Abuja: A coalition of civil society organisations has urged the National Assembly’s harmonisation committee to adopt the House of Representatives’ position on mandatory electronic transmission of election results and retention of electoral timelines. The group also called for the approval of downloadable missing or unissued voter cards, urging the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to issue the 2027 election notice in line with the Electoral Act 2022.
According to News Agency of Nigeria, the group made the position known during a news conference in Abuja on Monday. During the conference, Mr. Jake Epelle, Founder and CEO of the Alnino Foundation (TAF) Africa, expressed concern over the Senate’s rejection of real-time electronic transmission of results, use of downloaded voter cards, and shortening of key electoral timelines. Epelle warned that the divergence between the Senate and the House of Representatives could undermine the credibility, transparency, and predictability of the 2027 general elections.
Epelle highlighted that the prolonged amendment of the Electoral Bill has created legal uncertainty capable of delaying INEC’s preparations and compromising credible elections. He noted that Section 28 (1) of the Electoral Act 2022 empowers INEC to issue notice of elections 360 days before the date of the election. However, the legal uncertainty created by ongoing amendments has apparently deterred INEC from releasing the timetable for the 2027 elections, placing the Commission in potential violation of the extant law.
Epelle urged INEC to release the 2027 election timetable without delay to fulfil statutory obligations, guide stakeholders’ preparations, and reduce legal vulnerabilities. He acknowledged the Senate’s planned emergency plenary on February 10 and called on lawmakers to adopt clear provisions mandating real-time electronic transmission and collation of results, downloadable voter cards, and retention of statutory timelines.
He recommended that the conference committee adopt the House position on mandatory electronic transmission while ensuring technology-neutral drafting to accommodate future innovations. On voter access, he supported downloadable voter cards, citing about 6.2 million uncollected Permanent Voters’ Cards during the 2023 elections, which he said disenfranchised registered voters. Epelle also urged the retention of existing timelines of 360 days for election notice, 180 days for submission of candidate lists, and 150 days for publication of nominations, warning that compression could heighten logistical risks.