An Open Assault on Democracy: Why Nigerians Must Resist the Senate’s Electoral Betrayal

 

By RULAAC

The Nigerian Senate has declared open war on democracy. By rejecting mandatory electronic transmission of election results and deliberately weakening key electoral safeguards, the Godswill Akpabio–led Senate has chosen impunity over integrity and rigging over reform.

What transpired during the passage of the Electoral Act Amendment Bill, 2026 is not a disagreement over policy details. It is a calculated rollback of hard-won democratic gains secured after years of struggle, civic mobilisation, and painful lessons from flawed elections. The rejection of compulsory electronic transmission of results, alongside the compression of critical electoral timelines and restrictions on voter access to digital tools, is a conscious attempt to reopen the space for manipulation in the 2027 elections.

Let us be clear: this is not legislative oversight. It is legislative sabotage.

Electronic transmission of results from polling units is one of the most effective guardrails against ballot snatching, result alteration, and post-election disputes. It is precisely because it limits fraud that it has now been targeted. By insisting that INEC retain vague discretionary powers on how results are transmitted, the Senate has preserved the very loopholes that have historically been exploited to subvert the will of voters.

Equally troubling is the reduction of timelines for election preparation and candidate disclosure. These compressed timelines increase the risk of logistical failures, weaken transparency, and disadvantage voters while empowering political insiders who thrive in chaos and opacity. No democracy that is serious about credible elections deliberately weakens its own safeguards.

This Senate’s actions sharply contrast with the more progressive position taken by the House of Representatives, which has shown greater sensitivity to public interest and electoral credibility. Reports that the Senate version of the bill reflects the personal whims of its leadership rather than collective democratic reasoning only deepen concerns about arrogance, impunity, and contempt for citizens.

Nigeria’s democracy is already fragile. Voter apathy is rising, trust in institutions is collapsing, and young people increasingly feel alienated from the political process. At such a moment, any legislature committed to national stability would be strengthening confidence in elections – not tearing it down.

RULAAC believes that what is unfolding is part of a broader pattern: an elite determination to maintain a criminal political status quo in which elections are mere rituals and power is insulated from accountability. This Senate is not merely out of touch; it is brazenly anti-people and anti-democracy.

Silence at this moment would be complicity.
Civil society organisations, youth movements, labour unions, professional bodies, faith leaders, and all defenders of democracy must mobilise now. Advocacy must be intensified. Public pressure must be sustained. The Conference Committee must be compelled to reject the Senate’s regressive provisions and restore the progressive safeguards necessary to make votes count in 2027.

Democracy is not gifted by politicians; it is defended by citizens. If Nigerians allow this betrayal to stand, we should not feign surprise when our votes no longer matter and our elections lose all meaning.

This is the line. We must not allow it to be crossed.

Okechukwu Nwanguma
Executive Director

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