Ovation Magazine publisher, Dele Momodu, has said that members of President Muhammadu Buhari's cabinet look intimidated, urging Buhari to give them confidence to express themselves.
In an interview with The Punch, Momodu also insisted that he was still behind the President and will give him a chance to bring the promised change.
He said: "My support has never been a blank check. I gave my support; I still give my support. I will give him a chance. I believe he can still do something if he wants to.
"As I have advised in my articles, he needs to jazz up his cabinet. I believe that his cabinet is very weak and ineffectual. That is my opinion and that of many people, including one of his biggest supporters, (Pastor) Tunde Bakare.
"He needs to do something about his cabinet. He also needs to free them a bit. I think they are a bit uptight. They are too scared and timid. They look intimidated, like they don't have the freedom to initiate anything. It is (evident from) the body language of the president."
He added, "But the moment you make it (public offices) less attractive, and an average person can survive on his daily income, all those things will change. I believe Buhari is using the same methodology that someone like (former) President Obasanjo had established in his time.
"The system is not too different from what Nuhu Ribadu was operating: arrest, investigate, prosecute; and a lot of the times, you've already destroyed the accused on the pages of newspapers. So, you're not sure if the person is innocent or not.
"For me, that is not the way to do it. The best way to do it is to, first of all, have a uniform standards for all public officials so that nobody feels discriminated against."
Momodu also stated that the anti-corruption war of the Buhari administration was similar to that of former president Olusegun Obasanjo.
"I've always expressed my view about fighting corruption. I think while it is very desirable and necessary, there are more ways and methodologies to deal with corruption. Firstly, we must ask ourselves, 'Why are people generally corrupt?'," he said.
"The definition of corruption in Nigeria is faulty. People think that you have to be a minister or governor to be corrupt. But if we all agree that corruption is endemic, then we must go to the root cause.
"The root cause of corruption, in my view, begins with need before it graduates to greed. Can an average Nigerian survive on his income or salary? The answer is a big no."
He noted that people must make ends meet by all means "because the natural instinct of man is survival."