Tag: PAACA

  • PAACA urges Nigerians to scrutinise political parties ahead of 2027 polls

    PAACA urges Nigerians to scrutinise political parties ahead of 2027 polls

    The Peering Advocacy and Advancement Centre in Africa (PAACA) has called on Nigerians to closely monitor the activities of politicians and political parties as preparations intensify for the 2027 general election.

    Executive Director of PAACA, Ezenwa Nwagwu, made the appeal in a statement issued in Abuja, stressing that public attention should extend beyond the Election Management Body to the internal democratic practices of political parties.

    Nwagwu noted that the quality of primary elections often determines the credibility of the eventual general elections, warning that flawed primaries frequently produce disputed or unpopular candidates.

    “Nigerians underestimate the role political parties play in the outcome of general elections. If the primary elections are compromised, the outcome will reflect in the main polls. About 90 percent of the challenges in our elections stem from weak internal democracy—imposition of candidates, absence of genuine contests, and limited competition within parties,” he said.

    He spoke against the backdrop of the expected resumption of deliberations by the National Assembly on electoral reforms and possible amendments to the Electoral Act.

    The PAACA director further urged citizens and stakeholders to monitor the growing wave of defections across political parties and assess its implications for internal cohesion and stability within the political system.

    He said, “Stakeholders must pay keen attention to what the political parties are doing. We cannot be described as meddlesome interlopers in the affairs of people who recruit leaders for us. The leader’s selection process is a sacred assignment that the political parties are involved in. They are the ones who present candidates. INEC does not present candidates. Sometimes they even present unqualified candidates, and the matter ends up in court”.

    He stressed that reforms must go beyond passing new laws every election season, arguing that politicians must embrace a change in their attitudes towards elections and democracy.

    “We may have all the good laws, but at the end of the day, it comes down to the attitude of politicians,” Nwagwu said.

    “So, as we go into 2027, the reforms are not just going to be legalistic reforms. We must examine how much we have shifted from our subversive attitude to the laws that already exist. Because even when you make new laws, the politicians who make the laws go back to study how to subvert them,” Nwagwu stated further.

    Nwagwu faulted what he described as the over-concentration on INEC, noting that election administrators often become scapegoats for crises orchestrated by political actors.

    “The challenge is that all of us are fixated on the election administrator whose job is simply to conduct elections. But politicians sometimes go behind to compromise the administrator and subvert the rules. About 60 per cent of electoral crises are orchestrated by political actors themselves,” he said.

    He warned that as 2027 approaches, citizens must remain vigilant and resist attempts by politicians to dominate and divert public discourse.

    “We will begin to see the heating up of the polity from February. Politicians have mastered the art of diverting attention from the real issues, and citizens must not allow them to control the narrative,” he cautioned.

    Nwagwu predicted that in 2026, Nigerians would see an increase in self-promotion by politicians.

    He said, “We will see an increase in awards (governor of the year, politician of the year). We will see an increase in self-promotion. As citizens, it is our duty to hold them accountable to ask, “How did you improve the lives of Nigerians, in health education and so on?”

    He criticised lawmakers who, according to him, return home during holidays to distribute food items without engaging constituents meaningfully.

    “Many lawmakers went home to share rice, but none held town hall meetings to explain how they have been representing their people in Abuja,” he said.

    On reforms, the PAACA executive director identified result management as a key area requiring urgent attention.

    “The real challenge is collation. What we need is a system that allows electronic collation of results from polling units to local governments. IReV is not a coalition,” he clarified.

    He also called for the expansion of Nigeria’s democratic space through reforms such as reserved seats for women, diaspora voting, and early voting.

    Nwagwu lamented what he described as the absence of ideological opposition in Nigeria’s political space, noting that the country has “opposition figures, not opposition parties.”

    “These figures are largely incoherent in their policy perspectives. Many of them are not new actors, yet there is no imagination or alternative vision on how the economy should be run. What we see repeatedly is the same IMF-driven agenda of privatisation,” he said.

    He added that a review of Nigeria’s economic outlook over the last four decades shows little deviation or innovation in policy direction, regardless of which party is in power.

  • Ignorance biggest threat to Nigeria’s democracy — PAACA boss

    Ignorance biggest threat to Nigeria’s democracy — PAACA boss

    Widespread ignorance among citizens has been identified as the biggest threat confronting Nigeria’s electoral process and democracy, warning that unless it is urgently addressed, efforts to deepen democracy ahead of 2027 polls will remain superficial.

    Executive Director of the Peering Advocacy and Advancement Centre in Africa (PAACA), Mr. Ezenwa Nwagwu, stated this while speaking at a one-day town hall meeting on electoral reform organised by PAACA in Kaduna on Wednesday, adding that, the organisation had been traversing the country’s geopolitical zones to sensitise citizens on the electoral process, its inherent challenges, and recent innovations that could strengthen democracy if properly understood.

    According to him, “It’s been very humbling. Across the country, more and more people are eager to understand how the process works. Once they do, we’ll have a better electoral environment by 2027,” he said. But he quickly added:

    “The biggest challenge remains ignorance. In a hall of 30 people, we found only six who even had copies of the Electoral Act or the Constitution. If citizens don’t engage with the documents that govern elections, what we’re treating are mere symptoms, not the root cause.”

    Nwagwu highlighted how PAACA, with support from the MacArthur Foundation, is working with partners to demystify the electoral process and empower citizens to ask tough questions and hold politicians accountable.

    He also pointed to major improvements in Nigeria’s electoral system which, he noted, often go uncelebrated.

    “The introduction of technologies like BVAS and the IReV has quietly revolutionised the process. For example, in Anambra, candidate nominations closed without the usual noise about substitutions. This is because INEC’s new upload system blocked politicians from besieging the commission at the last minute with conflicting lists,” he explained.

    According to him, BVAS has similarly curtailed bloated voter registers by verifying identities on Election Day. “Before, some states had inflated registers but recorded half the turnout. Now, the biometric system has fixed that. These are incremental gains we must acknowledge even as we push for more improvements,” he said.

    Nwagwu urged journalists not to only focus on electoral flaws but also spotlight systemic shifts that could gradually deepen democratic culture. “While we keep an eye on what didn’t go well, we must also highlight progress. That’s how to build trust and sustain reforms,” he stressed.

    Also speaking at the event, Kaduna State Director of the National Orientation Agency (NOA), Mr Danjuma Makama, said the agency remained committed to educating citizens on electoral laws, party symbols and voting procedures. He noted that during the 2023 elections, NOA worked to combat vote buying and electoral violence through grassroots campaigns.

    “The last elections exposed both our vulnerabilities and strengths. We saw voter inducement and violence, but also resilience. Going forward, NOA will intensify efforts to promote peaceful participation and voter education,” Makama assured.

    On his part, Chairman of the Conference of Nigeria Political Parties (CNPP) in Kaduna, Mr Mikailu Abubakar, described electoral reform as “a national imperative.” He called for further strengthening of INEC’s independence, electronic transmission of results, improved security for voters and officials, and deliberate inclusion of women, youth and persons with disabilities.

    “Our democracy must reflect fairness and equal opportunity for all. These town halls are essential platforms for advocacy and institutional change,” he said, urging participants to approach discussions with patriotism and an open mind.

    Read Also: PAACA lauds Tinubu, INEC for sacking three suspended RECs

    Representing the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), CSC Ndan Nicholas Kur emphasised the importance of collaboration among security agencies, INEC, political parties and the media to secure the electoral space.

    Kur said the 2023 elections offered vital lessons, citing INEC’s own data showing an 11.27% increase in registered voters and over 180 incidents of violence across 18 states, with Kano topping the chart. “Strengthening inter-agency coordination, civic education, and conflict resolution mechanisms are key as we move forward,” he said.

    The town hall concluded with stakeholders reaffirming their commitment to push for credible, inclusive and technology-driven elections that truly reflect the will of Nigerians.

  • Bill seeking to peg age limit for President, Gov undemocratic, says group

    Bill seeking to peg age limit for President, Gov undemocratic, says group

    The Peering Advocacy and Advancement Centre in Africa (PAACA) has kicked against the proposed bill by the House of Representatives seeking to set an age limit of 60 years for Presidential, Governorship, and Deputy Governorship candidates, describing it as a violation of democratic principles.

    The Executive Director of PAACA, Ezenwa Nwagwu, who spoke with reporters in Abuja argued that restricting individuals from contesting elections based on age is undemocratic and infringes on their constitutional rights.

    “A democracy should be about inclusivity, not exclusion. Denying anyone the right to contest based on age alone shrinks the democratic space rather than expanding it, in deed the progressive and radical consideration should be removing age limits for voting and being voted for, ” Nwagwu stated.

    The bill, which seeks to bar individuals above 60 years from running for presidential and governorship offices, passed its second reading in the House of Representatives last Thursday. 

    A section of the bill also stipulates that “a person shall be qualified for election to the office of the President if he has been educated up to at least university level and has earned a Bachelor’s degree in his chosen field of study.”

    Nwagwu questioned the rationale behind the proposed age limit, stating that there is no scientific evidence to suggest that individuals below 60 years perform better in office than those above that age.

    He said: “At a time when there is a strong clamor for expanding the democratic space, lawmakers should not be shrinking it. Leadership should be about competence, vision, and the ability to deliver, not about an arbitrary age limit.”

    Nwagwu, however, argued that educational qualifications do not necessarily guarantee good governance or better performance in office.

    He pointed out that the drafters of the 1999 Constitution deliberately set the educational requirement at the ability to read and write to promote inclusivity.

    “There are countless examples of individuals with high academic qualifications who have failed in leadership, just as there are those with minimal formal education who have excelled. The focus should be on capacity, integrity, and competence,” he emphasised.

    Beyond the age limit and educational requirements, Nwagwu also raised concerns about another proposed bill seeking to conduct all elections in Nigeria on a single day. 

    While acknowledging the need for electoral reforms, he cautioned against rushing into changes without adequate preparation.

    Read Also: House of Representatives passes Tax Reform Bills

    “Trying new approaches in our democratic experience is good, but we must be careful not to erode some of the gains already made. The crisis of elections in Nigeria can not be said to be necessarily because they are staggered; rather, it is due to the manifest attitudes of stakeholders, including politicians, electorates, security agencies, and electoral officials,” he said.

    Nwagwu highlighted the infrastructural challenges that make conducting elections in one day difficult, if not impossible, particularly in backwater communities and suburbans 

    He added: “Sometimes, people make these proposals from an urban lens. The reality is evidently different in many parts of Nigeria. There are communities where people travel for hours by boat. Motorcycles and donkeys just to cast their votes.

    “We do not yet have the logistical and infrastructural capacity to conduct elections in one day without disenfranchising voters.”