Then markets, town squares, and communities across Nigeria. Every unregistered young Nigerian is a voice that won't count in 2027 and we're doing something about that.
Watch this space.
Today, we mapped out how EiE is getting young Nigerians fully ready to vote in 2027. Registered. Card in hand. Knowing exactly what to do when it matters. Because awareness without preparation changes nothing.
UNILAG and LASU are first.
Today, we met with @ineclagos ahead of CVR Phase 3 - kicking off May 4. The agenda: bringing voter registration closer to the people, voter education, PVC collection, and more.
We look forward to a productive partnership that puts the power of the ballot in every hand, as we scale this work nationally ahead of 2027.
“What can YOU do as an active citizen to improve your community?”
That’s the question our ED @_ufuoma_ put to young people at the @ProGender Lagos Regional Workshop this week.
The room didn’t disappoint.
Adelabu as Minister of Darkness.
Bwala lying with a straight face.😑
We need more short & simple videos in major languages that connect the dots for citizens.✊🏽
#OfficeOfTheCitizen#NigeriaDecides2027
Thanks @wearegst 🫡
There’s an important provision in the Electoral Act 2026 that citizens should know about, especially ahead of the 2027 elections.
It affects how political parties conduct their primaries.
Let’s explain 👇🏾
It’s always a pleasure catching up with our friends at @BusinessDayNg! Together, we’ve spent years amplifying citizen voices across Nigeria. Excited for what’s ahead!
ELECTORAL ACT 2026: Allowing voters to download their Permanent Voter Card directly from INEC's website is a meaningful win.
What Really Changed - And What Didn't
https://t.co/SPpgiKDQoe
My piece on Nigeria’s Electoral Act 2026 is now live on @PremiumTimesng.
Not all bad. But the part that’s bad is very bad, and it’s exactly the part that decided 2023.
Read it here 👇 https://t.co/06VUyf7xSK
AKINDEJI AROMAYE: "It would be dishonest to describe this law as entirely without merit. Some provisions represent genuine progress. But an electoral law is only as strong as its weakest clause, and this one contains several that deserve scrutiny, not as post-mortems, but as the basis for what Nigerians must do next. Allowing voters to download their permanent voter cards directly from INEC’s website is a meaningful win. In 2023, millions of PVCs went uncollected because the physical collection process failed, wrong centres, inadequate notice, and avoidable chaos. Digital access removes a real barrier. If you registered, you should be able to vote. This provision makes it more likely."
https://t.co/YdCZZAmCgm
President Tinubu has signed the Electoral Bill 2026 into law despite weeks of protests.
@Deji_AAA breaks down the key provisions. There is good news. There is bad news. And there is one clause that could make 2023 happen all over again 👇🏿
https://t.co/iRGbK7AnFS
This means the "network failure" excuse could be deployed across 100% of polling units, not just the legitimate 7%. Nigeria's telecom infrastructure, rather than being improved, becomes weaponized as justification for opacity. Sad 😠
The Senate's "reversal" on electronic transmission is legislative bad faith disguised as reform. On Feb 10, they passed an amendment that preserves the exact loopholes that undermined 2023. Here's why we're rejecting it:
The Senate's Clause 60(3) fails this basic test.
1/
Nigeria’s 2027 elections face a credibility crisis.
The Senate has maintained the status quo that undermined 2023 elections, keeping electronic transmission optional rather than mandatory.
@Deji_AAA breaks down what’s at stake for our democracy 👇
Real-time electronic transmission of results is simple:
After votes are counted and announced at the polling unit, Form EC8A is uploaded immediately for public verification.
It protects results before collation.
Storming the National Assembly today shows how much we care about credible elections. I told @nigeriantribune why the Senate’s amendments threaten 2027 reforms as @EiENigeria warns ambiguous laws = abuse & distrust.