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Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? - Politics - Nairaland

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Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by StoriesUpdate(op): 9:22am On Apr 27
Shielding the Vote or Strengthening the Victor? The High Stakes of Nigeria’s New Rules

By : Festus Ifeanyi Anagwu

The signing of the Electoral Act 2026 feels like a recurring fever in the Nigerian body politic. Just as the nation begins to catch its breath and look towards the 2027 horizon, the goalposts have been moved yet again. While the National Democratic Congress (NDC) takes its grievances before Justice Mohammed Umar in Suit No. FHC/ABJ/CS/635/2026, the rest of us are left to wonder: is this reform, or a tactical retreat from accountability?

Nigeria’s democratic history is littered with these eleventh-hour legislative ‘upgrades.’ From 2002 to 2022, and now in 2026, we have seen a consistent and troubling habit of altering the electoral architecture just as the candidates are taking their marks. Reform is necessary for any evolving state, but when the rules are rewritten on the eve of an election, the law ceases to look like a neutral foundation and begins to resemble a political instrument. We must be honest: manipulation rarely starts at the polling unit. It begins in the quiet halls of the legislature, where the grounds for challenge are narrowed and the gates to participation are locked.

The heart of the current controversy lies in a chilling legislative erasure. By removing ‘qualification’ as an express ground for an election petition under Section 138, the new Act appears to suggest that the constitutional requirements for office – age, education and integrity – may be treated as negotiable. That is a dangerous precedent. If a candidate who is constitutionally unfit to lead can hide behind a statutory shield once the results are announced, the 1999 Constitution risks being reduced from the supreme law of the land to a mere suggestion. Nigerians are essentially being asked to accept that illegality, once inaugurated, becomes untouchable.

Furthermore, the administrative ‘order’ promised by Section 77(5), regarding digital party registers, feels like a Trojan horse. In a perfect world, a 21-day deadline for submitting membership lists to INEC would prevent fraud. In our world, it may provide a perfect mechanism for party bosses to ‘delete’ dissent. By turning membership into a closed-door privilege managed through an opaque digital gatekeeper, we risk wounding democracy in the cradle of the primary election. If an aspirant is excluded by a list before reaching the voters, the general election becomes a choice between pre-selected shadows rather than a true competition of ideas.

Nigeria is the heavyweight of African democracy, and its stability is the continent’s anchor. We cannot afford to treat electoral laws as disposable tactics. The court will eventually rule on the legality of these provisions, and that process must be respected. But the court of public opinion must already confront their democratic morality. A democracy dies a slow death when the law is used to shrink the people’s choices and insulate the powerful from scrutiny. Nigeria does not need a more complex legal code; it needs a system stable enough to be trusted and constitutional enough to be legitimate. We must demand that the law remains a shield for the voter, not a weapon for the politician.

Dr Festus Ifeanyi Anagwu is a Nigerian scientist, researcher and public affairs commentator. He writes on governance, democracy, innovation and national development.

_The views expressed in this article are those of the author and are offered as public interest commentary on constitutional democracy and electoral governance. They do not seek to prejudge any matter before the court._
https://guardian.ng/opinion/law-or-labyrinth-is-nigerias-new-electoral-act-a-dead-end-for-democracy/

Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by lovelove2323: 11:05am On Apr 27
Only GOD can save us in this very country Amen
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by legendarystar: 11:07am On Apr 27
We hope things get better cause it’s getting out hand honestly
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by ppogba: 11:07am On Apr 27
The democracy that did not die when Obasanjo did his own will not die now.

The political elite should stop heating the polity.
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by boxypane: 11:09am On Apr 27
A question that has already been answered by the topic. I expected the country to be upside down when the Senate decided against immediate electronic transmission of election results.
But really, are Nigerians worth fighting for?
Lots of issues that has led to anarchy and change in government in other meaningful countries, passes in Nigeria like the wind...
Let us drop sentiments aside , to hell with tribe or class.... Theae thieving politicians suppose learn bitter lessons.
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by helinues: 11:10am On Apr 27
I will reserve my opinion on this thread because immediately after the 2023 election, I started raising loopholes in the last adjusted electoral act, possible rectification for them and some new adjustment.

Just like the opposition leaders who are not even having any particular direction, so as there supporters who were speaking in tongues on threads related to electoral reforms.

Abeg, is it when election is less than a year they find it suitable to be having the discussion.

They will learn in a bitter way
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by Afriifa(m): 11:22am On Apr 27
Still no legislation on Islamic terrorism.
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by HIGHESTPOPORI(m): 11:23am On Apr 27
helinues:
I will reserve my opinion on this thread because immediately after the 2023 election, I started raising loopholes in the last adjusted electoral act, possible rectification for them and some new adjustment.

Just like the opposition leaders who are not even having any particular direction, so as there supporters who were speaking in tongues on threads related to electoral reforms.

Abeg, is it when election is less than a year they find it suitable to be having the discussion.

They will learn in a bitter way
You left the Govt that is supposed to do the right thing to blame opposition.
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by HIGHESTPOPORI(m): 11:23am On Apr 27
When you have people of questionable characters in power,don't expect the right thing to be done.
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by Nakuza(m): 11:27am On Apr 27
When the law is not made as a supreme law of the land but aim to shield some powerful individuals then our nascent democracy is in danger.
The legislative arms of the government seems to have lost its primary purpose and relevant enhancing democracy. And this is the arm of government we spend enormous tax money to keep operational activities with nothing to show forth.
We keep calling ourselves giant of Africa yet we can't showcase a good example for others Africa countries. In terms of credible and transparent democracy, countries like Ghana and South Africa have left us behind.
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by Chucks13: 11:28am On Apr 27
They asked for electoral act and we gave it to them so no complain. They are the ones saying Tonubu is scared of the electoral reform and Tinubu gave them what they asked for so why opposition now in panic?
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by Dronedude(m): 11:32am On Apr 27
It's not surprising that the Electoral act is twisted to undermine democracy. It's simply greed.
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by ScamDemicEra: 11:58am On Apr 27
ppogba:
The democracy that did not die when Obasanjo did his own will not die now.

The political elite should stop heating the polity.
... wow what a comment !!

I'm against censorship but comments like this causes one to rethink ....
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by Ofunaofu: 12:56pm On Apr 27
The 2026 electoral amendment is the worst the National Assembly has ever embarked upon since inception, and the reason isn’t far-fetched. We are under a regime led by a notorious drug baron, certificate forger, and identity thief, hell-bent on perpetuating himself in power.”
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by Yemmysworld91: 1:10pm On Apr 27
boxypane:
A question that has already been answered by the topic. I expected the country to be upside down when the Senate decided against immediate electronic transmission of election results.
But really, are Nigerians worth fighting for?
Lots of issues that has led to anarchy and change in government in other meaningful countries, passes in Nigeria like the wind...
Let us drop sentiments aside , to hell with tribe or class.... Theae thieving politicians suppose learn bitter lessons.
There you go again. There much more dangerous things in that bill than electronic transmission of results. The opposition didn't notice that but went all out protesting against only electronic transmission of results hence the summit they had in ibadan yesterday.
Go read the new electoral acts and spot the real traps in there
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by chuksjuve(m): 1:16pm On Apr 27
Nations are progressing forward but here we are progressing backwards with the speed of light.
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by themanderon: 3:20pm On Apr 27
A group of criminals gathered together to enact a law that would give legal backing to the electoral heist they hope to Carry out next year.
Legalization of fraudulent certificates and all other vices is what that act is full of.
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by UsmanDogo: 3:38pm On Apr 27
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by btaliat(m): 8:49pm On Apr 27
Like I do say, Nigerians will fight when they are tired. But now, let us just watch them as they are riding us. Let's the wisest of us thinks supporting the oppressors is the way of showing love to the country. And let the most foolish of us thinks that being silent is golden even at the face of Injustice. When we wake up, we start from where we slept.
Re: Law or Labyrinth: Is Nigeria’s New Electoral Act a Dead End for Democracy? by DLSReigns(m): 12:24am On Apr 28
The political change required in 2027 isn't just the seat of the president but most importantly the need to flush out the national assembly crooks.
1 Reply

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