A coalition of civil society organisations (CSOs) have faulted the Electoral Act 2026, warning that the new law contains “dangerous loopholes” that could undermine the 2027 polls.
The groups, including Yiaga Africa, International Press
Centre, ElectHer, Nigerian Women Trust Fund, TAF Africa, Centre for Media and
Society, and The Kukah Centre, made the remarks on Thursday at a press briefing
in Abuja following the presidential assent to the Electoral Act 2026.
The CSOs described the law as “a missed opportunity for the
transformative electoral reform that Nigeria requires and that Nigerian
citizens deserve”.
“At a time when public confidence in elections remains
fragile, this law should have decisively strengthened transparency, eliminated
ambiguities, and deepened safeguards against manipulation,” the groups said.
“Instead, it creates more vulnerabilities in the electoral
process.”
The organisations also criticised the process leading to the
passage of the law, citing concerns over transparency and legislative
accountability.
“The speed, and opacity, raise serious concerns about
legislative transparency and the commitment of lawmakers to genuine electoral
reform,” they said.
They alleged that last-minute amendments were introduced
without adequate scrutiny or public access, adding that “the final version of
the Bill voted upon reportedly contained last-minute amendments that were
neither published nor made available to civil society or the broader public
prior to adoption”.
According to the CSOs, such actions undermine confidence in
the electoral reform process.
“When reforms are rushed, consolidated without scrutiny, and
adopted without full disclosure, public confidence inevitably erodes,” the CSOs
said.
The groups identified key weaknesses in the act,
particularly provisions relating to electronic transmission of results.
They said although section 60(3) mandates electronic
transmission, it allows manual collation where transmission fails due to
“communication failure,” which they said is undefined and vulnerable to abuse.
“There is no independent verification mechanism. There are
no consequences for deliberate sabotage disguised as technical failure,” the
CAOs said.
“This loophole will be tested again in 2027 and the Act
provides no protection.”
The CSOs also criticised a provision requiring that only
officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) can trigger a
review of election results, warning that this excludes political parties,
candidates, and observers.
“Restricting the power of review to reports filed by INEC
officials is against the spirit behind the power of review vested in INEC,”
they said.
The groups further condemned the imposition of a N50 million
administrative fee for registering new political parties, describing it as
exclusionary.
“This is not administrative cost recovery; it is a financial
moat designed to exclude grassroots movements, youth-led parties, and non-elite
political formations from formal competition,” the CSOs said.
Despite their concerns, the CSOs acknowledged positive
provisions such as downloadable voter cards, disability-inclusive voter
registration, and stricter penalties for electoral offences.
However, they warned that the law remains flawed.
“The Electoral Act 2026 is now law. It is imperfect. It is
incomplete. It leaves dangerous loopholes open and erects new barriers to
participation,” they said.
The CSOs urged INEC to urgently publish a revised timetable
for the 2027 general election and issue clear regulations to address
ambiguities in the law.
They also called for a nationwide simulation of electronic
transmission of results to identify technical gaps ahead of the elections.
The coalition urged political parties to publicly commit to
defending electronic transmission and called on the national assembly to
publish the final version of the law.
“The national assembly must promptly publish the final
version of the Electoral Act 2026 as signed into law to ensure public
awareness, legal clarity, and stakeholder engagement,” the groups said.
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