Green Revolution Chairman Varney Gbassey Kromah

MONROVIA – The Green Revolution of Liberia, a pro-democracy and advocacy group, says it strongly condemns and unequivocally rejects the 2024 Afrobarometer survey as an outdated, misleading, and politically weaponized tool that fails to capture the current socio-economic conditions of the people of Liberia.

According to the pro-democracy group, the survey, conducted between July 30 and August 21, 2024, barely six months into the President Joseph Nyuma Boakai-led Administration, cannot credibly assess the trajectory of the nation. “Using it to suggest a 50/50 national division on the country’s direction is a shallow interpretation of post-election sentiments—not a reflection of legitimate support or performance appraisal.

“We are the witnesses of our own suffering. We do not need foreign-funded surveys to interpret our pain,” said Manja Varney Gbassey Kromah, National Chairman of the Green Revolution. “Liberians today are not divided—they are united in frustration over worsening poverty, unchecked corruption, selective justice, and economic decline.”

One Year Later: The Real State of the Nation

According to GRL, “As of June 2025, Liberia faces skyrocketing public outrage over unbearable living standards, a culture of impunity with no real anti-corruption action, erosion of the rule of law through political interference, and a collapsing economy marked by inflation, unemployment, and lost investor confidence.”

The AfroBarometer has been producing survey results on Liberia for a few years now

They argued that none of what they listed above is reflected in the Afrobarometer report. “To continue using this outdated data as a shield against public criticism is not just disingenuous—it is dangerous to democratic discourse and national integrity,” they added.

“The Green Revolution of Liberia stands in firm resistance to false narratives and calls for a new wave of people-centered truth, accountability, and transformations.”

50% Hopeful, 50% Hopeless – Research Shows Liberians are Evenly Divided

According to research findings released by Afrobarometer on May 30, 2025, 50% of Liberians say the country is going in the right direction and the other 50% says it is not.

The data, gathered in the second half of 2024, shows that Liberians are sharply divided on the state of the nation and their personal circumstances, but many still believe better days are ahead.

The survey, conducted by the Center for Democratic Governance (CDG) on behalf of Afrobarometer, found a significant increase in optimism since the last round of research in 2022. 

At that time, only one in four citizens (25%) felt the country was on the right path. That figure has now doubled.

Despite this shift in perception, the overall picture remains mixed. When it comes to the economy, 45% of respondents described conditions as “fairly good” or “very good,” while 48% rated them as “fairly bad” or “very bad.”

Citizens Caught in the Middle

Personal living conditions mirror the national divide. Exactly 46% of citizens said their conditions were good, and the same percentage said they were bad. This deadlock reveals a population evenly split between progress and frustration.

Meanwhile, about 41% of Liberians reported improved personal living conditions over the past year, while 33% said national economic conditions were better than a year ago. Twenty-five percent said they were worse off, while the remaining portion reported no significant change.

Optimism on the Rise

Encouragingly, a majority of respondents, 61%, expressed hope that the national economy will improve over the next 12 months. This signals a resilient sense of faith in Liberia’s potential, despite ongoing economic strain and political uncertainty.

This optimism may stem from changing leadership dynamics, improved service delivery in some sectors, or broader regional economic momentum.

How the Study Was Conducted

The Afrobarometer survey was conducted between July 30 and August 21, 2024, involving 1,200 adult Liberians across all regions.

Interviews were carried out face-to-face, in local languages, to ensure inclusive participation. The results come with a margin of error of ±3 percentage points, offering reliable insights into national sentiment.

Green Revolution of Liberia National Chairman, Manja Varney Gbassey Kromah

Afrobarometer, a non-partisan pan-African research network, has conducted public opinion surveys in more than 40 countries since 1999. This is the seventh round of data collection in Liberia, with previous rounds conducted in 2008, 2012, 2015, 2018, 2020, and 2022.

The Road Ahead

As Liberia moves deeper into 2025, this 50-50 split reveals a nation standing at a crossroads, with half its citizens encouraged by progress and the other half deeply skeptical.

However, the data also show a glimmer of unity in expectation, with most Liberians hopeful that tomorrow will be better than today.

Whether that hope materializes may depend on policy outcomes, governance transparency, and the government’s ability to deliver on promises. For now, Liberians remain watchful—but not without hope.

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