Key political events in Nigeria in June 2026
In the aftermath of party primaries held
across the 22 registered political parties in Nigeria between April 23 and May
30, 2026, the parties are now trying to resolve issues arising from the
exercise. While many aspirants who felt shortchanged in the nomination process
have petitioned the party-primaries appeal committees, others have gone to
court to ventilate their grievances, while some others have defected to other
parties with the hope of picking the party ticket. A political party ticket is
the most sought-after by Nigerian politicians at this point.
As political parties compile the list of
winners in their party primaries for the upcoming nomination to the Independent
National Electoral Commission, the electoral management body has said that
access codes will be given to the designated party officials to upload
candidates’ particulars for the 2027 general election on its portal between
June 26 and July 11, 2026. Currently, many of the parties are also finalising
the nomination of running mates for their presidential and gubernatorial
candidates. That’s why a lot of lobbying is going on by aspirants to political
offices across the country. Will President Bola Tinubu retain Vice President
Kashim Shettima as his running mate for the 2027 presidential election?
In a June 9, 2026, submission at the
INEC quarterly consultative meeting with political parties, the Chairman of
Inter Party Advisory Council, Alhaji Yusuf Dantalle, blamed the Electoral Act
2026 for the shoddy and suboptimal party primaries that political parties
conducted. He said, “The conduct of these primaries exposed significant legal,
administrative, and operational challenges that deserve urgent national
attention.”
He said further, “The experience of the
just-concluded nomination exercise demonstrates that the removal of indirect
primaries created considerable constraints for political parties. In many
instances, parties adopted the consensus option despite the existence of
multiple aspirants who had duly purchased expression of interest and nomination
forms. Several aspirants were persuaded, and in some cases pressured, to
withdraw from the contest after preferred candidates had already been
identified by influential party stakeholders. While some aspirants accepted
these arrangements in the interest of party unity, others challenged their
exclusion, arguing that genuine consensus requires the voluntary agreement of
all contestants. Consequently, several disputes have found their way to the
courts, creating uncertainty and avoidable tension within the political system.
“Furthermore, the enormous financial and
logistical demands associated with direct primaries presented significant
challenges, particularly for political parties that do not control governmental
resources. Faced with these realities, some parties adopted extraordinary
measures to avoid circumstances that could necessitate direct primaries. In
some cases, nomination forms were not made widely available to prospective
aspirants. In others, congress and primary election schedules were not publicly
announced in a timely manner to minimise potential disputes.”
On Friday, June 12, 2026, Nigeria
celebrated its Democracy Day with a public holiday and speeches. In the course
of time, seven general elections have been held, and the eighth one is due in
seven months’ time. President Bola Tinubu, in his national broadcast, said
inter alia that “For 27 unbroken years, since May 29, 1999, Nigerians have
chosen their leaders through the ballot, witnessed peaceful transitions of
power, and resolved disagreements in courtrooms and legislative chambers—not
through violence. We have experienced the longest stretch of civilian rule in
our history. Our democracy is not perfect, but it is ours, and we must continue
to defend and strengthen it.”
He said further, “In the coming days,
Ekiti and Osun States will hold elections. I urge INEC, security agencies, and
all parties to ensure these polls are peaceful and credible. Democracy fails
when citizens doubt the process. To our National Assembly, judiciary, the
press, and civil society: you are the guardrails of our republic. Criticise me,
disagree with me, but never stop believing in Nigeria.” To young Nigerians, he
said, “Nigeria is your home and your future. Build here, code here, work here,
and vote here. Every great nation was built by those who stayed to solve
problems, not by those who abandoned ship.”
The President gave his scorecard on the
security and the economy. He gave kudos to our soldiers, police and members of
the security community, saying that the highest budgetary allocation of N5.41tn
was earmarked for security and defence in the 2026 budget. It is unknown how
much of this sum has been released to the police, intelligence community and
armed forces to enable them tackle the lingering insecurity. I also found it a
factual error on the part of the president to have said that terror-related deaths
are down by 81 per cent since 2015. The over 13,000 terrorists that the
President said have been neutralised in the past year, as well as the 124,000
fighters and dependents that have laid down their arms since 2023 through
Operation Safe Corridor, mean nothing to average Nigerians if bandits and
kidnappers are still on the rampage in our communities.
The rising cost of living being
experienced by Nigerians also makes the so much economic freedom the president
said he’s working on to sound like Greek to us. People want to be able to pay
their bills with ease and live a decent lifestyle not being given a false hope
of a better tomorrow. The president needs to work harder to reduce poverty and
unemployment in order to enjoy accolades from Nigerians.
The Ekiti State governorship election
comes up this weekend (June 20) across 16 local government areas, 177 wards and
2,445 polling units. There are 13 candidates that will be on the ballot, but it
is looking like a one-horse race as the ranks of opposition parties in the
state are fragmented, and none of them can match the incumbent Governor Biodun
Oyebanji, popularly known as BAO. Unlike
in 2022 when it was a three-horse race among Oyebanji, Bisi Kolawole of the People’s
Democratic Party and former Governor Segun Oni, who then contested under Social
Democratic Party, this fourth off-cycle governorship election in Ekiti will be
a referendum and coronation for the incumbent.
As I said on the Arise News TV breakfast
show last Sunday, Oyebanji enjoys the power of incumbency, belongs to the
ruling party at the centre, which is the All Progressives Congress and has also
been endorsed by all former governors in Ekiti State, namely, Otunba Niyi
Adebayo, Ayo Fayose, Engineer Segun Oni, and Dr Kayode Fayemi. He has made
modest achievements in terms of infrastructural development and peace in Ekiti
State.
INEC will do well to ensure that the
election commence on schedule on Saturday and that accreditation, voting,
sorting, counting, announcement of results and declaration of the winner are
done without a hitch. Uploading of results on the INEC Result Viewing Portal
should be without glitches.
INEC chairman, Prof. Joash Amupitan’s
readiness to give Nigerians credible 2027 general elections will be measured by
his performance in Ekiti and Osun off cycle governorship polls.
Finally, the most mentioned name in
Nigeria’s political cycle since Monday, June 15, 2026, is Justice Peter Lifu of
the Federal High Court, Abuja. The jurist had asked INEC to deregister five
political parties namely: African Democratic Congress, Accord Party, Action
Peoples Party, Action Alliance and Zenith Labour Party and those parties are
not taking it lying low. This deregistration which I heard is being ordered
despite the Court of Appeal ruling for a stay of proceedings till October 2027,
will not augur well for our politics and future elections. It will affect
Governor Ademola Adeleke in Osun State, who is seeking reelection on August 15,
2026.
According to Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi in
his press statement, the facts are straightforward. “The plaintiffs had argued
that the ADC and four other political parties failed to satisfy constitutional
requirements relating to continued registration. However, in its
counter-affidavit filed before the court in May, INEC, the constitutional body
empowered with the registration, regulation, and supervision of political
parties in Nigeria, categorically maintained that the ADC had not violated any
registration requirements, had not failed any constitutional
electoral-performance threshold, and that no legally recognised basis existed
for its deregistration.” Need I say more?
I.G: @jideojong
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