Tag: TBAN

  • National Assembly Should Avoid a Legislative Coup Against Nigerians on Electronic Transmission of Election Results – TBAN

    National Assembly Should Avoid a Legislative Coup Against Nigerians on Electronic Transmission of Election Results – TBAN

    The media have recently reported that the much-anticipated Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill 2021 does not provide for the electronic transmission of election results by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Section 50 (2) of the said bill states that: “Voting at an election under this bill shall be in accordance with the procedure determined by the commission, which may include electronic voting, provided that the commission shall not transmit results of elections by electronic means.”

    This provision, or any other with the same intent, is troubling for many reasons. One, electronic transmission of election results is a popular demand by Nigerians who are keen to see significant improvements in the country’s electoral processes and outcomes. To pass a law to deny the wish of the people is tantamount to a legislative coup by the National Assembly. This must be avoided.

    Two, the National Assembly will further erode its credibility if it decides against a reasonable and popular legislative demand. This will further delegitimise the country’s democracy.

    Three, by specifically disallowing INEC from using electronic means to transmit election results, the National Assembly would be passing a law that hamstrings an institution of the state from carrying out its function to the best possible outcome.

    Four, without electronic transmission of results, a new electoral law would, at best, only introduce cosmetic changes, while essentially helping to perpetuate rigging of elections.

    In an earlier advocacy statement by To Build A Nation (TBAN) on this subject, we outlined the benefits of electronic transmission of results in drastically curbing election rigging and violence, including arsonist attacks on INEC’s facilities and polling materials. Electronic transmission of results is also an important framework for enabling diaspora voting.

    Our findings confirm the availability of practical and inexpensive technological solutions for electronic transmission of election results from any polling unit in the country where voting is actually possible. Therefore, the excuse of impracticality of transmitting election results by electronic means only denies the reality.

    The National Assembly should no longer delay the passage of the new electoral bill with a provision for electronic transmission of results. The INEC needs time to be able to operationalise this and other provisions of a new Electoral Act ahead of the 2023 general election.

  • Towards Substantive Nigerian Electoral Reform Ahead of 2023 General Election

    Towards Substantive Nigerian Electoral Reform Ahead of 2023 General Election

    A Press Statement by TBAN

    Lagos, Nigeria, February 19, 2021 – There is broad consensus for electoral reform in Nigeria. Key stakeholder groups, including the National Assembly, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), civil society organisations (CSOs), and Nigerians in diaspora are either working on, or pushing for, functional changes to make Nigeria’s elections more credible, participatory, efficient, and serve as a framework for strengthening the country’s democracy rather than for undermining it – as it mostly remains the case.

    By some accounts, a new electoral law to serve these objectives, and more, is nearly a done deal. Even if this is the case, it is necessary to keep providing the policymakers with the support they need while also ratcheting up public advocacy until a new electoral act is passed by the legislature and assented to by the President.

    Time is also of the essence, too. At To Build A Nation (TBAN), we advocate for the new legislation to be in place by the end of the first half of 2021. This would enable the implementation of applicable new provisions of the law to be piloted in the Anambra State gubernatorial election in November this year, and in the off-main-cycle elections that would hold prior to the 2023 general election.

    TBAN supports the proposed broad amendments, including to effectively regulate campaign financing, punish electoral offenders, and make INEC financially independent. However, two reform agenda are at the core of our advocacy. One is direct electronic transmission of results from the polling units (PUs) to INEC’s computer server at its central collation centre. The other is diaspora voting.

    We acknowledge that, like in many other countries, some aspects of Nigeria’s electoral processes are already electronic. For example, voter registration has changed from manual to electronic, including the collection of biometric information of voters. Voter accreditation is also done electronically. The critical missing part in the electronic processes is electronic transmission of results. This retains the vulnerabilities to delays in the transmission of election results, falsification of the results, and physical and arsonist attacks on the manual collation centres across the country by sponsored thugs.

    The technologies for electronic transmission of results from the PUs around the country is affordable and easily implemented. They sidestep the concern of lack of education by a large part of the electorate, infrastructural deficiencies, lack of electricity power, and high costs of acquisition of voting machines and their deployment. Indeed, election results can be transmitted to INEC’s server using an app on mobile phones by INEC’s returning officers. It can be that simple, yet electronic transmission of results would be a real game-changer, helping to eliminate the aforementioned vulnerabilities of manual collation and transmission of election results.

    We assert that diaspora voting in Nigeria’s election is also an imperative, for a number of reasons. First, the clear disenfranchisement of up to 16 million Nigerians living abroad makes the country’s election one of the most exclusionary in the world. That number is higher than the population of longstanding world’s democracies, including Greece.

    Second, Nigeria needs new voting blocs that are not amenable to vote-buying. Vote buying is not only providing empirical evidence that the country’s democracy is deliberately skewed to impoverish the people so that established politicians can weaponise the mass poverty to their electoral advantage, it is also fuelling voter apathy. Nigerian diaspora, and definitely the middle class – which has all but disengaged from the democratic process – constitute important voting blocs.

    Third, Nigerians in diaspora have for decades been making key contributions to the domestic economy through remittances. Money sent to the country through the formal remittance channels by Nigerian citizens living abroad, estimated at over $20 billion annually, rivals the national budget, contributing to poverty alleviation in the country. Recently, the federal government has also issued diaspora bonds to further harness the development financing power of fellow citizens living abroad. Indeed, a more recent policy musing has considered the introduction of diaspora taxation.

    It remains axiomatic that there is no taxation without representation. But even until the possible introduction of diaspora taxation in Nigeria, the economic contributions the diaspora citizens have been making provide a good basis for their enfranchisement in the country’s election. The outlook of the country’s external earnings suggests increased dependence on diaspora financing for the economy.

    We believe the anticipated electoral reform in Nigeria should be far-sighted and truly problem solving. The expected new electoral law is rightly seen as a last-ditch effort to save the country’s democracy. The reform should enable the election of more competent people into government to undertake the other key reforms, such as a constitutional restructuring of the country and building a just, equitable and productive economy.

    It is important that Nigerian citizens should not relax in their demand for the necessary electoral reform. Our work is not done yet. After the new Electoral Bill has been passed, and signed into law by the President, citizens and groups should remain vigilant to ensure the law is implemented to the letters.

    Signed

    Jide Akintunde
    Executive Director, TBAN

    Joy Chianu
    Head, TBAN Policy Research Committee

    TBAN Policy Research Committee Members Who Developed This Statement

    1. Joy Chianu (Ontario, Canada)
    2. Dr. Uchenna Ilo (Glasgow, the UK)
    3. Dr. Gbenga Jaiyesimi (Sagamu, Nigeria)
    4. Udeme Etukeyen (Uyo, Nigeria)
    5. Temitope Alo (Abuja, Nigeria)
    6. Chimere Alim (Lagos, Nigeria)
    7. Bryant Ezeamama-Agubalu (Miami, USA)
  • Diaspora Voting Should Be Included in new Electoral Act, Says TBAN

    Diaspora Voting Should Be Included in new Electoral Act, Says TBAN

    On Wednesday, December 09, 2020, the National Assembly Joint Committee on Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) And Electoral Matters held a public hearing on the proposed new Electoral Act. Wide-ranging important recommendations, including on electronic voting, electronic transmission of results, prosecution of electoral offences, effectuating the ceiling for campaign funding, voter education and continuous registration of voters, were made to the joint committee by INEC and civil society groups that participated, including To Build A Nation (TBAN).

    However, both INEC and the joint committee expressed reservations on the readiness of the country to have diaspora voting. This, therefore, raises concern as to whether the next amendments to the Electoral Act would include provisions that would provide a legislative backing for diaspora voting in the country.

    TBAN believes this disposition is regrettable. We believe now is the time to provide a legislative backing for diaspora voting in Nigeria’s elections. There is ample time to operationalise a pilot phase for diaspora voting in the 2023 general election and full implementation from 2027.

    Allowing Nigerians abroad to vote in the country’s elections has been on the policy discussion since the early years of the Fourth Republic. It is the extent to which the authorities have not committed to the delivery of key electoral reforms that there has been no progress whatsoever on the diaspora voting agenda. E-voting and electronic transmission of results make diaspora voting much easier to implement.

    Diaspora voting is not a favour to eligible Nigerian voters living abroad. It is an imperative for a number of reasons. One, Nigeria’s democracy needs new blocs of informed voters who are not susceptible to vote-buying by corrupt politicians. This is necessary for the country to be able to elect credible and competent leaders. TBAN identifies Nigerian middle class and Nigerians in diaspora as the key new voting blocs.

    Two, the government needs to enable all the citizens to perform their civic duty of voting during our elections. And, three, Nigerians in diaspora are a key stakeholder bloc, contributing over $20 billion annually in official migrant remittances to support their relatives in the country and the economy.

    Nigeria cannot wait to restore credibility to its elections that have continued to witness fewer people voting from one election to another since 2003. We, therefore, task both the National Assembly and INEC to deliver the legislative and operational frameworks for diaspora voting without further delay.