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ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission - Politics - Nairaland

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ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by iwaeda(op): 6:42am On Oct 23, 2025
Electoral Act amendment: Senate proposes mandatory electronic transmission of results

The Senate on Wednesday passed for second reading a bill seeking to repeal the Electoral Act 2022 and enact a new Electoral Act 2025, with a major proposal mandating the electronic transmission of election results ahead of the 2027 general elections.

The bill, which aims to regulate the conduct of federal, state and area council elections, followed growing calls to address the technical glitches that marred result transmission during the 2023 presidential election.

Chairman of the Senate Committee on Electoral Matters, Simon Lalong (APC, Plateau South), last, week led the debate on the bill which was later stepped down for further consideration.

Presenting the general principles of the legislation, Lalong said the amendment was necessary to correct the lapses witnessed in the 2023 polls and to strengthen Nigeria’s electoral process for credible future elections.

Daily Trust reports that before the bill’s second reading, the joint committees of the National Assembly on Electoral Reforms, in collaboration with the Policy and Legal Advocacy Centre (PLAC), had held a public hearing, a move that raised questions about legislative procedure.

In a draft copy of the proposed amendment obtained by Daily Trust, lawmakers seek to alter Section 60 (5) to make electronic transmission of results compulsory.

While the 2022 Act did not expressly mention electronic transmission, the proposed 2025 version stipulates that “the Presiding Officer shall transmit the results, including the total number of accredited voters, to the next level of collation both electronically and manually.”

By contrast, the current Section 60 (5) of the 2022 law only states that “the Presiding Officer shall transfer the results, including the number of accredited voters and the results of the ballot, in a manner as prescribed by the Commission.”

Other highlights of the proposed bill

The bill also seeks to amend the 2022 Electoral Act to include statutory delegates in political parties’ primaries ahead of the 2027 general elections.

It further stipulates that elections into the offices of the president and governors must be conducted “not later than 185 days before the expiration of the term of office of the last holder of the office.”

The same timeline applies to elections into the National Assembly and state Houses of Assembly, which must now be held “not later than 185 days before the date on which each of the Houses stands dissolved.”

If passed and assented to by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the next general elections would likely hold in November 2026, instead of February and March 2027.

The bill also provides that where a vacancy occurs in any of the legislative Houses more than 90 days before a general election, such a vacancy must be filled within 30 days of its occurrence.

The proposed amendment further seeks to align the new electoral calendar with constitutional changes to Sections 76, 116, 132, and 178, which now delegate election timelines to the Electoral Act rather than the Constitution.

Other notable provisions include recognising voting rights for inmates and mandating the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to register eligible prisoners; introducing digital voter identification through electronically generated voter cards with QR codes; and imposing stiffer penalties for electoral offences, including mandatory prison terms for falsifying results or obstructing election officials.

The bill also expands the delegate framework for indirect primaries to standardise internal party representation, mandates INEC to conduct financial audits within six months of each financial year to promote transparency, and raises campaign spending and donation limits to reflect current economic realities.

The bill also adds the National Identification Number (NIN) as part of the requirements for voter registration. It also introduces provisions for mandatory early voting.

Controversy over procedure

Debate on the bill was earlier stepped down last week after the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Electoral Matters, Senator Simon Lalong (APC, Plateau South), concluded his presentation on its general principles.

Senate President Godswill Akpabio, who presided over the session, said Lalong had not provided sufficient details and suggested a closed-door session to consider the proposal.

Daily Trust reports that the decision to suspend debate also followed concerns raised by Senator Binos Dauda Yaroe (Adamawa South), who questioned the procedure, describing it as unusual for a bill yet to scale second reading to have already undergone a public hearing.

“I support the second reading of this bill. But people will wonder. The second reading is supposed to come before the public hearing that was held last Monday. Holding a public hearing before second reading is confusing,” Yaroe said.

Senate Leader Opeyemi Bamidele (APC, Ekiti Central) also argued that the day was not suitable for an executive session and suggested the bill be stepped down for another legislative day.

Akpabio subsequently put the matter to a voice vote, and senators approved the suspension.

After extensive debate yesterday, the Senate passed the bill for second reading and committed it to the Committee on Electoral Matters for further legislative work, with a directive to report back within two weeks.

Another public hearing?

Speaking with Daily Trust after yesterday’s plenary, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe (Abia South) said that there must still be a public hearing after the second reading, ahead of the third reading.

“This is the second reading. There has to be a public hearing before the third reading. I’m not aware that any has been held by the Senate on it,” Abaribe said.

Recall that a public hearing was organised on October 13 by the National Assembly Joint Committees on Electoral Matters in collaboration with the Policy and Legal Advocacy Centre (PLAC), during which stakeholders, including lawmakers, political parties, civil society organisations (CSOs), and electoral experts, made extensive submissions.

Speaking during plenary yesterday, Senator Ali Ndume (APC, Borno South) urged Nigerians to participate in the upcoming public hearing to ensure that the next elections reflect the people’s will.

However, Senator Ireti Kingibe (FCT), who was on another legislative assignment, told Daily Trust that “usually, bills go for public hearing after second reading. But we already had a public hearing, so maybe not.”

Senate President Akpabio said the upper chamber would continue consultations to perfect the electoral law ahead of 2027. “We also have another one this weekend in Lagos. We will continue to discuss until we get a real, perfect Electoral Act for the country,” he said, though he did not clarify whether the Lagos meeting would serve as another public hearing.

Senate Leader Bamidele had earlier assured that the amendment process would be concluded by December 2025, to avoid interfering with preparations for the 2027 elections.

INEC must be held accountable – Akpabio

While commenting during the debate, Senate President Akpabio said the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) must be held accountable for the conduct and integrity of elections in Nigeria.

He said the electoral umpire, as custodian of election materials and logistics, should bear the responsibility of proving that elections were conducted in accordance with the law.

“I agree with Senator Dickson and other senators who have called for shifting the burden of proof in electoral litigations from litigants to INEC. INEC is responsible for election logistics and conduct; it must therefore prove that the processes it supervises comply with the law,” Akpabio said.

The Senate President also said elections in Nigeria have improved since the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) left power in 2015.

Akpabio, who served two terms as Akwa Ibom State governor on the platform of the PDP, said, “You will agree with me that since the PDP left, elections have improved tremendously in this country. I have been close to most of the presidents since 1999, and I recall that in 2007, when I won as governor, our dear President Yar’adua, may his soul rest in peace, admitted that the election that brought him to power was flawed and full of inconsistencies.

“Imagine the last election, we went up to the Supreme Court debating whether winning the FCT should determine the presidency. We will do our best, and Nigerians must also play their part on this issue of electoral act amendment.”

Akpabio further alleged that some individuals from Anambra State travelled abroad during the 2023 elections to prepare questionable documents, which were later presented in court.

“Immediately after the election, they came back and submitted papers you couldn’t even fold. We must find a way to block such loopholes to prevent these occurrences,” he said.

Other contributions

During debate on the bill, Senator Abdul Ningi (PDP, Bauchi Central) said the proposed amendment aimed to promote fairness, transparency, and credibility in the electoral process.

“Every National Assembly since 1999 has tinkered with the Electoral Act to bring power closer to the people. What we are doing now is to review gaps that have hindered our electoral system from meeting global standards — particularly issues around BIVAS, electronic transmission of results, and real-time collation,” Ningi said.

Senator Adamu Aliero (APC, Kebbi Central) said the review must address inconsistencies in the 2022 Electoral Act.

“For example, in our haste to pass the last Act, we excluded senators, House members, governors, and other elected officials from serving as delegates. That was a major omission we must correct. We must also ensure elections truly reflect the people’s will. We are tired of seeing politicians use arms to intimidate and rig elections,” he said.

He urged his colleagues to support improvements to BIVAS “so that whatever result is declared reflects the actual vote.”

Senator Tahir Monguno (APC, Borno North) called for transparent party primaries, reduced election spending, and tougher sanctions for vote-buying.

Senator Agom Jarigbe (PDP, Cross River North) advocated for electronic transmission of results and independent candidacy, while Senator Olalere Oyewunmi (PDP, Osun West) pushed for stiffer penalties for electoral offenders, including INEC and security personnel who compromise elections.

Oyewunmi, the Deputy Minority Leader, lamented that many offenders had not been adequately sanctioned.

Senator Patrick Ndubueze (APC, Imo North) proposed that election results should be compiled and announced within six hours of voting, while Senator Orji Uzor Kalu (APC, Abia North) called for clear definitions of security agencies’ roles on election day and improvements in election technology.

Chief Whip of the Senate, Monguno, stressed that credible and transparent elections are key to sustaining democracy and called for sustained reforms.

Senator Adams Oshiomhole (APC, Edo North) warned against holding all elections in a single day, saying it would be dangerous if unforeseen challenges occurred.

“If all elections are held in one day and something goes wrong, the entire process will be affected, and there will be confusion everywhere,” he said, while also urging vigilance against hacking.

Senator Seriake Dickson (PDP, Bayelsa West) said democracy would be in jeopardy if the current amendment fails.

“If there’s one thing the 10th Senate must achieve, it is electoral reform,” Dickson said, recalling how the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua admitted flaws in his own election and former President Goodluck Jonathan conceded defeat in 2015 to strengthen democracy.

Amendment will restore public confidence – Analysts

Political analysts say the amendment, particularly the provision for mandatory electronic transmission of results, could guarantee credible elections, restore public confidence, and deepen Nigeria’s democracy.

A political scientist and former lawmaker from Rivers State, Hon. Bernard Mikko, told Daily Trust that while the initiative was commendable, sincerity and transparency were critical.

“While we look to technology, we must also address the human factor. Corrupt operators can compromise any system; therefore, honesty and integrity are crucial. If handled properly, this will deepen democracy,” Mikko said.

Similarly, political analyst Jackson Lekan Ojo said the move aligns with current realities and, if properly implemented, would lend credibility to the 2027 general elections.

He said that while the former INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, failed to deliver on electronic transmission in 2023, the current chairman, Prof. Joash Ojo Amupitan, must work closely with the National Assembly to ensure success.

“The National Assembly must ensure the amendments scale through, by passing the bill for third reading and getting the president’s assent. It will deepen our democracy and restore public confidence in the electoral process,” Ojo said.
https://dailytrust.com/electoral-act-amendment-senate-proposes-mandatory-electronic-transmission-of-results/

Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Racoon(m):
An issue the ought to have considered immediately they came on board? They tactically delayed till now because they know any deliberations on any electoral reforms or amendment is gonna delayed till the 2027 election is past.

Even the president is not going to be interested in any electronic voting. Well, I don't blame the NASS. They all worked in cohort with the executive and Judiciary to bastardize the policy.

Now INEC is gonna conduct another fraudulent election, judiciary legalize it and the vicious cycle goes all over. They may underestimate the ripple effects of such a political anomaly.

Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by iwaeda(op): 10:17am On Oct 23, 2025
Nlfpmod, hope no glitches will happen. grin grin grin grin
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by christejames(m): 10:32am On Oct 23, 2025
Take this clowns serious at your own detriment undecided
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Eleph(m): 10:34am On Oct 23, 2025
It's always good on paper. Practicality is the usual bottleneck.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by bigpicture001: 10:35am On Oct 23, 2025
This will not see light of day.. so. Long as Akpabio is at the helms of affairs..


It will happen after tinubu wins second term..

But I ask, what is someone who now has 90% governors ND NASS members still afraid of..?
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Nwaikpe: 10:36am On Oct 23, 2025
Jokers.


They sit in that circus and play with themselves.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by bigpicture001: 10:36am On Oct 23, 2025
Racoon:
An issue the ought to have considered immediately they came on board? They tactically delayed till now because they know any deliberations on any electoral reforms or amendment is gonna delayed till the 2027 election is past.

Even the president is not going to be interested in any electronic voting. Well, I don't blame the NASS. They all worked in cohort with the executive and Judiciary to bastardize the policy.

Now INEC is gonna conduct another fraudulent election, judiciary legalize it and the vicious cycle goes all over. They may underestimate the ripple effects of such a political anomaly.
You know Nigeria too much my man...
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Ceejay8: 10:37am On Oct 23, 2025
This one’s na mumu wey just occupy seats
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Fuckyoumod: 10:39am On Oct 23, 2025
Believe them at your own peril.

The electoral reform Buhari signed into law only to be squashed by the Supreme Court and tribunals.

Until 270 million Nigerians wake up, nothing will change in this country.

Tinubu will rule over you people!
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by epainos:
Excellent....excellent....excellent.

No matter how sluggish we are moving, we are still moving forward which is good. What I really want is to to remove INEC chairman's appointment from the president duties. It is unfair.

Also, we need to find a way to use the blockchain tech for everything we are doing. Elections sef. Even every expenses of all government departments need to go to the blockchain.

The only weapon we have is tech. Let use it.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by simpleseyi: 10:41am On Oct 23, 2025
We will determine that. Not the Senate.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by nairalanda1(m): 10:43am On Oct 23, 2025
Good idea, but it still won't work. Some guy or gal is going to come out with an affidavit or 'evidence' that the results were transmitted to INEC Under duress, or that the election server was hacked or so forth...be it APC, PDP, ADC, etc supporter

The problem with elections is Nigerian politicans never accepting defeat. Because those who control the sharing of the national cake benefit well well, hence the win at all costs mentality.

Ye don't see that in saner climes because

1.Most income from government comes from tax, so pressure is on the elected ruler to do well, or else.
2.Most income also comes from investments, so if his or her royal highness is not attracting enough factories or so on to the region, palava don land for him head.

Nigeria , and any country that comes from Nigeria, is made up of people who believe government income must be shared , not used for further development. That is the bane of our problem, and why we have never really had good leaders since independence. Even the argument for independence was made on 'more money to share' things.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by ZUBY77(m): 10:43am On Oct 23, 2025
The electronic transmission is perfectly working right now,
Until the election day itself.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by discusant: 10:43am On Oct 23, 2025
First stop the situation where a team in a football competition is allowed to appoint the referee.

How can a president of Nigeria be allowed to appoint INEC Chairman?
It's a method to perpetuate a political party's stranglehold on power.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by princepee: 10:47am On Oct 23, 2025
grin grin they will not pass it.

If they do half of them will not win there pooling unit
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by favour32(m):
Believe them at your own peril.

Na so dem deceive us in 2023 say....


dem say na glitch



Another glitch don dey warm up.


Mahmoud!

Make reach that day,
You go know say glitch go hold electronic transmission of electoral results.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Racoon(m): 10:57am On Oct 23, 2025
bigpicture001:
You know Nigeria too much my man...
Humn! They knew all these does not count because they know their evil scheming.
It is so sad my brother
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Klington: 10:59am On Oct 23, 2025
Tinubu and his apc gang will never allow such thing to happen.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Mindlog: 11:06am On Oct 23, 2025
With the glitch template as a backup!
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by DeepSight(m): 11:06am On Oct 23, 2025
This, along with one other thing, is all we need to remove the curse from Aso Rock. That other thing is a united opposition.

So -

1. Mandatory electronic transmission of results

Plus

2. United opposition

= Freedom.

Anything less, it's a waste of time.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by surgical: 11:12am On Oct 23, 2025
bigpicture001:
This will not see light of day.. so. Long as Akpabio is at the helms of affairs..


It will happen after tinubu wins second term..

But I ask, what is someone who now has 90% governors ND NASS members still afraid of..?
it will still not happen after Tinubu wins ,he loves power ,he likes to dictate, he will want to turn Nigeria to lagos where he imposes anyone he likes, a free and fair election will not allow him to do that, so he will never be in support
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Mrexcell(m): 11:23am On Oct 23, 2025
This bill will definitely improve tinibu's bad image if he finally signs it into law.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Cj4charles(m): 11:26am On Oct 23, 2025
After elections, you will see them denying ever proposing such
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Anguldi(m): 11:27am On Oct 23, 2025
Tinubu no go gree, coalition centers should be scrapped too💯
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by gabbasin(m): 11:38am On Oct 23, 2025
No matter how perfect an eletroral law we come up with, if politicians still don't play by the rules, our election outcomes will still end up being validated by the courts.
Winning at all cost by the politicians is the albatross of our elections and most of those who are resoundingly defeated in elections will still not accept defeat and will approach the courts to look for technicalities to secure victory.
And the election umpire will always be the fall guy as INEC will always be blamed for every defeat politicians suffered in the polls.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by MrColdsweat: 11:44am On Oct 23, 2025
Which company will be contracted to create and operate the voting technology?
We are watching una in 6D
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by CharleyBright(m): 11:50am On Oct 23, 2025
Let them enact the law not propose it.
If this is done, most politicians won't get 2nd term including the one occupying Aso villa
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by Paut(m): 12:22pm On Oct 23, 2025
[quote author=bigpicture001 post=137220652]This will not see light of day.. so. Long as Akpabio is at the helms of affairs..


It will happen after tinubu wins second term..

But I ask, what is someone who now has 90% governors ND NASS members still afraid of..?


Omo...
The matter choke o, dem want even conduct presidential election in 2026 instead of 2027🤠
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by peteofi(m): 12:22pm On Oct 23, 2025
Make INEC no change am for us again for 2027. Let's see how it goes.
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by seunoyeleyep(f): 12:40pm On Oct 23, 2025
They want to give you sth to gloat about till 2027. These guys are batstards*
Re: ElectoralAct Amendment: Senate Proposes Mandatory Electronic Result Transmission by jaxxy(m): 12:56pm On Oct 23, 2025
what makes the Nigerian elections credible when there is no direct electronic collation of results to a central viewing database?
1 2 Reply

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