.
Our role is to measure and publish — nothing more, nothing less.
Oxford-Metro collects only the information needed to support public sentiment tracking, vote integrity, regional analysis, and user participation. We do not sell user data. We do not share personal information with political parties or campaigns.
Our data practices are designed around responsible privacy principles: consent, limited collection, careful retention, and protection of user information.
Limited collection — We collect only what is needed to record a verified response and prevent duplicate voting.
No personal sale — User contact and participation data is never sold to third parties, advertisers, or campaigns.
Cookie-based identity — We use browser cookies to prevent duplicate voting per poll. This is not used for tracking or advertising.
Data retention — Participation data is retained to support real-time results and historical public pulse records.
Oxford-Metro aims to align its data practices with the Nigeria Data Protection Act 2023 (NDPA) principles of lawful processing, purpose limitation, and data minimisation.
Users may contact us to request information about personal data held in connection with their participation.
What We Do NOT Do
Political opinion in Nigeria changes by state, zone, local pressure, party history, and economic reality. A national headline number hides more than it reveals. Oxford-Metro tracks sentiment across all six geopolitical zones.
Kano · Katsina · Kaduna · Sokoto · Zamfara · Kebbi · Jigawa
Borno · Yobe · Adamawa · Taraba · Gombe · Bauchi
FCT · Niger · Kwara · Kogi · Nassarawa · Benue · Plateau
Lagos · Oyo · Ogun · Osun · Ondo · Ekiti
Anambra · Enugu · Imo · Abia · Ebonyi
Rivers · Delta · Edo · Cross River · Akwa Ibom · Bayelsa
Regional breakdowns only appear when minimum response thresholds are met per zone. We do not show weak regional claims from tiny response counts. Zones in early stages show “Awaiting Threshold” — never fabricated results.
Every structural and editorial decision at Oxford-Metro is made to protect the accuracy and trustworthiness of public sentiment data.
We do not fake votes or invent results. If real data does not exist, nothing is displayed.
Public pulse votes and formal polling are clearly separated. Every data point says what it is.
Regional and state-level results appear only after minimum participation levels are reached.
Duplicate voting, suspicious activity, and abnormal submission patterns are monitored.
Oxford-Metro does not describe itself as an INEC partner, election body, or scientific polling organisation.
Results update as verified responses come in, without editorial delay or manual adjustment.
Vote in the public pulse, explore regional sentiment, and follow candidate momentum as Nigeria’s 2027 conversation develops.
No payment required to participate. Open public pulse vote only. Not an INEC election. Not a scientific poll.