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    Home»Uncategorized»INEC, 2027, and the Death of Voter Trust in Nigeria
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    INEC, 2027, and the Death of Voter Trust in Nigeria

    Prima NewsBy Prima NewsJune 18, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    When only 14 out of 100 registered voters show up, democracy is on life support. When a citizen’s voter data leaks from inside INEC, the system bleeds.

    With Ekiti, Osun and 2027 looming, the question is brutal: Has INEC become the biggest threat to Nigeria’s elections?

    The bottom line is that INEC isn’t protecting voters. It’s pushing them out.

    The law says registration must be continuous. Yet INEC shut it down six months before the 2023 polls, forcing a court battle just to add 31 days. Result: millions begged to vote but couldn’t. This time, the same six-month blackout is back for 2027.

    When 86 per cent of Abuja voters stay home and 400,000 people’s data leaks from INEC’s own staff, that’s not an accident. That’s design by neglect.

    Proof? Access is a crime scene. Polling units sit eight kilometres from voters in Lugbe and Kuje. PVC collection ends without a single SMS alert to owners. BVAS fails on election day, and INEC blames “network”.

    Meanwhile, actor Emeka Ike’s voter record lands on Lere Olayinka’s phone. INEC admits an officer leaked it. Who was arrested? Nobody. Who punished Olayinka for posting it? Nobody. If a minister’s aide can buy your data, what stops the minister? Or the President?

    The price is that democracy is bleeding voters. In the FCT Council poll, 1,680,315 registered, and 239,210 voted. That’s 14.2 per cent turnout. Eighty-six per cent stayed home. Nationwide in 2023, 93.4 million registered, but only 25.3 million voted. Sixty-eight million Nigerians walked away.

    They didn’t boycott. They were blocked by distance, by deadlines, by doubt. When citizens believe “votes don’t count”, elections become theatre. INEC is selling the tickets.

    I see a CVR scam: six months to disenfranchise. Sections 9 and 10 of the Electoral Act say voter registration must be continuous. INEC obeyed the letter, killed the spirit. In 2022, it slammed the CVR door on June 30. Queues stretched for miles. SERAP went to court. Only after public rage did INEC add 31 days. By then, millions were locked out.

    Now look at 2026: CVR stops August 30. Elections start in January 2027. That’s the same six-month blackout. What exactly will INEC do in those 180 days except count desks?

    Canada lets you register at the polling unit on election day. New Zealand lets you enrol days before. Nigeria locks you out half a year early. Whose democracy is this?

    Voter education is loud in Abuja but silent in Kuje. INEC’s job isn’t just to count votes. The law says it must teach voters how to cast them. But ask a trader in Nyanya: Where is your polling unit? How do you transfer your PVC? When BVAS rejects your thumb, what next? Silence.

    INEC spends billions on TV jingles. Meanwhile, voters trek eight kilometres because nobody told them their unit had moved. PVCs rot in ward offices because nobody got a text. Voter education isn’t a press release. It’s a door knock. INEC isn’t knocking.

    Emeka Ike’s case wasn’t a hack. INEC said so. An “electoral officer” used “official credentials” to pull his file. Then Lere Olayinka, Wike’s spokesman, posted it online. Two crimes, zero arrests.

    The Constitution calls INEC “independent”. But independence isn’t on paper. It’s in handcuffs. If staff can leak data to aides, they can leak it to parties, governors, godfathers. Your phone number, address, face, thumbprint — for sale. How do you trust a referee who bets on the match?

    The 2023 elections were the warning. FCT was the autopsy. Mahmood Yakubu’s INEC gave us 2023: disputed results, BVAS excuses, and IReV glitches. Nigerians called it a heist. INEC called it “technical”. Three months ago, Prof. Joash Amupitan’s team ran FCT council polls. Turnout crashed to 14.2 per cent. Voters said units vanished. INEC said “reorganisation”. Translation: we moved your goalpost and didn’t tell you.

    Ekiti and Osun are weeks away. 2027 is months away. Same umpire. Same playbook.

    The Constitution says INEC is independent, but reality says otherwise. Can an officer leak data to a minister’s aide and keep his job? Yes. Can INEC shut registration six months early despite the law? Yes. Can it move polling units without telling voters? Yes.

    That’s not independence. That’s impunity with a stamp. And every day it stands, more Nigerians conclude: “My vote won’t count.” When belief dies, turnout dies. When turnout dies, democracy dies.

    Now, who benefits from empty polls? Ask yourself: Who wins when 86 per cent stay home? Not the voter. Not the market woman who needs roads. Not the student who needs jobs.

    Low turnout favours machines, money, and incumbents. It favours those who can bus 14 per cent of voters and call it a mandate. INEC’s failures aren’t bugs. They’re features — for someone.

    Call it our global shame. In Canada, voters register on election day and vote the same day. New Zealand enrols in the poll. Ghana has continuous registration and sends SMS to collect PVCs.

    But Nigeria? Six-month cutoff, eight-kilometre treks, zero SMS, leak your data, and blame the network. We’re not just behind. We’re walking backwards.

    So, what am I prescribing? Do these or stop lying.

    Kill the six-month blackout. Run CVR till 30 days before the polls. If Canada can, INEC can.

    Jail data leakers. Prosecute the officer who leaked Emeka Ike’s file. Prosecute Olayinka for publishing it. No sacred cows.

    Take polling units to people. Two kilometres max. Publish new maps 90 days before elections.

    SMS every voter. We can do PVC by text. If banks send OTPs, INEC can send “Your PVC is ready at Ward 5”.

    We must also name and shame. Every BVAS failure must list the officer, unit, and sanction. No more “technical glitch”.

    The final verdict is this: INEC is on trial. The Constitution gave INEC one job: free, fair, credible elections. The evidence says it’s failing.

    Registration blocks voters. Education misses them. Data leaks about them. Units hide from them. Turnout mocks them.

    Next year isn’t just another election. It’s a referendum on INEC. If the umpire can’t protect access, privacy, and trust, then it isn’t an umpire. It’s a saboteur in an INEC vest.

    Bottom Line: You can’t kill voter trust and expect democracy to live. INEC has months to prove it isn’t the killer. The clock isn’t ticking. It’s screaming.

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    2027 elections BVAS Democracy Nigeria electoral act INEC Nigerian elections voter registration voter trust
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