By Mercy Peter
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has commenced the review of its Regulations and Guidelines for Political Parties ahead of the 2027 General elections.
The Commission has set 16 January and 6 February 2027 for the Presidential and National Assembly and governorship and state Assembly polls under the revised timetable.
The three-day Technical Review Workshop, which commenced on Wednesday, 4th March 2026, in Ikot Ekpene, Akwa Ibom State, with the support of the Westminster Foundation for Democracy (WFD), comes on the heels of the enactment of the Electoral Act 2026 and the release of the Commission’s Revised Timetable and Schedule of Activities for the 2027 General Election.
The Chairman of the Commission, Prof. Joash Amupitan, SAN, described the exercise as a critical institutional realignment aimed at harmonising the Commission’s regulatory framework with the new legal order.
“We meet at a watershed moment in our democratic journey,” the Chairman said, noting that the Electoral Act 2026, assented to in February, has recalibrated statutory timelines and compressed the operational window for electoral activities.
Prof. Amupitan emphasised that the ongoing review is not a routine administrative exercise but a deliberate effort to sanitise party operations and embed higher standards of accountability.
“We are not just editing a document. We are aligning our Regulations and Guidelines with the 2026 Act to ensure that our electoral architecture is not only robust in theory but strong in practice,” he stated.
The Chairman identified the conduct of party primaries as a focal point of the reforms. With primaries scheduled between 23rd April and 30th May 2026, he warned that non-transparent nomination processes could undermine public trust and destabilise the electoral process.
“The quality of internal party democracy has a direct bearing on the election conducted by INEC. If candidates emerge through opaque processes, we face voter apathy and an explosion of pre-election litigation,” he cautioned.
He further expressed concern over recurring leadership tussles and intra-party disputes that frequently end up in court, often with INEC joined as a party.
“Each day spent defending avoidable intra-party disputes is a day diverted from our primary mandate of election planning,” Prof. Amupitan said, stressing that while the Commission remains neutral, it will enforce compliance firmly and consistently.
According to him, the revised 2026 Guidelines will introduce stricter benchmarks for membership documentation, financial transparency, and the inclusion of women, youth and Persons with Disabilities (PWDs). He also referenced Sections 83(5) and (6) of the Electoral Act 2026, which remove the jurisdiction of courts over internal party affairs, reinforcing judicial precedent on party autonomy.
Anchoring the Commission’s authority on Section 160 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended) and Section 151 of the Electoral Act 2026, the Chairman assured stakeholders that INEC would remain open, accountable and guided strictly by the law.
“The sovereign will of the Nigerian people must remain sacrosanct from the point of candidate nomination to the final declaration of results,” he affirmed.
In his remarks, the National Commissioner and Chairman of the Election and Party Monitoring Committee (EPMC), Dr. Baba Bila, described the review as strategic and timely, being the first comprehensive regulatory exercise following the enactment of the Electoral Act 2026.
He explained that the 2022 Regulations and Guidelines, which cover party registration and de-registration, party operations, conduct of primaries, campaigns and campaign finance reporting, require both structural refinement and substantive amendments to reflect the new statutory provisions.
“The review and updating of the Regulations and Guidelines for Political Parties could not have come at a better time than now,” Dr. Bila said.
Also speaking, the Country Director of the Westminster Foundation for Democracy (WFD) Nigeria, Mr. Adebowale Olorunmola, reaffirmed the organisation’s technical partnership with INEC.
“With the recent passage and assent of the Electoral Act 2026, there is a need for the guidelines and regulations to be improved in order to give bite to the Act,” he noted, urging stakeholders to ensure that political parties evolve into inclusive and internally democratic institutions.
The Commission stated that the outcome of the review will produce a clearer, more coherent regulatory framework to guide political parties and safeguard the integrity of the 2027 General Election.





