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Election day workers are silent casualties of Nigeria’s polls –Yilwatda

Ismaila Sanni
Ismaila Sanni
Yilwatda

The national chairman of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Professor Nentawe Yilwatda, has raised a fundamental concern about Nigeria’s electoral process, pointing to what he described as a major but often ignored contributor to low voter turnout in elections.

The Special Adviser to the APC national chairman on Media and Communications Strategy, Mr. Abimbola Tooki, made this known in a press statement.

Speaking at a meeting of chairmen and secretaries of political parties with the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, at the commissions’ national headquarters in Abuja, Yilwatda noted that thousands of Nigerians who were legally eligible to vote were effectively disenfranchised on election day because of the very roles they played in safeguarding the process.

He listed INEC ad-hoc staff, security personnel, civil society observers, medical doctors, journalists and other essential support staff who are deployed for election duties but are unable to cast their votes.

According to him, these categories of citizens are later counted among those blamed for voter apathy, even though their absence from the polling booth is a direct consequence of national service.

Professor Yilwatda stressed that that contradiction called for urgent policy reflection, particularly on the long-debated issue of early voting.

Responding to the issue, the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, Professor Joash Ojo Amupitan, SAN, explained that while the idea of early voting had been considered, it raised serious operational and cultural concerns.

He noted that by the time he assumed office, work on the Electoral Bill had largely been completed, but early voting stood out as one reform that could potentially accommodate election-day workers.

However, the INEC chairman cautioned against a system where votes were cast early and “warehoused” for counting after the general election. Such an arrangement, he warned, could expose the process to abuse, manipulation and loss of public trust, with fears that “huge votes could suddenly appear from somewhere.”

At the heart of the matter, he said, was Nigeria’s electoral culture.

Nigerians, he observed, were deeply invested in real-time voting and counting, wanting to see results as they emerge.

Until the country built a culture and system that enjoyed absolute public confidence and was seen as incorruptible, adopting early voting might remain difficult, he said.

The INEC chairman also highlighted the heavy financial implications of conducting elections in a single day nationwide.

He explained that doing so would require the commission to almost double its electoral materials, since the current staggered process allowed for the reuse of some equipment.

A one-day election, he said, would significantly increase the cost of elections and place enormous pressure on resources.

Yilwatda concluded by emphasizing that Nigeria must confront the realities honestly, balancing inclusivity, credibility, cost and culture, if the nation is serious about strengthening its democracy and ensuring that no citizen is excluded from the ballot by virtue of service to the country.

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