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INEC Chairman, Prof Joash Amupitan
Political parties are racing to resolve post-primary disputes, finalise candidate lists and conclude consultations on running mates after the Independent National Electoral Commission fixed June 26 for the release of access codes to its nomination portal and July 11 as the deadline for the submission of candidates’ particulars for the 2027 general elections.
As appeals, grievances and leadership tussles continue to trail the conclusion of party primaries, INEC has warned that unresolved internal conflicts and ongoing court challenges to its electoral timetable could complicate preparations for the polls, even as major parties intensify efforts to beat the nomination deadline and complete their presidential tickets.
The African Democratic Congress, the Young Progressives Party and the All Progressives Grand Alliance have expressed readiness to submit the names of their candidates to the Independent National Electoral Commission following the conclusion of their primary elections.
The electoral umpire announced that the access codes would allow political parties to begin uploading candidates’ details for the 2027 general elections to its portal.
The INEC Chairman, Prof Joash Amupitan, disclosed this in Abuja on Tuesday, during the Second Quarterly Consultative Meeting with leaders of registered political parties, noting that the step follows the completion of party primaries on May 30, 2026.
According to the commission’s schedule, political parties will gain access to the dedicated nomination portal from June 27, while the deadline for submission of candidates’ details is July 11, 2026.
The portal is a critical component of the nomination process, as only candidates whose particulars are submitted within the stipulated period are eligible to contest elections under the platform of their parties.
According to Amupitan, access codes will be issued to authorised national officers of each political party, who will be responsible for uploading nominees’ biodata and other required information into the system.
He cautioned that the process must be taken seriously, urging parties to ensure their ICT personnel are fully prepared ahead of the exercise, as deadlines would be strictly enforced.
“On Friday, 26th June, 2026, the commission will issue official access codes to all political parties for the purpose of accessing the Candidate Nomination Portal.
“These access codes will enable designated national officers of political parties to upload the names, personal particulars and other required information relating to nominated candidates.
“I urge political parties to ensure that their ICT personnel and relevant officers are adequately prepared and that all submissions are completed well before the stipulated deadlines. The portal is fully automated and will close automatically at the expiration of the prescribed period,” he stated.
He also expressed concern about unresolved court cases relating to internal party leadership, describing them as unnecessary distractions that could affect electoral preparations.
He urged political actors to resolve such disputes quickly to keep the electoral timetable on track.
Reiterating the commission’s independence, Amupitan assured stakeholders that INEC would continue to discharge its duties impartially and in line with constitutional provisions.
The INEC boss further encouraged parties to intensify voter education efforts and mobilise citizens to participate in the Continuous Voter Registration exercise to obtain their Permanent Voter Cards ahead of the elections.
“The success of the 2027 general election will depend not only on the preparedness of the commission but also on the commitment of political parties to uphold democratic principles, respect the rule of law, conduct transparent primaries, discourage violence, hate speech, and vote buying, and promote issue-based campaigns,” he said.
Amupitan noted that the Commission would ensure equal treatment for all parties while strictly following the Constitution, the Electoral Act, and all relevant guidelines.
Despite pending appeals against two Federal High Court judgments affecting parts of INEC’s timetable, he affirmed that preparations for the 2027 elections would continue as scheduled under lawful court directives.
The Commission disclosed it has filed appeals against two recent Federal High Court rulings that questioned key components of its timetable for the 2027 general elections, warning that any attempt to dismantle parts of the schedule could disrupt the entire electoral process.
Amupitan said the Commission had reviewed the two judgments and decided to approach appellate courts for clearer interpretations of its legal and constitutional mandate in organising election activities.
The first ruling, delivered on May 20, 2026, in a case filed by the Youth Party against the electoral body, challenged certain timelines set out in INEC’s election schedule.
The second judgment, issued on May 26, 2026, in a suit instituted by the Social Democratic Party, affirmed the Commission’s authority to issue an electoral timetable but struck out some timelines relating to candidate nomination and substitution procedures.
INEC maintained that the disputed timetable is built on interconnected processes that cannot be separated without affecting the integrity of the entire election planning structure.
Citing portions of the court’s own observation in the SDP ruling, Amupitan noted that “an election timetable, without a date for submission of parties’ membership register, timeframe for primaries, etc., is inchoate. Without this timetable, there would be chaos in our electoral system.”
He added that while the commission respects the judiciary and will continue to comply with lawful decisions, the cases raise fundamental questions about the scope of its powers in regulating elections.
“While the Commission remains fully respectful of the decisions of the courts and of the judicial process generally, these judgments raise important legal questions concerning the extent of the Commission’s constitutional and statutory powers in coordinating and regulating electoral activities,” the INEC chairman said.
According to him, the electoral timetable is not merely a list of dates but a coordinated framework that guides multiple administrative and logistical processes required for credible elections.
He stressed that although the Electoral Act provides timelines for certain activities, several critical steps in election preparation are not expressly covered by statute but must still be accommodated within the overall schedule.
Key activities listed by Amupitan include submitting and verifying political parties’ membership registers, monitoring primaries nationwide, and pre-uploading primary results on INEC’s portal. He also mentioned nomination processes, printing ballot papers and result sheets, ensuring quality control, and deploying election materials.
Additional activities are training personnel, voter education, procuring sensitive materials, and configuring the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System. Legal requirements, such as allowing parties to inspect electoral materials per Section 42 of the Electoral Act, 2026, were also noted.
Amupitan argued that these processes are interdependent and must be harmonised to ensure efficiency, transparency and fairness in the conduct of elections. He warned that isolating parts of the timetable could undermine administrative order and create uncertainty among political actors.
“The Commission therefore considers it imperative that all electoral activities be harmonised within a coherent and workable framework that promotes certainty, transparency, administrative efficiency and equal treatment of all political parties,” he said.
He assured political parties and Nigerians that the legal challenge would not distract the commission from its preparations for the 2027 polls.
According to him, INEC remains committed to conducting credible elections in line with the Constitution, the Electoral Act, and binding judicial pronouncements.
Speaking with The PUNCH, the National Publicity Secretary of the ADC, Bolaji Abdullahi, said the party was taking time to conclude the resolution of disputes arising from its primary elections before forwarding the names of successful candidates to the electoral commission.
“The ADC is currently dealing with the issues arising from appeals by those who felt aggrieved at the primaries. We have time, and we will do the needful once this process is over,” he said.
His remarks indicate that the party is prioritising internal dispute resolution in order to avoid legal complications that could arise from unresolved grievances by aspirants who participated in the primaries.
Political parties often face post-primary challenges as aspirants dissatisfied with the conduct or outcome of elections seek redress through party appeal panels or the courts. Such disputes have, in previous election cycles, led to prolonged litigation and, in some cases, the disqualification of candidates.
On its part, the Young Progressives Party said it was fully prepared to comply with INEC’s guidelines once the nomination portal becomes operational.
The party’s National Publicity Secretary, Wale Egbeola-Martins, said the YPP would begin uploading the names of its candidates immediately the commission opens the portal.
Also, the National Publicity Secretary of APGA, Ejimofor Opara, said the party is done with compiling the list of its candidates for the various elective offices in 2027, saying, “We will upload when the portal is open.”
Similarly, the Social Democratic Party revealed it is currently compiling the list of its candidates ahead of the July 11 deadline stipulated by INEC.
National Publicity Secretary of the party, Rufus Aiyenigba, explained that the party was processing all relevant documentation required for the submission of candidates.
“The SDP is currently working on all the relevant documents in relation to the uploading of all our candidates for all elective positions from all our primaries conducted—presidential, governorship, Senate, House of Representatives, and Houses of Assembly,” he said.
National Publicity Secretary of the Nigerian Democratic Congress, Osa Director, stated that the party had completed its primaries and was ready to upload the names of successful candidates to the INEC portal.
On whether the party would publish the names of successful candidates, the Director maintained that such publication was not a legal requirement.
“It is not compulsory for you to publish a list of candidates. What the constitution expects you to do by the guidelines of the Electoral Act is to send your list to INEC. And we have done so.
“Those who were victorious were also contacted and given nomination forms to fill. That’s all. Did you see the APC publish the names of their candidates in any major newspaper? The key thing is to send it to INEC, and candidates will be contacted, which we are already doing,” he added.
National Publicity Secretary of the Labour Party, Ken Asogwa, said the party was on course to meet the deadline, noting that its National Executive Committee would meet later this week to ratify the nomination list.
“It will be done this week. Although I need to reconfirm with the National Organising Secretary, I am certain it will be concluded this week.
“It is already ongoing. I am sure we will beat the deadline. We have an NEC meeting on Thursday where the whole nomination list will be approved by the National Executive Committee. So, once the approval is given on Thursday, the next stage will be to forward the list to INEC,” Asogwa said.
Meanwhile, the LP and SDP have said consultations are still ongoing regarding the selection of their vice-presidential candidates for the 2027 general election.
While LP presented Dr Chibuzo Okereke as its presidential candidate, the SDP stuck to its 2023 candidate, Prince Adewole Adebayo.
Speaking in an interview with The PUNCH, the party’s spokesman, Asogwa, said discussions were still underway and that the issue would be resolved shortly.
“On the issue of running mate, there are still some consultations ongoing. We are confident that it will be sorted in a few hours from now,” Asogwa said.
Asogwa’s counterpart in SDP, Aiyenigba, confirmed that Adebayo was consulting widely within the party before announcing his choice of running mate.
According to him, the process is aimed at ensuring broad acceptance of the eventual nominee across the party’s structures.
“Our SDP presidential candidate, Prince Adewole Adebayo, is currently undergoing wide consultation within the party’s national structure, with regard to his running mate for the 2027 presidential election.
“He will soon unveil his choice and will certainly be a most popular and acceptable choice to all, and most value-adding,” Aiyenigba said.
So far, only the Nigerian Democratic Congress has announced a vice-presidential candidate.
The NDC presidential candidate, Peter Obi, named former Kano State Governor Musa Kwankwaso as his running mate shortly after he was officially confirmed as the party’s presidential candidate.
The announcement followed the party’s presidential primary, where Obi secured the NDC ticket for the 2027 election.
Obi and Kwankwaso recently defected from the African Democratic Congress to the Nigerian Democratic Congress, citing internal divisions and prolonged legal disputes within their former party.
Atiku intensifies consultations
Former Vice President and presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress in the 2027 election, Atiku Abubakar, is intensifying consultations within his political base to pick a running mate in the coming weeks.
On Monday, Atiku hosted former Rivers State governor, Rotimi Amaechi, who ran against him in the ADC presidential primaries a few weeks ago. Amaechi had expressed strong reservations about the conduct of the exercise, which saw Atiku poll 1,846,370 votes to clinch the ticket.
Atiku had visited Amaechi a fortnight ago at his Abuja residence, in what his media team tagged a meeting between two opposition figures working together to rescue Nigeria from the pangs of poor governance by the President Bola Tinubu-led government.
Our correspondent gathered that Monday’s visit by Amaechi is not unconnected with Atiku’s earlier decision to run with either Obi or the former Rivers State governor long before Amaechi picked the nomination form to vie for the ADC presidential ticket.
A highly-placed source told The PUNCH that Atiku rates Amaechi “very highly,” noting that the ex-Vice President would only look elsewhere if the former Transportation Minister declined to run on a joint ticket with him.
The source, who declined to be named citing a lack of authorisation, said Amaechi’s impressive outing in the primaries, especially in the South-South geo-political zone, makes him the natural pick as running mate to Atiku.
He said, “These people will never come out to tell you what they discussed behind closed doors, but Atiku has identified Amaechi as a politician with the required visibility and popularity to prosecute the 2027 presidential election. The reason for this is not far-fetched. In the recently concluded ADC primaries, Atiku won in Rivers, Bayelsa, Akwa Ibom, Ebonyi and Delta States. A joint ticket featuring Atiku and Amaechi will give Tinubu sleepless nights.”
He added that a group loyal to Atiku have also identified journalist-turned politician, Mr Dele Momodu, as a potential running mate to the Wazirin Adamawa. According to him, this group sees Momodu as a man of unquestionable loyalty who is unlikely to rock the boat in the event of Atiku’s victory at the polls.
“This may come as a bit of a surprise to many, but this group sees Amaechi as a strong-headed person capable of causing problems in the future. In Momodu, they believe Atiku will have a reliable, loyal and committed ally whose job will be to work for the nation and his principal. This group does not see Momodu as a core politician but as a man who will stop at nothing to work in the furtherance of the agenda of his principal and of the country at large,” he added.
Although the Ovation publisher has yet to confirm this development, a statement posted on his Facebook wall on Monday has gotten many Nigerians talking.
He wrote, “The 2027 presidential election is expected to be a major fight between President Bola Tinubu and his biggest challenger, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar. It promises to be the battle of the titans. A third force, hopefully, may show up, as it did in 2023, but not with enough firepower and tenacity to upstage and obliterate the two elder statesmen.
“This is why it has become pertinent and urgent for our dear party ADC to change the traditional way of playing politics by becoming a link between the old and modern, conservative and cosmopolitan tendencies, veteran politicians and technocrats in government. There’s no better combination than this duo, assuring a colourful blend. The North and the South will reunite in a game of ethnic and religious rivalries,” the statement read in part.
Meanwhile, the Senior Special Assistant to Atiku on Public Communications, Mr Phrank Shaibu, has described the meeting between the two ADC chieftains as part of ongoing consultations in building a virile and prosperous Nigeria.
In an interview with The PUNCH, Shaibu said, “His Excellency, Atiku Abubakar, regularly engages with political leaders, stakeholders, and eminent Nigerians on issues concerning the future of our country. As you are aware, Rt Hon Rotimi Amaechi remains a respected political figure and a key stakeholder in the national conversation.
“The meeting forms part of the ongoing consultations among patriotic Nigerians committed to rescuing the country from its current challenges and building a stronger democratic alternative ahead of 2027.” (The PUNCH)

























