3/2/2026
INEC’s 2027 Pledge of Credible Polls Under the Spotlight
As political activities gradually intensify, the focus is shifting from promises to preparedness. For many Nigerians, the key question is no longer whether INEC intends to deliver credible elections, but whether the systems, safeguards and independence required to guarantee them will be firmly in place.

INEC 2027 Nigeria Election
Urban Naija
INEC’s 2027 Pledge of Credible Polls Under the Spotlight
inecs-2027-pledge-of-credible-polls-under-the-spotlight
As Nigeria prepares for the 2027 general elections, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has pledged to deliver credible, transparent and technology-driven polls. But while the promise signals institutional reform, questions remain about whether implementation will match ambition.
Speaking at the 2026 Citizens’ Townhall on the Electoral Act in Abuja, INEC Chairman, Prof. Joash Amupitan, said electoral integrity remains central to national development and global confidence.
“Nigeria deserves elections that inspire trust at home and command confidence abroad. That is our commitment,” Amupitan stated.
Technology as Democratic Infrastructure
INEC says preparations for 2027 will include nationwide stress-testing of technology, reinforcement of digital infrastructure and scenario-based simulations to prevent disruptions experienced in previous elections.
Amupitan acknowledged that during past polls, especially the 2023 presidential election, technological systems experienced stress-capacity limitations at the national scale. However, he insisted the commission has drawn lessons from those experiences.
“Perfection is our aspiration, but continuous improvement is our obligation,” he said.
The Electoral Act 2026 provides for clearer voter accreditation procedures, electronic transmission of results and defined timelines for results management. INEC maintains that these provisions strengthen transparency and reduce opportunities for manipulation.
Addressing Transmission Controversies
On electronic transmission delays recorded in some recent elections, the INEC chairman attributed challenges to infrastructure constraints rather than institutional failure.
“The delay was logistical, not systemic. Transmission did not fail. The issue was timing, not integrity,” he said, referencing difficulties encountered in parts of the Federal Capital Territory Area Council elections.
The commission argues that in a country with varying terrain and uneven network coverage, isolated delays should not be mistaken for systemic breakdown.
Civil Society Urges Vigilance
However, civil society groups have urged caution. The Executive Director of Yiaga Africa, Samson Itodo, acknowledged improvements in the new Electoral Act but warned that implementation will be critical.
“Democracy is not self-executing; it requires guardians, and the citizens of this great country are the guardians we need,” Itodo said.
He cautioned that certain provisions of the Act could weaken safeguards if not properly enforced, particularly around financial independence and dispute resolution mechanisms.
“If the Electoral Act 2026 is to succeed, it must deepen trust, not dilute it. It must block avenues for manipulation rather than create new ones,” he added.
Analysts note that while technology can enhance transparency, public trust remains the true measure of electoral credibility. Infrastructure gaps, power supply challenges and network limitations continue to pose risks, particularly in rural communities.
Observers say Nigeria’s 2027 election will not be judged solely by technological upgrades, but by whether voters believe their ballots are counted accurately and fairly.
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