By Samuel Wise Bangura
As Sierra Leone steps into 2026, President Julius Maada Bio has declared a “Year of Action”, a promise of steady leadership and tangible results . However, the air in Freetown carries a familiar mixture of weary skepticism and desperate hope. For citizens navigating daily life where the scourge of kush claims young lives and economic opportunities remain scarce, grand declarations from cabinet retreats echo with a hollow tone. The administration, now in its second term, has held at least four major cabinet retreats since 2018, each pledging to “accelerate delivery.” Yet, as the political machinery begins its inevitable warm-up for the 2028 elections, the critical question is whether 2026 can truly transcend being another chapter of promises and become a year of palpable change.
President Bio’s administration has consistently used cabinet retreats as symbolic reset buttons, moments to recalibrate and promise renewed vigor.
Following his first election in 2018, initial retreats set the agenda for the “New Direction,” focusing on anti-corruption and human capital development. Mid-term retreats, particularly around 2021-2022, were framed as solutions to “accelerate delivery,” acknowledging implementation gaps. While the Government highlights achievements in education access, the public’s lived experience continued to be defined by economic hardship.
The post-2023 re-election retreat cemented the “Big Five Game Changers” as the second-term blueprint. The most politically resonant of those is the promise to create 500,000 new jobs. This target, aimed squarely at the country’s restless youth, was a central pledge. However, entering 2026, there is a stark absence of official, consolidated data showing how many jobs have been materialized under this initiative. The Government points to sectoral plans in agriculture and public works, but without transparent metrics, the promise feels suspended in abstraction. This pattern of ambitious announcement followed by opaque tracking has defined the retreat cycle, breeding public cynicism.
The Government’s economic narrative, especially in the lead-up to the 2026 “Pro-People Budget,” emphasizes hard-won macroeconomic stability. Officials point to inflation falling to 4.4% and GDP growth projected at 4.4% as signs of foundational progress. The budget itself is themed on “Enhancing Domestic Revenue Mobilization”, a necessary but challenging shift in an era where “aid is slowing down globally”.
However, those figures are a distant reality for the average Sierra Leonean. The official unemployment rate, modeled by the World Bank, stood at 3.126% in 2024 . This statistic is significantly misleading in a nation with a vast informal sector where underemployment and vulnerable employment are the norm. The promise of 500,000 jobs clashes with the daily struggle of youths hustling for inconsistent daily wages, graduates without prospects, and the lack of creation in the formal, quality employment that people truly need. While the budget includes incentives for local manufacturing and youth entrepreneurship , the translation of these policies into mass, dignified employment remains the government’s greatest unmet challenge.
Beyond the economy, two crises are actively corroding the nation’s social fabric and global standing: the drug epidemic and diplomatic alienation.
The synthetic drug kush has become a national emergency, devastating communities and claiming young lives. President Bio’s address mentioned a “firm response” combining law enforcement and rehabilitation , but the crisis on the ground feels uncontained. It is a public health tragedy that also saps the nation’s productive energy, making the promise of a “Year of Action” ring hollow for families in mourning.
Perhaps the most stinging indictment of governance and institutional health came from the United States in December 2025. In a sweeping visa restriction order, the U.S. placed Sierra Leone on a short list of countries facing a full travel ban, alongside nations like Afghanistan, Syria, and South Sudan . The U.S. cited “widespread corruption,” “poor documentation practices,” and an inability to reliably screen and vet travelers . This is not merely a travel inconvenience; it is a severe blow to the country’s international image, affecting business, education, and diaspora ties. Notably, the order listed 38 other countries given conditions to meet, yet Sierra Leone was left out entirely from this corrective pathway, suggesting a deeper assessment of institutional failure . This isolation contradicts the government’s narrative of rebuilding institutional confidence and represents a tangible governance failure with significant consequences.
This brings us to the core political paradox of 2026. President Bio has rightly called for responsible conduct ahead of the 2028 elections. Yet, in Sierra Leone’s political calendar, 2026/2027 is universally recognized as the year politics takes center stage, with party primaries, realignments, and campaign preparations consuming oxygen. This leaves 2026 as a narrow, 12-month window for unimpeded governance.
The government’s challenge is to prove that this “Year of Action” is a sincere, final push on delivery and not merely a pre-electoral public relations campaign. Will the “Big Five” finally show measurable results in job numbers and agricultural output? Will the fight against kush show a dramatic downturn in addiction and related crime? Can diplomatic efforts repair the deep damage of the U.S. visa ban? The people are measuring action not by budget speeches or retreat communiques, but by changes in their daily lives: the availability of affordable food, the safety of their communities, and the prospects for their children.
President Bio’s 2026 declaration arrives at a critical juncture. The scaffolding of plans from Feed Salone to digital transformation is in place. The “Pro-People Budget” has been articulated . The repeated cycle of retreats has built a foundation of promises. Yet, the patience of the people, worn thin by economic pressure, social despair, and now international stigma, is a finite resource.
Sierra Leone is headed toward a definitive answer. The path of true action requires transparent accountability for past promises, especially on jobs, a marshaling of state resources to combat the drug crisis with the urgency it demands, and a good-faith diplomatic offensive to address the failures that led to international pariah status. The alternative path leads to 2027, where all government action will be interpreted through a partisan lens, and the “Year of Action” will be remembered as a final, unmet pledge before the political storm. The direction for 2026 will not be decided at the State Lodge, but in the streets, farms, and homes where Sierra Leoneans live the reality of their nation’s promises every single day.