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Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas - Politics - Nairaland

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Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by treesun(op): 5:14pm On Mar 01
The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abbas, on Sunday said the National Assembly approved a hybrid system of electronic and manual transmission of election results in the amended Electoral Act to prevent voter disenfranchisement and reduce apathy ahead of the 2027 general elections.

Abbas explained that Nigeria’s limited internet penetration and unstable power supply made it impractical to rely solely on real-time electronic transmission across the country.

The Speaker spoke while receiving the Ambassador of Spain to Nigeria, Ambassador Felix Costales, during a courtesy visit to his office at the National Assembly complex in Abuja.

According to a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Musa Krishi, Abbas received the envoy alongside the Chairman, House Committee on Appropriations, Abubakar Bichi; Chairman, House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Wole Oke; and Chairman, Nigeria-China Parliamentary Friendship Group, Jafaru Yakubu.

The statement noted that the Spanish envoy also indicated that Spain operates a system that allows manual transmission of election results.

Abbas assured that, based on his engagement with the leadership of the Independent National Electoral Commission, the 2027 general elections would be more credible and inclusive.

On the Electoral Act, the Speaker said,”Sometimes, people scream far beyond the exact level of the issue. A lot of people think that we need to embrace electronic transmission in real-time in Nigeria, but within the very little period that you’ve been in Nigeria, you should be able to speak on the quality of our internet network. You should know that even in advanced cities like Abuja, you are not guaranteed stable internet services all the time.”

He continued, “Based on the NCC report, they said Nigeria is still underserved by almost 40 per cent, which means 40 per cent of territories at large in Nigeria are not covered by the internet. Now, tell me, for those who are saying we should go ahead and do that, already, if you look at the number of our registered voters in this country, it is alarming.

It is sad to say that even with the manual arrangement we are using, we are only able to capture about 12-15 per cent of registered voters who, after every four years, come to vote. That’s voter apathy. Very few people go out to vote.”

According to him, exclusive electronic transmission could further suppress participation. “Now, if we are to introduce only the electronic system, it will further reduce the number because 40 per cent of the country will probably not be able to vote as they don’t have adequate internet services. It means what we should be expecting is not only disenfranchising the voters—denying some people the right to vote—we will also record, perhaps, the lowest number of voters in the next elections.

“These are all avoidable. That is why we said, in our wisdom, the Electoral Act should be hybrid—a combination of both the manual and electronic systems. Where it is feasible to use the electronic transmission, use the electronic transmission; where it is not possible, use the manual, because there is no way one form, particularly the electronic, can be used entirely in all parts of the country for the elections.”

The Speaker further argued that even critics of the provision were aware of the country’s infrastructure limitations.

“The opposition, even though they know the truth—are Nigerians, they live in Nigeria, they travel all over Nigeria—they know that the level of internet penetration in Nigeria is inadequate. There is no way you will be able to have transparent elections using an inadequate system, and through our energy crisis in the country as well, we do not have enough electricity.

“The internet is always backed by energy. How do you power the entire country on the day of the election to have phones that are working and internet that is working, backed by adequate electricity? All those are challenges that, for now, will not be able to provide us the opportunity to do transmission in real time online.”


Abbas described democracy as a gradual process that improves over time. He said, “In our entire democracy, we will continue to improve year after year, election after election. I believe Nigeria, with the support of countries like Spain, will do better.

“We expect you to continue to guide us and give us all the technical advice and support to do better, particularly in the National Assembly, through collaboration between your country and our parliament. It will go a long way in strengthening our competence, particularly in areas of legislative drafting and so on. I believe that with what you have in Spain, Nigeria can benefit a lot.”

He added that Nigeria was making steady progress despite existing challenges. “You cannot say you have everything that you require. You keep on learning. We believe that Nigeria is not doing badly, even though it may not be at the rate that the international community would want to see, but we are moving slowly and gradually.”

Earlier, Costales said his visit was aimed at strengthening legislative diplomacy and deepening bilateral ties between Spain and Nigeria. He said Spain would closely monitor Nigeria’s electoral process and support efforts to strengthen democratic institutions.

“You can count on us—whatever we can do to deepen Nigerian democracy. Yes, there may be challenges, but you can count on us in any way possible.”

The envoy also noted that political polarisation was a global phenomenon. He said, “Sometimes when you dig down, you realise that the issues are not that big, or not as big as they seem in the public discourse. It happens a lot in Spain… At the end of the day, if you want to move forward in democracy, you have to reach some level of compromise. We have to try to rule and govern on the level of consensus.”

PUNCH Online reports that President Bola Tinubu recently assented to the amended Electoral Act passed by the National Assembly as part of reforms aimed at improving the credibility and inclusiveness of future elections, particularly the 2027 general polls.


The amendment clarifies the legal framework for the transmission of election results, authorising the use of both electronic and manual methods depending on the availability of infrastructure and operational feasibility.

The reform has generated debate among political actors and civil society groups, with supporters describing the hybrid model as pragmatic, while critics argue that it could weaken transparency if not properly implemented and monitored.
https://punchng.com/electoral-act-why-nassembly-approved-electronic-manual-transmission-abbas/

Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Ibehchizzy: 8:05pm On Mar 01
Save us with that bullshit
You only do what tinubu says you should do
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Brendaniel: 8:06pm On Mar 01
To create room to cheat na, if political parties can have situation room where they gather their results from all polling units in real time, why can't INEC with over 1 trillion naira budget not have even better real time transmission.

Meanwhile I asked AI this question, if you are a Peter Obi supporter and a good Nigerian, don't let anyone deceive you.

Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by elder1002(m):
CONFIDENCE LOVES SUNLIGHT ☀️. FEAR PREFERS “AFTER COLLATION” 😏

The most dangerous part of the new electoral bill is not electronic transmission 📱. That phrase was added to sound progressive 💁‍♀️. The real danger is this clause: “In the event of network issues or other transmission impediments, the manually completed and signed INEC result form shall serve as the official result” 📝.

That one sentence quietly does three things 🤔:
- It elevates paper over technology 📄
- It legalizes delay 🕰️
- It re-opens the exact loophole Nigerians have been suffering from 😔

So yes, it is electronic but with an escape route 🚪. Let’s bring this down from grammar to Nigerian street reality 🌆.

HOW ELECTIONS REALLY WORK ON THE STREET 🗣️
Election day 🌞. You wake up early 🕰️. You queue under sun ☀️. You vote 🗳️. Votes are counted in front of everyone 👥. Party agents agree 🤝. INEC writes it on EC8A 📝. At that moment, your vote is still alive 💪.

Then someone says: “Network no dey” 😏. Under this new law, that sentence is enough 🤷‍♂️. No upload 📤. No timestamp 🕰️. No public record 📊. Paper now becomes king again 👑 — and the result must travel 🚗.

AND ON THAT JOURNEY… 🚗
That EC8A can be 🤔:
- Taken “for verification” 🔍
- Cancelled and rewritten 📝
- Corrected without witnesses 😶
- Replaced with a cleaner version 💁‍♀️
- Declared invalid later 😔

By then, voters are already at home 🏠.

COLLATION CENTER REALITY 🏢
At ward and LGA collation 🤝:
- Police are present 👮
- Party big men are present 👔
- Ordinary voters are not 😔

This is where 🤔:
- Figures are “adjusted” 📊
- Results are “harmonized” 🤝
- Disputes are “settled” 🛠️
- Winners are “finalized” 🏆

All paper 📄. All legal ✅. All protected by that clause 🤐.

iREV STORY 📱
Hours later 🕰️. Sometimes days later 🕰️. Some results upload 📤. Some don’t 😔. Some never will 😶. When you ask: “Why didn’t my polling unit upload?” 🤔 The answer is ready-made: “Network issue” 😏. Conversation over 🙅‍♂️.

BVAS — STRONG WHEN IT SUITS THEM 🤖
BVAS works perfectly 😎:
- To stop accreditation 🚫
- To delay voters 🕰️
- To frustrate turnout 😔

But when it’s time to upload results? 📤 Suddenly it’s unreliable 😂. Funny how technology only fails after voting ends 😏.

WHY PEOPLE STOP VOTING 😔
Vote apathy is not laziness 😴. It is learned behaviour 🤓. People have learned this lesson: Your vote counts at the polling unit but changes on the road 😔. After two or three elections like this, people stay home 🏠.

WHY BALLOT SNATCHING STILL MAKES SENSE 😔
With this system 🤖:
- Disrupting voting still helps 😔
- Cancelling results still helps 😔
- Snatching ballot boxes still helps 😔

Because paper can always be rewritten later 📝.

THE BILLION-NAIRA INSULT 😡
Nigeria will spend billions 💸:
- On BVAS devices 🤖
- On election logistics 🚗
- On “technology-driven elections” 💻

Only for the final authority to rest on manual paper collation 📄. That is not reform 😔. That is expensive deception 😂. High-tech money 💸. Low-trust process 🤷‍♂️. You cannot run a 21st-century election on 19th-century trust 😏.

NOW ENTER 2027 🤔
2027 is not just another election year 🗳️. It is a pressure point 🤯. Nigeria is entering it with 😔:
- Deep voter fatigue 😴
- Rising hardship 😔
- A younger population that feels cheated 😡
- Shrinking trust in institutions 😔

In such an environment, election credibility is not optional , it is national stability infrastructure 🏗️. When elections lack credibility 😔:
- People withdraw 😔
- Losers reject results 😡
- Winners lack legitimacy 😔
- Courts replace ballots ⚖️
- Streets become louder than polling units 😡

That’s how instability starts — quietly 😔.

THE TRUTH NO ONE WANTS TO SAY 😏
If a party truly has 😎:
- Millions of supporters 👥
- Majority control 💪
- Nationwide popularity 🌎

Then real-time transmission should be proof, not a threat 😏. Transparency is not risky to the popular 💪. It is risky only to those who benefit from darkness 😔.

Nigerians are not asking for miracles ✨. They are asking for elections where 🤔:
- Votes don’t change while travelling 🚫
- Results don’t mature at collation centers 😏
- Winners don’t fear verification 🔍

This is not about party 🤝. It is about process 📊. Nations don’t collapse only through coups 😔. Some collapse quietly when citizens stop believing voting matters 😔.

If 2027 is to be peaceful, legitimate, and respected 🙏, transparency must move from promise to practice 💡. Sunlight is not the enemy of democracy ☀️. It is its only defense 🛡️. Good afternoon to all actual progressives 🇳🇬✊.

Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Dee60: 8:08pm On Mar 01
He is on his own! Who is the speaker speaking for?
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Rindo69: 8:09pm On Mar 01
"Abbas explained that Nigeria’s limited internet penetration and unstable power supply made it impractical to rely solely on real-time electronic transmission across the country"

Of course... but bandits have "Internet penetration" in the forests to post their tik tok videos. There is Starlink and probably by 2027, there'll be Amazon Leo but we must find excuses to keep manual transmission cos this is the only way 12 can turn to 1200 or even 12000.
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Ogbuefienubiaka: 8:10pm On Mar 01
It's because APC wants the likes of Wike to keep changing results. Fraudsters
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Thewrath: 8:10pm On Mar 01
Rubbish,since they claimed to have won the last election,mandatory electronic transmission or results in REAL TIME shouldn’t be an issue.
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by SixSeven: 8:12pm On Mar 01
For years, the National Assembly has not been able to do electronic voting in the upper and lower house, why? The Ayes have it! wink


https://www.tiktok.com/video/7382111068379827461

If they can do what they want even if the nays are the loudest, that should tell you a lot about why they tell you confidently that your online polls, your comments and questions are NOISE. Majority will have their say, minority will fund their way.

Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by helinues: 8:13pm On Mar 01
Give us the list of how the senators voted
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Hemanwel(m):
E no get why. It's simply to be able to carry out their rigging plans.

The reason Tinubu wants all the governors in APC is so they can use their power of incumbency to rig the elections for him, when voting manually. The governors will be useless to him if ONLY real-time electronic transmission of results to IREV is approved.

So ultimately, Tinubu is using money meant to build infrastructures and improve lives of the citizens to bribe governors and lawmakers into his party so that they can rig for him
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by paxonel(m): 8:16pm On Mar 01
Atleast real time electronic transmission should be implemented in cities where internet network are fairly stable while manuel collation should be done in villages.

Is it difficult to ask?
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by reddingtonblack: 8:18pm On Mar 01
iF not that our leaders are completely daftt and shamelezz, you are proudly telling a foreigner the internet connection in your country is poor even in the city capital
Out of desperation to justify the nonsense they did, in 2026 poor network is that good image for nigeria

Lets even say thats it true No network, what decisive steps have govt taken since last election 2023 to Fix the challenge considering their is a motion ahead to enact Irev real time. since 2023 they all kept quiet
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by phemray(m): 8:29pm On Mar 01
Brendaniel:
To create room to cheat na, if political parties can have situation room where they gather their results from all polling units in real time, why can't INEC with over 1 trillion naira budget not have even better real time transmission.

Meanwhile I asked AI this question, if you are a Peter Obi supporter and a good Nigerian, don't let anyone deceive you.
Funny you, so your AI was available during Tinubu as a governor and Obi to know details of Thier performances. Their real legacy performances are on the ground for those of you children of that time to see and know the truth.

Go to each state and asked who did this and that then you will get to know the fact.
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Evergrind: 8:30pm On Mar 01
Una no just rate Nigerians
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by seunowa(f): 8:30pm On Mar 01
Rindo69:
"Abbas explained that Nigeria’s limited internet penetration and unstable power supply made it impractical to rely solely on real-time electronic transmission across the country"

Of course... but bandits have "Internet penetration" in the forests to post their tik tok videos. There is Starlink and probably by 2027, there'll be Amazon Leo but we must find excuses to keep manual transmission cos this is the only way 12 can turn to 1200 or even 12000.
One question you need to ask yourself is if that tik tok video is real-time because many of you have slow and low understanding.
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Olatundex22(m): 8:33pm On Mar 01
Any which way, loser will always cry ringing
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Nextjs: 8:38pm On Mar 01
They are criminals.


We need electronically transfer of results

The BVAS is used to valid voters before they vote. Which uses network.

The BVAS is also configured to store data n transmit immediately network is restored
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Negelzi: 8:38pm On Mar 01
Mr Speaker,the green and red chambers are nothing but bunch of disgrace to the global community..
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Besko(m): 8:44pm On Mar 01
Until Nigeria is ready... this crop of polithiefians will continue to take u for a ride
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by anonimi: 8:58pm On Mar 01
Evergrind:
Una no just rate Nigerians
Do we Nigerians rate ourselves huh




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMWUS1W_ITc?si=T-ggHsmtwcqiujQr
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by jaxxy(m): 9:01pm On Mar 01
Brendaniel:
To create room to cheat na, if political parties can have situation room where they gather their results from all polling units in real time, why can't INEC with over 1 trillion naira budget not have even better real time transmission.

Meanwhile I asked AI this question, if you are a Peter Obi supporter and a good Nigerian, don't let anyone deceive you.
Obi has gone to join a political coalition which 80% chance will not give him the presidential ticket so what will this comparison do for us now Is the issue.

Obi couldn't stay or grow labour party, left it in chaos for a packaged coalition not an organic coalition.

He needs to to consult his Obidents movement and do his political calculations well.

He needs the coalition but the coalition may not want to field him as their presidential candidate and that indecision has killed momentum..
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by anonimi: 9:01pm On Mar 01
seunowa:
One question you need to ask yourself is if that tik tok video is real-time because many of you have slow and low understanding.
What question should speaker Abbas ask himself and his fellow APC progreThief politicians about electronic voting, 11 years after they were allowed to replace PDP prosperity with their extreme poverty shege huh

infotrust:
Opposition party, the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) has demanded that it is time for the country to embrace electronic voting in order to ensure the integrity of its elections and hand over the elections back to Nigerians instead of the judiciary.

In a statement issued on Sunday, by the party’s National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, ACN declared that with electronic voting, the overall cost of elections will be less and there will be stability in the polity.

Referring to the overwhelming deployment of security operatives during elections, the party added that the atmosphere of war usually associated with elections will disappear and the involvement of the security agencies will be de-emphasized.

Admitting that Section 52 (2) of the Electoral Act bans the use of electronic voting for the time being, ACN urged the National Assembly to move quickly to amend that part of the law while it called on the federal government to provide INEC with all the resources needed to make electronic voting a reality.

”While electronic voting is not a magic wand, it is the surest way for Nigeria to join the league of countries that have wiped out electoral fraud, which is the worst form of corruption. It is also the best way to hand over Nigeria’s elections back to Nigerians, instead of having the judiciary determine who wins what contest. Two years is long enough to achieve this,” ACN said.

The party noted that Ghana, which has organized perhaps the best elections in this part of the world, has realized it can no longer continue with manual voting; hence it did not wait for troubles associated with electoral malfeasance to break out before embracing electronic voting during its last general elections in December.

”It is not just enough for us to sit back in envy while the world hails our neighbor Ghana for being a model in electoral rectitude and participatory democracy. Let us ask ourselves what we need to do differently, to shed our toga of electoral fraud and brigandage”

”Yes, there were some hiccups during the last elections in Ghana, which were conducted with electronic voting. But Ghana quickly moved to correct whatever problems came up. The system also allowed Ghana to extend voting without fearing that ballot boxes will be hijacked or stuffed,”

ACN said it is true that Ghana’s last presidential election that was conducted with electronic voting is currently being challenged in court, ”to the best of our knowledge, that’s the only case being contested in court since the elections ended.”

”It is totally unacceptable and indeed an anomaly for a nation of 160 million people to hand over the determination of its elections to a few ‘wise’ men and women on the bench.”

“One result of Nigeria’s successive failed elections is that it has brought corruption to the judiciary. It is time to free judges to do their duties and allow Nigerians to play more roles in determining who governs them,” it said.

The party pledged its support for e-voting stating that ”we assure INEC of our full support towards using electronic voting in 2015.”

It also appealed to other political parties, Civil Society Organizations and all Nigerians to join it in pushing for a system that will “eliminate the role of thugs and side line vote thieves during our elections, in addition to making our elections free, fair and credible” the statement read.

http://www.channelstv.com/home/2013/01/13/acn-demands-use-of-electronic-voting-for-2015-elections/
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by akpumping7720(m): 9:23pm On Mar 01
Brendaniel:
To create room to cheat na, if political parties can have situation room where they gather their results from all polling units in real time, why can't INEC with over 1 trillion naira budget not have even better real time transmission.

Meanwhile I asked AI this question, if you are a Peter Obi supporter and a good Nigerian, don't let anyone deceive you.
Point us to the infrastructures or remain quiet forever. At least Millennium schools built by Tinubu are still in existence till today which some of your uncles and aunts benefited from.
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by akpumping7720(m): 9:28pm On Mar 01
Nextjs:
They are criminals.


We need electronically transfer of results

The BVAS is used to valid voters before they vote. Which uses network.

The BVAS is also configured to store data n transmit immediately network is restored
Haaabaaaa naaaah. Please let's do this opposition with sense naaaah. At the bolded is still in existence naaaah. And according to your statement; transmit when network is restored. Hope you know that it is no longer "real time transmission" If there is a network glitch?
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Brendaniel: 10:13pm On Mar 01
akpumping7720:
Point us to the infrastructures or remain quiet forever. At least Millennium schools built by Tinubu are still in existence till today which some of your uncles and aunts benefited from.
just a few listed below here

Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Brendaniel: 10:14pm On Mar 01
jaxxy:
Obi has gone to join a political coalition which 80% chance will not give him the presidential ticket so what will this comparison do for us now Is the issue.

Obi couldn't stay or grow labour party, left it in chaos for a packaged coalition not an organic coalition.

He needs to to consult his Obidents movement and do his political calculations well.

He needs the coalition but the coalition may not want to field him as their presidential candidate and that indecision has killed momentum..
The comparison is just to show that Peter Obi performed better than Tinubu as governor
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by akpumping7720(m): 10:17pm On Mar 01
Brendaniel:
just a few listed below here
Hope you are aware that it has been bursted that miracle centres thrived during Obi's regime? That aside, where are the schools he built from scratch that are still in existence?
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Brendaniel: 10:19pm On Mar 01
phemray:
Funny you, so your AI was available during Tinubu as a governor and Obi to know details of Thier performances. Their real legacy performances are on the ground for those of you children of that time to see and know the truth.

Go to each state and asked who did this and that then you will get to know the fact.
The same AI tells you who was the president of American in 1929 and you believe it, but rejecting information of Peter Obi from the same AI...

it is well...
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Brendaniel: 10:32pm On Mar 01
akpumping7720:
Hope you are aware that it has been bursted that miracle centres thrived during Obi's regime? That aside, where are the schools he built from scratch that are still in existence?
So you are saying that even Bill Gate's foundation were also fooled by Peter Obi's achievements ?
Re: Electoral Act: Why N’assembly Approved Electronic, Manual Transmission — Abbas by Pastorsarynzay: 10:44pm On Mar 01
Make una no worry, if it's network pallava, we go tell trump to tell elon musk to secure us 10G as for that mandatory transmission it's a must
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