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House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules - Politics - Nairaland

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House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Racoon(op): 5:45pm On Jul 31, 2025
"Nigeria’s Electoral System Under Review: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules, and Unified Election Day."
Nigeria’s drive to overhaul its electoral process has taken centre stage as the House of Representatives undertakes a comprehensive review of constitutional amendments aimed at strengthening electoral integrity ahead of the 2027 general elections. Central to this legislative push is an Electoral Reform Bill, made up of 12 interconnected proposals that collectively seek to enhance transparency, participation, and accountability across all levels of the electoral system.

According to the Summarised Compendium of Bills released by the Constitution Review Committee, the reforms are designed to address structural inefficiencies, expand democratic access, and curb long-standing abuses within Nigeria’s political system. Zonal public hearings are underway to gather citizen input before the final versions are adopted.

Opening the Political Space: Independent Candidacy and Party Reforms

At the heart of the reform agenda is HB. 1630, which proposes allowing Nigerians to contest for political office without party sponsorship. This is a game-changing initiative that would democratize access to the ballot, especially for individuals sidelined by party politics. However, there are concerns of an overcrowded ballot, fragmented votes, and logistical complications for election management.

In a bid to reinforce fairness within political parties, HB. 1381 would require party executives to resign before contesting elective office. This measure aims to prevent the misuse of party machinery and ensure internal democracy. However, it may result in the premature departure of experienced leaders or the manipulation of resignation timing.

Strengthening INEC and Institutional Independence

Another high-profile bill, HB. 1589 proposes involving the National Judicial Council (NJC) in appointing the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). This aims to reduce presidential overreach and enhance INEC’s independence. While it could build public trust in electoral neutrality, there are concerns that it might politicise the NJC or spark institutional rivalries.

Additionally, HB. 1217 seeks to establish a Political Parties Registration and Regulatory Commission (PPRRC), which would take over the responsibility of party registration and regulation from INEC. This would allow INEC to focus strictly on elections, while the new body monitors party compliance and finances. However, there might be potential jurisdictional overlaps and risks of politicisation.

Tightening Rules on Defections and Accountability

Addressing the culture of political defections, HB. 994 aims to redefine what constitutes “gross misconduct” by including unjustified defections as grounds for impeachment of presidents and governors. This is intended to protect the integrity of electoral mandates, but could also open the door to politically motivated impeachment efforts.

Building on that, HB. 2167 mandates that lawmakers must officially resign from their political party before defecting to another. The bill encourages ideological consistency and transparency but has raised constitutional concerns regarding freedom of association and the complexity of legal enforcement.

Reforming Election Timing and Logistics

A structural shift is proposed in HB. 1306 is to hold all general elections, presidential, governorship, and legislative, on the same day. This aims to reduce election costs, curb manipulation of staggered outcomes, and boost voter turnout. Nonetheless, it would place immense pressure on INEC, security forces, and logistical operations nationwide.

HB. 2166 adds flexibility by proposing that election timelines be regulated under the Electoral Act rather than being constitutionally fixed, allowing for more adaptive scheduling in response to unforeseen circumstances.

Ensuring Legal and Electoral Integrity

To address election-related crimes, HB. 1219 proposes the establishment of an Electoral Offences Commission tasked with investigating and prosecuting electoral violations. This could significantly reduce impunity but would require careful implementation to avoid political weaponisation.

HB. 1154 ensures that all pre-election disputes are resolved before candidates are sworn into office, preventing legal uncertainty after elections are concluded.

Another crucial proposal, HB. 1581, seeks to preserve election outcomes even if a deputy (running mate) is disqualified, shielding the will of the electorate from being overturned by procedural flaws.

INEC’s Expanded Mandate for Local Elections

HB. 1649 proposes empowering INEC to conduct local government elections, a role currently performed by state electoral commissions that are often criticised for partisanship. This would standardise local elections across the country and potentially enhance credibility, though it would significantly expand INEC’s already demanding responsibilities.

The reform package is promising, particularly the proposals on independent candidacy, pre-election dispute resolution, and INEC appointment procedures. However, many remain wary of the power shifts and tighter accountability measures embedded in the bills.

With zonal public hearings ongoing and public opinion being considered, the National Assembly stands at a pivotal moment. The outcome of these legislative efforts will not only shape the conduct of the 2027 elections but also define the long-term credibility, inclusiveness, and resilience of Nigeria’s democracy.

List of Electoral Reform Bills Under Review
HB. 1630 – Independent Candidacy for Elections
HB. 1589 – NJC Involvement in Appointing INEC Chairman
HB. 994 – Redefining Grounds for Removal of President/Governor
HB. 2167 – Requiring Official Resignation Before Defection
HB. 1381 – Mandatory Resignation of Party Executives Seeking Office
HB. 1306 – Holding All General Elections on the Same Day.


HB. 1217 – Establishing the Political Parties Registration and Regulatory Commission (PPRRC)
HB. 1219 – Creation of the Electoral Offences Commission
HB. 1649 – Empowering INEC to Conduct Local Government Elections


HB. 1154 – Pre-Election Dispute Resolution Before Swearing-In
HB. 1581 – Preserving Elections Despite Deputy Candidate Disqualification
HB. 2166 – Moving Election Timeline Regulation to Electoral Act.
https://westafricaweekly.com/nigerias-electoral-system-under-review-house-of-reps-proposes-independent-candidacy-inec-reform-defection-rules-and-unified-election-day/

Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Racoon(op): 5:53pm On Jul 31, 2025
"..The lack of a functional Biometric Voters Registration (BVR) System accounts for much of the abuse of the current process. The debate over BVR goes to the fundamental quality of our elections.

With BVR we have a chance at honest elections. Without it, we are doomed to repeat past failures. This system was applied in Ghana. It worked. Other African countries – Burkina Faso, Sierra Leone, Kenya and Tanzania – used biometric registers and validation system for their general elections.
It worked.


If Nigeria truly is the leader and giant of Africa, let us act like it. If smaller nations can take this step to assume the continental lead in the quality and integrity of their electoral processes, let us regain the leadership role by taking the necessary step to embrace this system as well.

The objective of the data capture and finger printing is to eliminate multiple voting. However, INEC’s present system negates this. Why take fingerprints, capture biometric data and then discard the information on the all-important voting day by resorting to manual accreditation?

Unless INEC embraces biometric verification and revalidation during the exercise, our elections will remain more an exercise in deception and subterfuge than in democracy and probity.... "
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Racoon(op): 5:57pm On Jul 31, 2025
“The care of human life and happiness is the only legitimate object of good government." ( Jeffersonian Credo ).
This noble objective starts with a good and credible legislative electioneering and democratic processes. Can Nigeria gets it right? Fingers crossed.
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Racoon(op): 6:08pm On Jul 31, 2025
I put everything aside to watch the ruling of the Presidential Election Petition Court, PEPC, from start to finish, on September 6! With rapt attention, I absorbed the minutiae of the very detailed verdict. But after the 13-hour-long ruling, I was utterly despondent. For, instead of safeguarding Nigeria’s democracy, protecting the integrity of future presidential elections and establishing boundaries for integrity politics in Nigeria, the court did the contrary!

Let me start with two general observations. First, the judges worked to a predetermined answer. Because they couldn’t bring themselves to annul the election of a sitting president, unprecedented in Nigeria, they found every reason to affirm Bola tinubu’s election. Courts of first instance are fact-finding courts that seek to get to the bottom of a matter to do justice. But the PEPC used every conceivable procedural technicality to reject virtually all the facts and witnesses presented by Peter Obi and Atiku Abubakar.

At one point, a cynical thought ran through my mind: Did INEC’s and tinubu’s lawyers write the verdict for the judges? I quickly dismissed the thought but was struck by how the judges treated Obi’s and Atiku’s lawyers, most of them Senior Advocates of Nigeria, SANs, like morons, who were utterly incompetent and ignorant of the law, but treated INEC’s and tinubu’s lawyers with total deference, regurgitating their arguments.


The second observation is that the judges’ interventions and tone betrayed their biases. For instance, one judge read out the results of the presidential election in the five South-East states and said that “INEC must be an abysmally poor manipulator, if not even an imbecilic one”, to have allowed Obi, instead of tinubu, to win massively in those states. In other words, if INEC really manipulated the election, tinubu should have won in the South-East.

Really? The learned judge failed to realise that it’s almost impossible to rig an election where one party is extremely strong, and another is extremely weak; that elections are usually rigged where two parties are fairly equally strong such that it’s easier to manipulate votes and tip the balance in favour of one and against the other. Yet, the erudite judge made hay of the argument that Obi won massively in the South-East, his core base, to “prove” that the presidential election was free and fair, making INEC’s and tinubu’s case for them!


Leaving aside those general observations, what about the substantive issues? These were FCT’s status; tinubu’s drug-related forfeiture; pleadings and evidence; and the role of INEC. In my view, the PEPC’s decisions were skewed in favour of tinubu and INEC. There were perfectly legitimate and reasonable positions the court could have taken, if so inclined.

Let’s start with the FCT issue. The PEPC rejected a literal interpretation of section 134(2)(b) of the 1999 Constitution on whether a winning candidate must score at least one-quarter of the votes cast in Abuja. It said that only a broader interpretation would align with the intention of the framers of the Constitution regarding “equality of citizens” and “equality of rights”, set out in the Preamble. Thus, the court said FCT’s votes couldn’t be decisive, stating: “Equality of rights in every citizen cannot exclude equality of the weight and value of their votes. No, it includes it.”

But if the principle of “equality of the weight and value of votes” is constitutional and sacrosanct, why did the votes of 8.8million (37 percent) who voted for tinubu carry more weight and value than those of 15.2million (63 percent) who rejected him? Why should 37 percent of voters have a veto over 63 percent? The court ruled that tinubu scored “the majority of lawful votes cast at the election”. The total lawful votes cast at the presidential election was 24 million. Is 8.8million the majority of 24 million? Certainly not!

Strangely, while the PEPC adopted a broader interpretation on FCT’s status to give tinubu an escape route, it adopted a narrower one on the issue of dishonesty to give him another lifeline

According to INEC, tinubu scored the “highest” votes among the presidential candidates, but not “the majority of the lawful votes cast at the election.” Surely, if votes were to have equal weight and value, a winning presidential candidate should have the majority of all the votes cast, not just the highest among the candidates. Since that’s not the constitutional position, it’s wrong to decide the FCT issue on the basis of “equality of the weight and value of votes"

Similarly flawed is the recourse to section 299 of the Constitution, which says FCT should be treated “as if it were” a state. The phrase “as if” is figurative. Abuja is not literally a state. There are many provisions of the Constitution that apply to states but not to Abuja. For instance, Abuja doesn’t have an elected governor or assembly; and the FCT Minister doesn’t attend meetings that state governors attend, such as the National Council of State and National Economic Council. Indeed, section 299 says that provisions of the Constitution should be read with “necessary modifications and adaptations” with respect to Abuja. The presidential election is sui generis, different from day-to-day issues of governance to which section 299 arguably refers. So, it’s wrong to use section 299 to defeat the reasonable construction of section 134(2)(b) regarding the presidential election.

Strangely, while the PEPC adopted a broader interpretation on FCT’s status to give tinubu an escape route, it adopted a narrower one on the issue of dishonesty to give him another lifeline. Section 137(1)(d) of the Constitution disqualifies from running for president anyone who was subject to a “fine for any offence involving dishonesty or fraud by whatever name called.”

Although the phrase “by whatever name called” is very broad, the PEPC held that the “fine” and “offence” referred to in section 137(1)(d) only related to criminal conviction. Thus, being a “non-conviction-based forfeiture”, the $460,000 that tinubu forfeited to the US Government didn’t disqualify him from becoming president, even though it was linked to proceeds of “narcotic trafficking and money laundering”.

That ruling would destroy the basis of integrity politics in Nigeria. If, as the PEPC held, the framers of the Constitution intended that a person who, though not convicted, forfeited assets on account of criminal conduct can become president, then it means that integrity and honesty are constitutionally and judicially excluded from Nigerian leadership!

Now, let’s turn to pleadings and evidence. Here’s the utter injustice. The petitioner carries a heavy evidential burden, yet the court and the law put insurmountable obstacles in his way. He must file his petition with detailed pleadings and relevant documents within 21 days of the declaration of election results. Anything not filed or “frontloaded” within 21 days would be rejected.

With 176,846 polling units across Nigeria, how can a candidate challenging a presidential election assemble all facts and witnesses within 21 days? Yet, the PEPC struck out most of Obi’s and Atiku’s pleadings and evidence, based on non-filing within 21 days and other procedural technicalities. Truth is, the cards are so stacked, both legally and judicially, against a petitioner in a presidential election that the taunt “Go to court” gains potency.

Finally, INEC’s role. The PEPC ruled that despite stating in its Regulations and Guidelines that it “shall” transmit election results “electronically” and “upload” them “to the INEC Result Viewing Portal (IReV)”, INEC is not obligated to honour those commitments.

The ruling defies the preponderance of English case law discouraging public bodies from frustrating legitimate expectations resulting from their undertakings or representations. If INEC cannot keep its own words, how can Nigerians trust it to conduct credible presidential elections?

Truth is, the PEPC judgement is perverse. Unless reversed by the Supreme Court, it will entrench rigged presidential elections in Nigeria and make presidential election petitions unwinnable, as ever. That will endanger Nigeria's future!
https://businessday.ng/columnist/article/pepc-judgement-the-perverse-ruling-endangers-nigerias-democratic-future/
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by helinues: 6:09pm On Jul 31, 2025
Only if the bill about independent candidacy can scale through, that's the beginning of the dead of the most known political parties in Nigeria
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Mrfixitt(m): 6:12pm On Jul 31, 2025
Good way to go. Electoral reform will send Emilokan packing in 2027
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by oluseyiforjesus(m): 6:19pm On Jul 31, 2025
Hmmmm
I see peter Obi handwriting on the wall
Dat will be best but can't work in Nigeria
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by richiemcgold: 6:19pm On Jul 31, 2025
Independent candidacy is going to be a joker for someone like Obi.

I suspect this is part of underground political games currently playing out. If u know u know
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by arantess: 6:20pm On Jul 31, 2025
oluseyiforjesus:
Hmmmm
I see peter Obi handwriting on the wall
Dat will be best but can't work in Nigeria
Why Una dey always see obi for dream?

Wetin dey occur?
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by arantess: 6:22pm On Jul 31, 2025
helinues:
Only if the bill about independent candidacy can scale through, that's the beginning of the dead of the most known political parties in Nigeria
So you are saying your APC party will just die like that?

Stop being pessimistic
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Tunmise40: 6:22pm On Jul 31, 2025
These are very good ideas that must be encouraged
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by BlackfireX: 6:22pm On Jul 31, 2025
This is good, but will the vampires, jackals, agbado and zombies allow it.



Watch them.

Bonbomclat
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by helinues: 6:23pm On Jul 31, 2025
arantess:
So you are saying your APC party will just die like that?

Stop being pessimistic
Could you point out to where I mentioned any political party? Is it only Apc the known political party in Nigeria?
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by just2endowed: 6:23pm On Jul 31, 2025
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by bigpicture001: 6:30pm On Jul 31, 2025
Tinubu won't let this fly till after his 8years passes
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by ngmgeek(m): 6:32pm On Jul 31, 2025
Good idea. The man sitting there right now knows that most opportunities come but once. Something isn't right about the way Nigeria is structured.
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by PMG2024: 6:34pm On Jul 31, 2025
Yes to independent candidacy. Most of our political parties lack ideology
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Clinton207: 6:40pm On Jul 31, 2025
I am in support of Independent candidacy , the penalty for defection of elected persons should be impeachment or recall .

Inec should strictly implement the use of Bvas.
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by SmartPolician: 6:41pm On Jul 31, 2025
The House of Reps should pass a bill for Nigeria to scrap the Senate because that house is totally useless
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Zouzer: 6:45pm On Jul 31, 2025
Independent candidacy is really nice. This will force Inec to stop printing only political parties' logos on the ballot paper
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Osanoghodua1: 6:49pm On Jul 31, 2025
No electronic transmission of results at real time, this is useless.
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Bendeco02: 6:52pm On Jul 31, 2025
Tinubu won't like this

If they now reform INEC, what chance do he stand in 2027?

Him and his supporters knows Nigerians don't like him grin
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Emmizofficial: 7:00pm On Jul 31, 2025
helinues:
Only if the bill about independent candidacy can scale through, that's the beginning of the dead of the most known political parties in Nigeria
Not possible imagine 100 million Nigerians decided to constest for offices how do they manage the overcrowding of the ballot paper
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Kennitrust(m): 7:05pm On Jul 31, 2025
I'm particularly interested in that defections rules.
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by DeepSight(m): 7:05pm On Jul 31, 2025
Story. Electronic Transmission of Results from Poll Centres openly and directly to IREV is all that is needed.
Also a different path to selection of INEC Chair and Commissioners. End of.
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by 2tpick: 7:07pm On Jul 31, 2025
Racoon:
https://westafricaweekly.com/nigerias-electoral-system-under-review-house-of-reps-proposes-independent-candidacy-inec-reform-defection-rules-and-unified-election-day/
compulsory electronic collation and transfer of results nko? That's one of the most important electoral reforms needed
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by surgical: 7:09pm On Jul 31, 2025
Mrfixitt:
Good way to go. Electoral reform will send Emilokan packing in 2027
no it is to help him , that's why everybody is defecting to apc the election will be rigged for them in one fell swoop

Did you notice there is no mention of compulsory electronic transmission of results, this one will affect them ,they dodged it
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by surgical: 7:10pm On Jul 31, 2025
Osanoghodua1:
No electronic transmission of results at real time, this is useless.
exactly, they've started their deceitful game again I hope Nigerians shine their eyes
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Elusive001: 7:28pm On Jul 31, 2025
DeepSight:
Story. Electronic Transmission of Results from Poll Centres openly and directly to IREV is all that is needed.
Also a different path to selection of INEC Chair and Commissioners. End of.
What of judiciary?

25 more characters needed
Follow this topic
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by DeepSight(m): 7:35pm On Jul 31, 2025
Elusive001:
What of judiciary?

25 more characters needed
Follow this topic
Also important but that reform will take much longer.
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by Elusive001: 7:37pm On Jul 31, 2025
DeepSight:
Also important but that reform will take much longer.
Any and every electoral reform without judicial reforms is a waste.
Re: House of Reps Proposes Independent Candidacy, INEC Reform, Defection Rules by franchasng: 7:40pm On Jul 31, 2025
This is where opposition members should be pushing for complete reform.


Defection:

Any politician elected under the platform of any party must drop the position and decamp as an ordinary politician and allow the party organize a party bi-election to replace the decamped politician.


The law must forbid any politician decamping to another party with the party's mandate.


If you believe you can win election on your own, then run as an independent candidate.



Election results transmission

All polling unit election results held in Nigeria must be transmitted in realtime to INEC's central server with big screens at every state capital or LGA of every state and LGA in Nigeria.



Any polling unit result not transmitted 30 minutes after the last person voted at that polling unit must be canceled.


Any alteration on uploaded polling unit result must be canceled.



President, Governor and LGA Chairman elections should be held same day.


Senate, Reps, State House of Assembly and LGA Councilors should be held same day.



The candidate declared winner by INEC must not be sworn in until Supreme Court rules, and there must be a 3 months timeline for Supreme Court to make it's ruling.


The electoral law must make it compulsory for Supreme Court to check irev portal results and compare with physical results from INEC before making any final ruling.

So irev results must be admissible as evidence in court for electoral litigations.


Also there should be a law that makes it possible or compulsory for any INEC staff, security operatives or individuals found guilty of aiding election rigging or manipulation to be chargeable to election offenders court with a minimum of 10 years in prison if found guilty and also make videos and photographs admissible in such cases
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