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Opposition splits over NASS poll shift plan ahead of 2027

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A fresh bid by the National Assembly to shift the 2027 presidential and governorship elections to November 2026 has divided opposition parties.

While some described it as an attempt to extend President Bola Tinubu’s stay in office, others agreed it could strengthen Nigeria’s electoral system if properly implemented.

The proposal, part of sweeping amendments to the 2022 Electoral Act, seeks to move the elections forward by about six months to allow all pre- and post-election litigations to be concluded before the May 29, 2027, handover date.

It is scaled through; the presidential and governorship elections would be conducted in November 2026, instead of the traditional February or March date.

The proposal forms part of the draft amendments to the 2022 Electoral Act, which stipulate that elections for both offices must be held no later than 185 days before the expiration of the incumbent’s tenure on May 29.

Section 4(7) of the proposed amendment states that “elections into the office of the president and governor of a state shall be held not later than 185 days before the expiration of the term of office of the last holder of the office.”

For legislative elections, Section 4(5) of the proposed amendment provides that “elections into the state houses of assembly and the National Assembly shall be held not later than 185 days before the date on which each of the houses stands dissolved.”

An analysis of the timeline shows that counting 185 days backward from May 29, 2027, places the proposed election date in November 2026, roughly six months earlier than the current schedule.

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Lawmakers said the adjustment would end the practice of swearing in elected officials whose victories are still subject to court disputes.

The proposal follows a similar move in July when lawmakers began pushing for constitutional amendments to allow all elections – presidential, governorship, National Assembly, and state assembly — to hold the same day in 2027.

At Monday’s joint public hearing, the House Committee on Electoral Matters, chaired by Adebayo Balogun, argued that moving the polls to November 2026 would help “ensure that all manner of election litigations are dispensed with before the swearing-in of winners.”

Balogun said the goal was to create enough time for the resolution of election petitions, as the committee also proposed an amendment that would reduce the 180 days of tribunal judgment to 90 days.

“Ninety days are expected of judgment by the appellate court, up to 60 days by the Supreme Court, which will not exceed 185 days,” he said.

Also proposed is early voting, contained in Section 2 of the draft bill, which provides that “there shall be a date set aside for early voting not later than 14 days before the day of the election.”

Nigerians eligible for early voting, according to the proposal, include security personnel, officials of the electoral commission, accredited observers, journalists, and ad hoc staff of the commission.

The proposed amendment also introduces mandatory electronic transmission of election results and makes the use of permanent voter cards non-compulsory.

Section 60(5) of the draft provides that “The presiding officer shall transmit the results, including the total number of accredited voters, to the next level of collation both electronically and manually.”

If passed, the amendment also imposes penalties for failure to comply.

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While the proposal has received backing from INEC, which described it as a step toward greater transparency and efficiency in the electoral process, opposition parties remain divided over its motive and potential impact.

In an exclusive interview with The PUNCH on Monday, the Peoples Democratic Party Deputy National Youth Leader, Timothy Osadolor, accused the National Assembly of trying to “buy more time” for Tinubu.

He said, “The National Assembly should not be thinking of tinkering with the Electoral Act in this regard. If their plan is to give President Bola Tinubu an opportunity to stay a bit longer before he goes, they should own up.

“The move is ill-timed and not in the best interest of Nigerians. What Nigerians want in the Electoral Amendment is for the BVAS to be constitutionally enabled to be part of the process and for election results to be transmitted in real time.”

Similarly, the National Publicity Secretary of the New Nigeria People’s Party, Ladipo Johnson, warned that bringing the polls forward could put the opposition at a disadvantage.

“Personally, I feel that it is a way to hoodwink the opposition.

“Those in government will be better prepared, while other parties will be forced to go back to the drawing board. Holding elections in November 2026 may be too early for those expecting February or March 2027,” he said.

The African Democratic Congress, however, opted for caution.

Its National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, said the party would only comment after reviewing the draft amendment.

“Inasmuch as we would like to comment, we don’t have a draft of the proposed amendment to the Electoral Act yet. We will definitely react officially after seeing the draft,” he said.

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The factional spokesman of the Labour Party, Obiora Ifoh, threw his weight behind the proposal, saying it would save costs and reduce tension.

“We have always averred that all elections should be held in a day so that the issue of bandwagon effect will be taken care of.

“If the National Assembly passes it and puts it into effect, Nigerians will be better off. It will also give enough time for litigations to be resolved before swearing-in,” he said.

But the National Coordinator of the Obidient Movement Worldwide, Dr Yunusa Tanko, called for broader consultations, warning lawmakers against acting in self-interest.

“Anything that the National Assembly wants to do, they should subject it to public opinion first.

“They shouldn’t do things only in their interest. They should learn to consult the people by having a public hearing. We have seen in the past how such unilateral actions backfire,” Tanko cautioned.

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Automatic ticket: Tinubu leaves lawmakers’ fate in govs’ hands

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President Bola Tinubu has rebuffed lobbying efforts by the leadership of the Senate to secure automatic return tickets for the ruling party’s sitting legislators ahead of the 2027 general elections, instead reaffirming the authority of state governors over the selection of candidates in their respective states, The PUNCH reports.

This was as he formally empowered governors to drive the primaries process after a meeting with the state executives on Thursday evening.

Our correspondents gathered that the President’s position has deepened anxiety among federal lawmakers, including several senators whose relationships with their governors have been strained.

The President made the decision at a closed-door meeting with the extended leadership of the Senate at the Presidential Villa on Wednesday evening.

Tinubu had earlier suggested that he would “do everything within the party’s power” to ensure the return of serving legislators, a promise that raised expectations in the National Assembly.

Multiple senior National Assembly sources familiar with the meeting said the senators had gone to the Villa specifically to press for Tinubu’s assurances.

The source said, “The meeting was to plead for automatic tickets for senators but President Tinubu insisted that the governor of each state has the influence over candidates.

“They made a case for continuity and stability and argued for automatic tickets, but the President was very clear in his response.

“He told them plainly that governors were the leaders of the party in their states and must have a say on who gets the ticket.”

One of our correspondents had spotted the official Mercedes sedan of Senate President Godswill Akpabio and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abbas, arriving at the Villa at minutes past 5pm on Wednesday.

The PUNCH also learned that the visit that was not on the President’s official schedule for the day.

Senate Majority Leader Michael Opeyemi Bamidele, in a post on his verified X account in the early hours of Thursday, confirmed the gathering, describing it as a session that deliberated on “matters of urgent national importance” following a resolution passed at a closed executive session of the Senate earlier that day.

“Far-reaching decisions were taken at this strategic meeting,” Bamidele wrote.

Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga separately confirmed the meeting, describing it as a consultation between Tinubu and “the extended leadership of the Senate.”

Less than 24 hours later, President Tinubu convened a second meeting, this time with APC governors.

The governors’ meeting, initially scheduled for 4pm at the Council Chamber, began at approximately 5pm after the venue was moved to the Conference Room of the President’s Office.

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Present were Prof. Babagana Zulum of Borno State, Hope Uzodimma of Imo State, Inuwa Yahaya of Gombe State, Hyacinth Alia of Benue State, Biodun Oyebanji of Ekiti State, Peter Mbah of Enugu State, and AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq of Kwara State, among others.

Some states were represented by their deputy governors.

Niger State Governor, Mohammed Bago, who spoke to State House correspondents revealed that Tinubu had formally empowered governors to drive the primaries process.

Bago said, “We came to thank the President for his magnanimity and his support to the governors and for our party, the APC.

“He gave us a matching order on what to do for him, he has given and ceded his executive power to the governors to go ahead and conduct primaries based on the Electoral Act, either a consensus or direct primaries.

“So he has reiterated his support for our decision, and he has given us a go ahead.”

Kwara State Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq confirmed the development saying, “The timetable for the primaries has been released. We’ve discussed the process moving forward so that there will be free and fair elections, no rancour, at the end of the process, so the party comes out stronger, stronger than ever, heading towards the election.”

Tinubu’s stance on the automatic came days after the National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress, Prof. Nentawe Yilwatda, said granting automatic tickets is not part of the party’s ethos.

At a media chat in Abuja on April 17, Nentawe said, “There is no automatic ticket in our constitution. The party cannot promise an automatic ticket.

“The constitution of the party does not provide for automatic tickets, and the party cannot wishfully promise automatic ticket to anyone. The Electoral Act also does not provide for automatic ticket.

“It says all primaries must be either by consensus or by direct primaries.”

He added that performance, not incumbency, would be the deciding factor for those seeking re-election.

The APC’s revised 2027 primary timetable, announced by the party’s Deputy National Publicity Secretary, Duro Meseko, at the 186th National Working Committee meeting on Thursday, now pegs Senate primaries for May 18, 2026.

House of Representatives primaries are scheduled for May 15, with the presidential primary on May 23.

Meseko also disclosed that the screening of aspirants, initially scheduled for May 6 to May 8, including the presidential screening set for May 9, has now been rescheduled.

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Announcing the adjustment to the APC 2027 schedule of activities, the Deputy National Publicity Secretary stated, “We now have a new revised timetable in accordance with the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, as amended, the Electoral Act 2026, and the Independent National Electoral Commission revised timetable and schedule of activities for the 2027 general elections.

“We hereby present the new revised timetable and schedule of activities for the conduct of the 2027 general elections to the press.

“Notice had already been given to state chapters on Monday, April 20. Sales of forms will commence this Saturday, April 25, to Saturday, May 2, 2026. The last day for submission of completed forms and accompanying documents is now Monday, May 4, 2026.

“Screening of aspirants- House of Assembly, House of Representatives, Senate, Governorship, and Presidential will hold as follows: Wednesday, May 6, to Friday, May 8, 2026, for House of Assembly, House of Representatives, Senate, and Governorship screening respectively. Saturday, May 9, 2026, is the screening for Presidential aspirants.

“Publication of screening results for State House of Assembly, House of Representatives, Senate, Governorship, and Presidential will hold on Monday, May 11, 2026.

Screening appeals will be handled by the appeal committees from Tuesday, May 12, to Wednesday, May 13, 2026, for State House of Assembly, House of Representatives, Senate, Governorship, and Presidential.

“Primary elections of the All Progressives Congress commence as follows: Friday, May 15, 2026: House of Representatives primary elections.

“Monday, May 18, 2026: Senate primary elections. Wednesday, May 20, 2026: State House of Assembly primary elections. Thursday, May 21, 2026: Governorship primary elections. Saturday, May 23, 2026: Presidential primary elections.”

Meseko announced that the post-primary appeal committees will sit on Monday, May 18, 2026 for the House of Representatives; Wednesday,  May 20, 2026 for the Senate; Thursday, May 21, 2026 for the State House of Assembly; Saturday, May 23, 2026 for the governorship; and Monday, May 25, 2026 for the presidential.

He explained that the party has adopted the two modes of primary elections provided in the 2026 Electoral Act, direct primary and consensus for selecting candidates for elective positions.

The Independent National Electoral Commission has fixed the Presidential and National Assembly elections for January 16, 2027.

The Governorship and State Houses of Assembly elections will hold on Saturday, February 6, 2027.

The Commission also stated that party primaries, including the resolution of disputes arising from them, are scheduled to hold between April 23, 2026 and May 30, 2026.

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According to INEC, campaigns for the Presidential and National Assembly elections will commence on August 19, 2026, while campaigns for the Governorship and State Houses of Assembly elections will begin on September 9, 2026.

Tinubu’s position may jinx the re-election bid of several lawmakers in several states.

Among them is Senator Gbenga Daniel of Ogun East, who is facing a concerted effort by Governor Dapo Abiodun to reclaim the senate seat for himself.

Daniel was reportedly shut out of a stakeholders’ meeting of the Ogun East senatorial district, a gathering that Governor Abiodun presided over.

Abiodun himself, who cannot seek a third term as governor, has been picked as the preferred senatorial candidate in Ogun East, with the Senate Committee on Appropriations chairman, Senator Adeola Olamilekan, positioned as the governorship candidate.

In Nasarawa State, Senator Aliyu Wadada, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Accounts, has secured a consensus endorsement for the governorship, which would see him exit the Senate.

In Oyo, Senator Sharafadeen Alli received the APC’s backing on April 15 to succeed Governor Makinde.

These departures, alongside the growing list of senators whose governors are actively working against their return, may see a high turnover rate in the red chamber.

A North-East senator who spoke to one of our correspondents on condition of anonymity warned that the APC is walking a constitutional tightrope.

The lawmaker said, “There is no provision for an automatic ticket in the APC Constitution. The Electoral Act recognises the consensus and direct primaries option.”

“Whatever they discuss in their meeting cannot upstage the law. We should either go by consensus or adopt the primary election model,” the senator added, noting that he was not privy to what was decided at the Senate leadership’s meeting with the President.

In Benue state, the fallout between Secretary to the Government of the Federation, George Akume, and Governor Hyacinth Alia over control of the APC structure in the state has pushed 10 of the state’s 11 federal lawmakers into Akume’s camp.

However, Tinubu on Thursday at the meeting, which Alia attended, gave governors the green light to determine the direction of the states primaries.

In late March, Deputy Spokesman of the House of Representatives Philip Agbese defected from the APC to the Labour Party, after his return prospects under the APC collapsed.

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Supreme Court Reserves Judgment In PDP, ADC Leadership Crises

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The Supreme Court on Wednesday reserved judgment in the leadership tussles within the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the African Democratic Congress (ADC), raising fresh uncertainty over the stability of the opposition parties ahead of the 2027 general elections.

A five-member panel of the apex court, led by Justice Mohammed Garba, reserved judgment after hearing arguments from parties in separate appeals challenging lower court decisions.

Naija News understands that no date was fixed for the delivery of the judgment. The development comes amid tight timelines set by the Independent National Electoral Commission.

INEC has fixed May 10 for submission of party membership registers, while party primaries are scheduled between April 23 and May 30, 2026.

The commission also set January 16, 2027, for Presidential and National Assembly elections, and February 6, 2027, for governorship and state assembly polls.

With both parties embroiled in multiple litigations, their ability to organise congresses, primaries, and other activities has been significantly disrupted.

The situation has left aspirants in limbo, uncertain about their political future as the legal battles continue.

Within the PDP, the crisis has split the party into factions led by Tanimu Turaki and Abdulrahman Mohammed.

The Turaki-led faction, backed by Governor Seyi Makinde and Bala Mohammed, is seeking validation of the party’s November 2025 convention held in Ibadan.

Lower courts had nullified the convention over alleged procedural breaches, including claims that Sule Lamido was denied the opportunity to contest.

ADC Crisis Deepens With Multiple Factions

The ADC is also facing a deepening leadership crisis involving former Senate President David Mark.

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The dispute arose after the handover of party leadership by Ralph Nwosu to a coalition group led by Mark, sidelining Nafiu Gombe.

The situation has since split the party into three factions, including one aligned with Dumebi Kachikwu.

The crises have resulted in multiple cases before the courts, raising concerns about the parties’ readiness for the 2027 elections.

Mark, through his counsel, argued that the dispute is an internal party matter and should not be subject to judicial interference.

However, opposing factions insisted that the courts have jurisdiction over the matter.

Following the conclusion of arguments, the apex court reserved judgment, with a date to be communicated to the parties.

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Wike-backed PDP fixes presidential form at N51m, gov N21m

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A faction of the Peoples Democratic Party backed by the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, has fixed its presidential nomination and expression of interest forms at ₦51m and governorship form at ₦21m ahead of the 2027 general elections.

The PDP National Organising Secretary of the faction, Umar Bature, disclosed this in a timetable made available to journalists on Wednesday.

According to the schedule, the faction will submit its register to the Independent National Electoral Commission on April 21, 2026, and notify the commission of its primaries on April 22.

The timetable shows that the expression of interest form for all positions costs ₦1m, while nomination fees vary across offices.

Aspirants for State Houses of Assembly are to pay ₦2m, House of Representatives ₦3m, Senate ₦5m, governorship ₦20m, and presidential aspirants ₦50m.

The sale of forms will begin on April 27 and close on May 4, while the deadline for submission of completed forms is May 9.

Screening of aspirants for State Houses of Assembly, National Assembly and governorship positions is scheduled for May 11, while that of presidential aspirants will hold on May 12.

The presidential primary has been fixed for May 18, while governorship primaries will be held on May 27.

House of Representatives primaries are scheduled for May 21 and Senate primaries for May 23, while State Houses of Assembly primaries will hold between May 21 and May 24. Appeals are expected to be concluded by May 30, 2026.

Bature added that female aspirants would only pay the expression of interest fee for their respective positions.

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The PDP has been embroiled in an internal crisis, leading to a split into two factions—one led by Tanimu Turaki and supported by Oyo State Governor Seyi Makinde and Bauchi State Governor Bala Mohammed, and the other led by Abdulrahman Mohammed with the backing of Wike.

Several cases filed by both factions are pending in court.

At the Supreme Court on Wednesday, the justices said a date for judgment would be communicated to the parties.

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