Tag: Electoral Act

  • Electoral Act: Akpabio blasts critics, says despite abuses, Senate not intimidated

    Electoral Act: Akpabio blasts critics, says despite abuses, Senate not intimidated

    …says ‘Mouth Legislators’ misleading Nigerians

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio has dismissed criticisms trailing the Senate’s amendment of the Electoral Act, saying commentators and civil society actors are misjudging the legislature based on an incomplete legislative process and misunderstanding of parliamentary procedures.

    Akpabio spoke in Abuja as special guest of honour at the unveiling of a book, “The Burden of Legislators in Nigeria”, authored by Senator Effiong Bob, in Abuja.

    Speaking on the controversy surrounding the removal of the phrase “real-time” electronic transmission of election results, Akpabio said the Senate had not concluded work on the bill and that public debate was premature.

    “The Electoral Act amendment is incomplete. We have not completed it, but they are already on television. They don’t understand lawmaking.

    “They don’t even know that what is in the Senate is not completed until we look at the Votes and Proceedings,” he said.

    Akpabio explained that the Votes and Proceedings stage allows senators to correct, amend, or clarify decisions taken on the floor before final approval, stressing that only after that process could the Senate’s position be considered final.

    “When we bring out the Votes and Proceedings, any senator has a right to rise and say, ‘On clause three, this was what we agreed upon.’ That is the only time you can talk about what the Senate has done or not done,” he said.

    He criticised commentators for what he described as “abuse” of the legislature, accusing some civil society actors of attempting to impose their views on lawmakers.

    “People have become mouth legislators. Go and contest election if you want to talk about lawmaking and go and join them and make the law. Retreats are not lawmaking; retreats are part of consultations. So why do you think that the paper you agreed in Lagos during a retreat must be what is agreed on the floor?” he asked.

    Akpabio insisted that the Senate did not remove electronic transmission of election results, clarifying that lawmakers only questioned the requirement for real-time transmission.

    “I must state clearly, without ambiguity, that the Senate has not removed any means of transmission. If you want to use a bicycle to carry your votes from one polling unit to the ward centre, do so. If you want to use your phone to transmit, do so. If you want to use your iPad, do so,” he said.

    He said the concern was that mandating real-time transmission could lead to legal disputes if network failures occurred during elections.

    “All we said was that we should remove the word ‘real time,’ because if you say real time and there is grid failure and the network is not working, when you go to court somebody will say it ought to have been real time,” he explained.

    According to him, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) should determine the mode and timing of result transmission within the framework of the law.

    The Senate President warned that insisting on real-time transmission could invalidate results in areas with poor connectivity or insecurity.

    “Real time means that in over nine states where networks are not working because of insecurity, there will be no election results. Nationally, if the national grid collapses and no network is working, no election results will be valid,” he said.

    He cited a Supreme Court ruling which, he said, acknowledged Nigeria’s inadequate infrastructure and emphasised that electronic transmission is only supplementary to the statutory collation process.

    “The result is in Form EC8A. It will be carried from the polling unit to the ward centre, from there to the local government collation centre, to the senatorial collation centre, to the state collation centre, and finally the national collation centre,” he said.

    Akpabio stressed that the amendment bill had not yet completed the bicameral legislative process and that a conference committee would reconcile differences between the Senate and House of Representatives versions before final passage.

    “It is only when we have finished that that you will now say the National Assembly has passed any amendment to the Electoral Act,” he said.

    He urged critics to allow the process to run its course, warning against attempts to “rubbish the process” before its conclusion.

    Akpabio said electoral reforms must be grounded in legal and institutional capacity, warning against imposing technology beyond the country’s infrastructure.

    “We insist that electoral reforms must be anchored in law, guided by capacity, secured against abuse and applied uniformly across the nation. Technology must serve democracy; it must not endanger democracy,” he said.

    He added: “You stay in a place that has no wire, no light, and you want to put in the law ‘real time.’ Progress must not bring about injustice.”

    The Senate President warned that mistrust of institutions without understanding legislative processes could weaken democracy.

    “When people do not understand their legislature, democracy is at risk. Democracy is measured not by passion alone, but by principles,” he said.

    He also recalled that the current Electoral Act enabled competitive elections in 2023, including losses by the then ruling party in key states.

    “This same Electoral Act made the incumbent party almost lose millions of votes. We lost in places like Lagos and Kano. New parties won whole regions with the same act, whether real-time electronic transfer or not,” he said.

    Akpabio concluded that laws must be made for posterity rather than partisan advantage, adding: “You don’t make law for an individual or for opposition. You make law to outlast you, for generations unborn.”

    Earlier in his opening remarks, the National Chairman of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) and former President of the Senate, Senator David Mark, who was the chairman of occasion, urged the National Assembly to pass the Bill and not to speak for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    “What the ADC is saying is, pass the law. Let INEC decide whether they can do it (real-time electronic transmission) or not. Don’t speak for INEC.

    “The stand of ADC is clear; pass the bill and let INEC decide on what it will do with it”, Mark said.

    Several speakers at the event, including Akwa Ibom State Governor, Pastor Umo Eno, and the book reviewer, Professor Maxwell Gidado SAN, praised Senator Bob’s courage in writing the book to bring to light the challenges the Nigerian legislator faces in the course of performing his duties.

    The author Senator Bob enumerated some of the challenges, saying that they included electoral battles, conflict with governors/godfathers, the judiciary through cancellation of victory, addressing the private issues of the electorate and self-inflicted challenges.

    “The courage to defend democracy is in the legislature and the legislators”, he said.

  • Electoral Act: SDP demands clear provision for electronic transmission of results

    Electoral Act: SDP demands clear provision for electronic transmission of results

    The Social Democratic Party (SDP) has called on the National Assembly to enact a new Electoral Act with a clear and unambiguous legislative mandate for the real-time electronic transmission of election results, warning that vague provisions could allow legal manipulation of future elections.

    Reacting to controversies surrounding the passage of the Electoral Act, the party, in a statement issued in Abuja on Friday by its National Publicity Secretary, Mr Araba Rufus Aiyenigba, cautioned the National Assembly, particularly the Senate, against acting contrary to the will of Nigerians.

    The SDP noted that Nigerians across the country have consistently expressed a desire for democratic consolidation that would move the nation beyond the challenges witnessed during the 2023 general elections.

    The party said Nigeria’s electoral system requires critical reforms to enhance transparency and rebuild public trust, stressing that the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) and the INEC Result Viewing Portal (IReV) are essential tools for reducing human error and preventing result manipulation during manual transmission by anti-democratic elements.

    Aiyenigba further argued that both Nigerian citizens and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) are eager to advance the integrity of the country’s electoral process. 

    He said this commitment is evident in the positive disposition of INEC’s new leadership to entrench transparency and conduct credible elections.

    Calling for vigilance, the party stated that INEC has demonstrated it possesses the infrastructure, technical capacity, political will and patriotic resolve to transmit election results in real time, provided it is allowed to carry out its constitutional duties without obstruction.

    Read Also: National Assembly committee to harmonise reworked Electoral Act Bill

    “It is mindful that eternal vigilance is  the price for freedom, that the SDP calls on the citizenry, civil society groups and  all democrats to step up strongly, their resistance against the few holders of our mandates, who are hell-bent on promoting and serving their interest against the true interest of Nigeria.

    “All hands must, therefore, be on deck to save our democracy and Nigeria from taking  retrograde steps in this new age.”

  • Electoral Act: Senate failed Nigerians, Opposition parties allege

    Electoral Act: Senate failed Nigerians, Opposition parties allege

    Some opposition political parties said on Thursday that the Nigerian Senate has failed the Nigerian people they swore to represent by rejecting the transmission of election results from polling units to the IREV in real time.

    The position of the opposition parties is contained in a statement jointly signed by the spokesmen of the Peoples Democratic Party, Comrade Ini Ememobong, the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, and the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), Bamofin Ladipo Johnson.

    They asked the conference committee to adopt the position of the House of Representatives and allow for the transmission of results

    The statement read, “Yesterday, the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria passed the amendment to the Electoral Act 2022, wherein, among other things, it rejected the proposal to make mandatory real-time electronic transmission of results at the polling units.

    “The grave implications of this retrogressive act by the Senate have compelled us as spokespersons of the major opposition political parties to jointly address this issue, which is capable of derailing our hard-earned democracy.

    “With this anti-people and anti-democratic action, we are concerned that the APC-led Senate may have set Nigeria’s democracy back by many decades. It is therefore not surprising that it has deservedly attracted widespread opposition and condemnation from Nigerians across all divides.

    “We are at a loss as to why a party that is currently deploying technology to run an e-registration of its members across the country is averse to using technology to transmit results.

    “We therefore harbour no doubts about the intention of the All Progressives Congress (APC), which is in firm control of the two chambers of the National Assembly. 

    They know Nigerians are fed up with them. They are aware of the rejection that awaits them at the forthcoming polls.

    “A free and fair election has therefore become a threat to them. This is why they have to preserve and protect any loopholes that could aid the manipulation of the electoral process to their advantage.

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    “However, regardless of their party affiliation, we would have expected the Senators to rise above party sentiments and act in the best interest of democracy, for which the legislature remains its most important symbol. But as usual, they failed the people they are supposed to represent.

    “In the last election, we are witnesses to the plethora of cases where the court, especially the Supreme Court, held that there was nowhere in the principal Act, which is the Electoral Act 2022, where electronic transmission was made mandatory, and therefore the act is lacking in legislative parentage.

    “This immediately signalled a lacuna that needed to be urgently fixed to ensure that future elections do not suffer the same fate. However, beyond providing a basis for judicial action in the future, the electronic transmission will increase transparency, trust, and belief in the electoral process, which in turn will deepen and consolidate democracy in our country. With this rejection, the Senate has returned Nigeria to square one.

    “The ball is now in the court of the conference committee, and we strongly urge its members to align themselves with the Nigerian people by adopting the position of the House of Representatives on mandatory real-time electronic transmission of election results.

    “They should not act as politicians, whose eyes and thoughts are only on the next elections, but as statesmen, who should have the next generation in mind. We are trusting that they will act in the best interest of the people, to forestall the negative consequences that may result in foisting anti-democratic laws on the people.”

  • Reps set up conference committee to harmonise Electoral Act

    Reps set up conference committee to harmonise Electoral Act

    The House of Representatives has constituted a conference committee to work with the Senate committee to harmonise the electoral act ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    While the House passed the act on the 23rd of December, 2025, the Senate on Wednesday passed the act with significant changes including reducing the period for issuance of the electoral timetable from 360 days to 180 days.

    While the House also approved electronic transmission of election results from the polling units to the IREV in real and simultaneously with physical collation, the Senate rejected the provision , choosing to allow the 2022 provisions which allows INEC to determine the mode of transmission.

    Spokesman of the House, Akintunde Rotimi said the conference committee was set up in accordance with legislative procedure for harmonising areas of difference between the versions of the Bill passed by both Chambers of the National Assembly.

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    According to him, the decision is contained in an internal correspondence dated Wednesday, February 4, 2026, signed by the Clerk to the House of Representatives, Dr. Yahaya Danzaria, conveying the directive of the Leadership of the House.

    Members of the committee led by the Chairman of the House Committee on Electoral Matters Adebayo Balogun (South West) include Fred Agbedi (south South), Sada Soli (North West), Ahmadu Jaha (North East), Iduma Igariwey Enwo (South East), Saidu Musa Abdullahi (North Central) and Zainab Gimba (representing the women).

    Rotimi said that the “Committee is mandated to confer with its counterpart from the Senate with a view to harmonising the differing provisions of the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill as passed by both Chambers, ahead of final passage by the National Assembly

    “The House of Representatives reiterates its commitment to advancing electoral reforms that strengthen transparency, credibility, and public confidence in Nigeria’s democratic process”.

  • Electoral Act amendments stall again after Senate’s second closed-door deadlock

    Electoral Act amendments stall again after Senate’s second closed-door deadlock

    The Senate on Tuesday again failed to conclude work on the much-anticipated Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill, retreating into another prolonged closed-door session that ended without clarity on the fate of the proposed reforms.

    Senators spent about four and a half hours deliberating behind closed doors on the report of the Senate Committee on Electoral Matters, chaired by Senator Simon Lalong, as well as submissions from an ad hoc panel set up last week to resolve contentious provisions of the bill.

    When plenary resumed at about 5:35pm, however, no details of the decisions reached were disclosed, leaving the bill in limbo for the second time in as many sittings.

    The executive session began shortly after 1:05pm when Senate Leader, Senator Opeyemi Bamidele, moved a motion for the Senate to dissolve into a Committee of the Whole for clause-by-clause consideration of the report.

    Although the ad hoc committee, headed by Senator Adeniyi Adegbonmire (Ondo Central), had its report listed on the Order Paper for presentation and final consideration, the chamber opted for secrecy.

    On resumption of plenary, Senate President Godswill Akpabio offered only a brief and non-specific account of the proceedings.

    “At the executive session, the Senate deliberated on matters relating to the working of the Senate in particular and the nation in general,” Akpabio said, before asking senators to confirm if the statement reflected what transpired.

    The chamber chorused “aye,” after which the gavel was struck, effectively closing the item without further explanation.

    Moments later, Senator Bamidele moved a motion for adjournment of plenary till Wednesday, with no indication of whether the bill had scaled third reading or when it would return for final passage.

    The repeated delay has heightened uncertainty around a bill widely regarded as critical to strengthening Nigeria’s electoral framework ahead of the 2027 polls.

    The proposed amendments seek to address loopholes observed in recent elections and boost public confidence in the process.

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    Key recommendations before the Senate include mandatory real-time electronic transmission of election results from polling units to the Independent National Electoral Commission’s Result Viewing Portal (IREV), tougher penalties for electoral offences such as result manipulation and ballot box snatching, and updated provisions to reflect current technology.

    Among the safeguards proposed is a new sub-clause to criminalise the failure of presiding officers to sign and stamp ballot papers and officially announced results.

    The committee also recommended replacing references to the “smart card reader” with the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) in Sections 47(2) and (3) of the Act.

    To protect vulnerable voters, the amendments to Section 54(1) would prohibit political party agents, candidates or their officials from accompanying visually impaired or incapacitated voters into voting cubicles.

    Stiffer sanctions are also proposed to deter vote trading, including increasing the fine for buying or selling Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) from N500,000 to N5 million.

    Despite the far-reaching nature of the proposals, Tuesday’s proceedings ended without a public resolution, further delaying a bill many stakeholders consider pivotal to credible elections and democratic consolidation.

  • Activist seeks Electoral Act amendment before primaries

    Activist seeks Electoral Act amendment before primaries

    An activist and advocate, Princess Abiodun Islamiyat Oyefusi, has urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to assent to the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill before the commencement of party primaries.

    She made the call in a legal brief, in which she also demanded strict and uniform enforcement of the amended law across Nigeria’s political system.

    The memorandum, dated February 2, and issued from the Royal Castle of Mercy, Lowa, Ikorodu, framed the proposed amendment as a constitutional and democratic imperative rather than a matter of administrative convenience or timing.

    Oyefusi warned that proceeding with party primaries under an outdated or uncertain legal framework could undermine the legitimacy of candidates, trigger extensive pre-election litigation, and erode public confidence in Nigeria’s democratic process.

    In the legal brief addressed to the President, Oyefusi raised three central questions: whether failure to enact the amendment before party primaries undermines legal certainty and the rule of law; whether legislative delay heightens the risk of pre-election disputes capable of disrupting the electoral calendar; and whether strict enforcement of the amended Act is essential to safeguarding internal party democracy and overall electoral integrity.

    Anchoring her arguments on provisions of the 1999 Constitution, including the sovereignty of the people and citizens’ right to political participation, Oyefusi also referenced the constitutional mandate of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the existing framework of the Electoral Act 2022.

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    She argued that electoral laws must be settled, clear, and enforceable before political parties begin their nomination processes.

    According to the brief, primaries conducted under a legal regime that is later amended are vulnerable to conflicting interpretations, disputes over retrospective application of the law, and possible judicial invalidation of nominations.

    Such uncertainty, she noted, offends the doctrine of legal certainty and destabilises the entire electoral process.

    Oyefusi further contended that delay in enacting the amendment weakens INEC institutionally, forcing the commission to operate within what she described as an “acknowledgedly deficient framework.”

    She warned that in such circumstances, INEC’s guidelines lack firm statutory backing, while its regulatory and enforcement actions become more susceptible to legal challenge.

    Timely assent to the amendment, she argued, would empower INEC to regulate party primaries with greater clarity, authority, and confidence.

    Drawing from Nigeria’s electoral history, the brief linked the majority of pre-election disputes to flawed party primaries. Oyefusi cautioned that legislative delay encourages forum shopping by aggrieved aspirants, produces conflicting court decisions, and places additional strain on the judiciary, with potential consequences for electoral timelines and outcomes.

    She maintained that enacting the amendment before primaries would establish a uniform legal standard applicable to all political parties, thereby significantly reducing litigation risks.

    On the issue of internal party democracy, Oyefusi described it as a legal obligation rather than a political ideal.

    She noted that the proposed amendments seek to clarify delegate eligibility, regulate nomination procedures, and prescribe sanctions for non-compliance by political parties. Without timely enactment and firm enforcement, she warned, party leaderships would continue to exercise excessive discretion, enabling manipulation, exclusion, and arbitrary outcomes that undermine democratic norms within parties.

    The brief also linked early and even-handed enforcement of the amended law to public trust and democratic legitimacy.

    Oyefusi argued that electoral credibility begins long before election day, at the stage where candidates emerge from party processes.

    She warned that unclear or selectively enforced rules diminish public confidence, while rigorous and uniform enforcement signals transparency and respect for voters’ choices.

    Emphasising that “legislation without enforcement is ineffectual,” Oyefusi called on INEC to apply the amended provisions uniformly and without political accommodation.

    She also urged that political parties be held strictly accountable for compliance and that the courts resist technical manoeuvres that defeat the clear intent of the legislature.

    Selective or weak enforcement, she cautioned, would only perpetuate the systemic defects the amendment seeks to address.

    Oyefusi described the signing of the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill before party primaries as a legal and democratic necessity.

    She warned that any delay could undermine legal certainty, fuel avoidable litigation, weaken institutional authority, and compromise the integrity of the electoral process.

    She therefore urged President Tinubu to assent to the bill without delay, called on INEC to immediately issue binding guidelines aligned with the amended Act, and demanded that political parties be compelled to demonstrate strict compliance as a condition for candidate recognition.

    According to her, decisive and uniform enforcement of the amended law is critical to safeguarding Nigeria’s democratic credibility ahead of future elections.

  • Constitution Review, Electoral Act, 2026 budget top Senate’s agenda on resumption

    Constitution Review, Electoral Act, 2026 budget top Senate’s agenda on resumption

    The Senate will, upon full resumption from its Yuletide recess, prioritise the consideration and passage of the Constitution Review Bills, amendments to the Electoral Act, and this year’s Appropriation Bill, The Nation has learnt.

    Although the Senate is scheduled to reconvene on Tuesday, January 27, plenary proceedings are expected to be suspended in honour of the late Senator Godiya Akwashiki, who passed on during the recess.

    Sources said the Red Chamber would adjourn sitting shortly after convergence, with substantive legislative business expected to start on the next legislative day.

    But ranking lawmakers stated that three major national issues would dominate the Senate’s agenda upon full resumption: the report of the Senate Ad Hoc Committee on the Review of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill, and the consideration and passage of this year’s budget.

    A senior lawmaker, who spoke in confidence with The Nation, confirmed that the Constitution Review report, chaired by Deputy Senate President Barau Jibrin, is ready for presentation, consideration, and passage.

    According to the source, the report was initially scheduled for consideration before the Senate proceeded on recess but was deferred due to the presentation of the 2026 budget by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, which the Senate has already passed for second reading.

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    “Yes, it was supposed to be presented and considered before the recess, but because of the budget presentation, it was stepped down,” the source said.

    “Now, one of the top items before the Senate on resumption will be the presentation and consideration of the Constitution Review report.

    “The Deputy Senate President, as Chairman of the Ad-hoc Committee, will lay the report before the Senate, after which the bills will be taken clause by clause and passed, subject to the required constitutional majority,” the source revealed.

    Also listed as a priority is the amendment of the 2022 Electoral Act, which lawmakers said has become urgent ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    The urgency is driven by the statutory requirement that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) must issue its notice of election and election timetable at least 360 days before polling day.

    With timelines for political party primaries under the existing Electoral Act rapidly approaching, the Senate is under pressure to conclude work on the amendment bill without delay.

    The House of Representatives has already passed its version of the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill.

    The President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio, had earlier assured Nigerians that all amendments to the Electoral Act would be concluded in good time for the 2027 elections.

    Speaking through his Special Adviser on Constitutional Matters, Dr. Monday Ubani (SAN), Akpabio said the Senate would take up the Bill immediately after resumption.

    Ubani, responding to questions from the AdvoKC Foundation, a civil society organisation, expressed confidence that the legislative process would be concluded swiftly, with presidential assent expected by the first week of February.

    “The timeline is critical, considering the legal requirement for INEC to issue a notice of election at least one year before the polling day,” Ubani said.

    “With the House of Representatives having passed its version, the process is already at an advanced stage. Once the Senate resumes, it will certainly pass the Bill,” he added.

    In addition to electoral and constitutional reforms, lawmakers said the Senate would intensify work on the 2026 Appropriation Bill, including committee-level scrutiny, harmonisation of reports, and final passage to ensure timely implementation of the fiscal plan.

    Efforts to get comments from the Chairman, Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Senator Adeyemi Adaramodu (APC, Ekiti South), were unsuccessful as he neither answered calls nor responded to messages as of the time of filing this report.

  • Electoral Act: Reps okay 10-year jail term for offenders

    Electoral Act: Reps okay 10-year jail term for offenders

    Anybody found to have forged nomination papers, election result forms, or willfully defaced or destroyed nomination papers during elections runs the risk of a 10-year jail term or N75 million fine as approval by the House of Representatives yesterday.

    Considering amendment to the 2022 Electoral Act, the House approved an increase in the fine from N50 million, while improper use of the voter card is to attract a fine of N5 million.

    But the House failed to approve the recommendation which imposes a two-year jail term on persons that financially or materially induces a delegate for the purpose of influencing the outcome of party primaries, congresses and convention following arguments by members that it could be used against candidates by political opponents.

    The House also deleted the clause that recommends the cancellation of polls and conduct of fresh elections whenever over-voting is established.

     It approved a new provision which provides that when there is over-voting, the excess figures should be deducted from the scores of all the candidate, while the presiding officer in such polling unit should be prosecuted.

    Addressing newsmen after the plenary, Chairman of the House Committee on Electoral Matters, Adebayo Balogun, said the Electoral Bill 2025 was originally introduced as a Bill for an Act to repeal the Electoral Act 2022 and enact a new Electoral Act for Nigeria.

    He said: “This approach was informed by our collective desire to build on the gains of recent elections and to respond to emerging challenges and opportunities within our electoral system.

    “The Committee, guided by stakeholder engagements, public hearings, and expert submissions, initially proposed far-reaching reforms intended to modernise and strengthen our electoral framework.

    “Among the reforms canvassed were provisions on early voting, inmate voting, the replacement of the Permanent Voter Card with more technology-driven voter accreditation mechanisms, adjustments to electoral timelines, and other innovations that, if adopted, would have significantly altered the structure, philosophy, and core provisions of the Electoral Act 2022.

    “However, as the legislative process progressed, particularly during the sittings of the National Assembly Joint Committee on Electoral Matters, it became evident that many of these far-reaching proposals did not command the support of the majority of members across the two Chambers, nor did they enjoy sufficient consensus among key stakeholders.

    “In legislative practice, a repeal of an existing law and enactment of a new law is appropriate where the proposed changes fundamentally transform the identity of the principal Act.

    “In this instance, because several of the proposed provisions such as Early Voting, Inmate Voting, Removal of the Permanent Voters Card (PVC), Election Timelines amongst others, that would have occasioned such a fundamental transformation were not approved at the committee stage, the House, sitting as a Committee of the Whole during the consideration of the report, wisely resolved that it would be more appropriate to proceed by way of amendment rather than outright repeal of the Electoral Act 2022.

    “This decision is not a setback to the electoral reform. Rather, it reflects the maturity of our democracy and the responsibility of Parliament to legislate in a manner that is inclusive, balanced, and anchored on broad agreement.

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    “Courts, including Nigerian courts following common law principles, consistently hold that what matters is the effect of the legislation, not its label.

    “You will notice that despite the rigorous work done by the Electoral Committee, there were also very meaningful amendments introduced by members of the House during the consideration of the report in the Committee of the Whole, indicating a robust debate and reflection of the immense importance attached to the Electoral Bill 2025 by the House of Representatives.

    “The Electoral Act 2022 remains one of the most progressive electoral laws in our history, and the amendments proposed under the Electoral Bill 2025 are designed to consolidate its strengths, address observed gaps, and improve implementation, without undermining the stability of the existing legal framework.

    “I want to assure Nigerians that the House Committee on Electoral Matters has conducted this process with utmost transparency and diligence. We engaged widely with the Independent National Electoral Commission, security agencies, civil society organizations, political parties, professional bodies, development partners, and citizens across the country. The outcome before the House today is a product of those engagements and reflects the realities of consensus-building in a democratic legislature.

    “While some innovative proposals could not be accommodated at this stage, they remain part of our national discourse on electoral reform. As our democracy evolves and wider consensus is achieved, such ideas can be revisited in the future through further legislative intervention.

    “As we have concluded consideration of this report, I reaffirm the commitment of the House of Representatives, and indeed the National Assembly, to credible elections, democratic stability, and the continuous improvement of our electoral laws.

    “Our goal remains clear: to ensure that every election in Nigeria is transparent, inclusive, secure, and truly reflective of the will of the Nigerian people”.

  • Electoral Act: Reps approve 10-year jail term, N75m fine for forgery of election documents

    Electoral Act: Reps approve 10-year jail term, N75m fine for forgery of election documents

    The House of Representatives on Thursday approved a 10-year jail term or a fine of N75 million for anyone found guilty of forging nomination papers or result forms, or willfully defacing or destroying election-related documents.

    The decision followed the House’s consideration of amendments to the 2022 Electoral Act, during which lawmakers approved an upward review of the fine from N50 million. 

    The House also approved a fine of N5 million for the improper use of a voter’s card.

    However, the lawmakers rejected a recommendation seeking to impose a two-year jail term on individuals who financially or materially induce delegates to influence the outcome of party primaries, congresses or conventions. Members argued that such a provision could be abused by political opponents to witch-hunt candidates.

    The House also deleted an existing provision that mandates the cancellation of votes and the conduct of a fresh election in polling units where over-voting is established.

    Instead, it approved a new provision stipulating that where over-voting occurs, the excess votes should be deducted from the scores of all candidates, while the presiding officer at the affected polling unit should be prosecuted.

    Addressing newsmen after the plenary, Chairman of the House Committee non Electoral Matters, Adebayo Balogun said the Electoral Bill 2025 was originally introduced as a Bill for an Act to repeal the Electoral Act 2022 and enact a new Electoral Act for Nigeria. 

    He said, “This approach was informed by our collective desire to build on the gains of recent elections and to respond to emerging challenges and opportunities within our electoral system. The Committee, guided by stakeholder engagements, public hearings, and expert submissions, initially proposed far-reaching reforms intended to modernize and strengthen our electoral framework.

    “Among the reforms canvassed were provisions on early voting, inmate voting, the replacement of the Permanent Voters’ Card with more technology-driven voter accreditation mechanisms, adjustments to electoral timelines, and other innovations that, if adopted, would have significantly altered the structure, philosophy, and core provisions of the Electoral Act 2022.

    “However, as the legislative process progressed, particularly during the sittings of the National Assembly Joint Committee on Electoral Matters, it became evident that many of these far-reaching proposals did not command the support of the majority of members across the two Chambers, nor did they enjoy sufficient consensus among key stakeholders.

    “In legislative practice, a repeal of an existing law and enactment of a new law is appropriate where the proposed changes fundamentally transform the identity of the principal Act. 

    “In this instance, because several of the proposed provisions such as Early Voting, Inmate Voting, Removal of the Permanent Voters Card (PVC), Election Timelines amongst others, that would have occasioned such a fundamental transformation were not approved at the committee stage, the House, sitting as a Committee of the Whole during the consideration of the report, wisely resolved that it would be more appropriate to proceed by way of amendment rather than outright repeal of the Electoral Act 2022.

    “This decision is not a setback to the electoral reform. Rather, it reflects the maturity of our democracy and the responsibility of Parliament to legislate in a manner that is inclusive, balanced, and anchored on broad agreement.

    “Courts, including Nigerian courts following common law principles, consistently hold that what matters is the effect of the legislation, not its label.

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    “You will notice that despite the rigorous work done by the Electoral Committee, there were also very meaningful amendments introduced by Members of the House during the consideration of the report in the Committee of the Whole, indicating a robust debate and reflection of the immense importance attached to the Electoral Bill 2025 by the House of Representatives.

    “The Electoral Act 2022 remains one of the most progressive electoral laws in our history, and the amendments proposed under the Electoral Bill 2025 are designed to consolidate its strengths, address observed gaps, and improve implementation, without undermining the stability of the existing legal framework.

    “I want to assure Nigerians that the House Committee on Electoral Matters has conducted this process with utmost transparency and diligence. We engaged widely with the Independent National Electoral Commission, security agencies, civil society organizations, political parties, professional bodies, development partners, and citizens across the country. The outcome before the House today is a product of those engagements and reflects the realities of consensus-building in a democratic legislature.

    “While some innovative proposals could not be accommodated at this stage, they remain part of our national discourse on electoral reform. As our democracy evolves and wider consensus is achieved, such ideas can be revisited in the future through further legislative intervention.

    “As we have concluded consideration of this report, I reaffirm the commitment of the House of Representatives, and indeed the National Assembly, to credible elections, democratic stability, and the continuous improvement of our electoral laws. Our goal remains clear: to ensure that every election in Nigeria is transparent, inclusive, secure, and truly reflective of the will of the Nigerian people.

  • Electoral Act, Constitution amendment top new legislative session

    Electoral Act, Constitution amendment top new legislative session

    The Senate will begin a busy legislative quarter after an eight-week annual vacation tomorrow.

    Top of the agenda are the 2026 budget, constitution amendment and the Electoral Act.

    Among such legislation is the ongoing alteration process of the 1999 Constitution.

    The House of Representatives, last week, held its National Public Hearing on about 86 constitutional amendment bills.

    The Senate is expected to conduct a similar process ahead of the presentation of the report of its Ad Hoc Committee on Constitution Review for consideration and passage.

    All bills passed by both chambers after due voting would be sent to the state Houses of Assembly for further consideration and passage.

    Read Also: 2027: EU calls for timely electoral reforms to restore public confidence, facilitate credible elections

    Two-thirds of the Houses of Assembly must concur with the National Assembly before any bill can stand.

    Thereafter, all the bills passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives would be compiled by the National Assembly and transmitted to the President for assent.

    Also, another critical legislation is the 2022 Electoral Act Amendment Bill.

    Both chambers have promised to prioritise the passage of some of the amendments being sought ahead of the 2027 general election.

    While receiving the Head of European Union Election Observation Mission (EOM) to the 2023 general election, Mr Barry Andrews, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Abbas Tajudeen, said the House would fast-track the passage of the amendments upon resumption.

    ‘Senate to avoid Akpoti-Uduaghan’s distraction’

    The suspended Kogi Central Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan’s office was unsealed on September 23 by the Sergeant-At-Arms.

    She was accompanied to her office by a crowd of supporters.

    Sources said the Senate has resolved to put the issue behind it and allow the matter to end.

    According to a source, the Senate has decided to leave the issue and allow Akpoti-Uduaghan to return in order not to stir further controversy that may distract it from focusing on crucial tasks before it.