Politics

Electoral Amendment Act Faces Test as Nigerians Brace for Next Election

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As Nigerians prepare to cast their votes, the Electoral Amendment Act is under scrutiny for its ability to protect the integrity of elections and ensure that citizens’ votes translate into real power. While the Act introduced electronic transmission of results, clearer timelines, and stricter rules for party primaries, experts warn that laws alone cannot guarantee reform.

In theory, digital results should move safely from polling units to INEC servers, reducing opportunities for manipulation. Yet history has shown that technological improvements cannot discipline a political culture that rewards compromise and selective enforcement. Delays or system stalls can nullify transparency before the public fully understands what went wrong.

The Act also expands enfranchisement through early voting for security personnel and diaspora participation. While these measures are necessary for inclusivity, they raise questions of logistics and fairness, sparking debate nationwide. Moreover, some reforms, such as dispute resolution timelines and diaspora voting, require constitutional amendments, limiting the Act’s immediate impact.

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Analysts highlight that real accountability depends on people willing to enforce the law. Even the most robust framework fails if institutions lack the courage to resist pressure or if political actors face no consequences for undermining elections.

The next election will test more than procedures; it will test the integrity of Nigeria’s electoral institutions. Will results move digitally and transparently from polling units to announcement points? Will citizens’ votes survive the journey unaltered?

For Nigerians, casting a vote is simple—the true challenge lies in defending it. The Electoral Amendment Act could restore trust, reduce litigation, and make elections more transparent. But its success depends on the spine of those implementing it. Until then, the distance between a vote and actual power remains wide.

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