Tension in Political circles as INEC voids late Primarily elections
The firm stance of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on its May 30 deadline for the conduct of party primaries ahead of the 2027 general elections has triggered anxiety within several political parties, especially those considering fresh or rerun exercises.
INEC National Commissioner and Chairman of the Information and Voter Education Committee, Mohammed Kudu Haruna, warned that parties that conduct primaries outside the approved timeline risk having their candidates rejected, pending the outcome of ongoing legal disputes.
“Any primary held outside INEC’s May 30 deadline will be invalid unless the Court of Appeal overturns the Federal High Court judgment,” Haruna said.
The commission is currently challenging a Federal High Court judgment in Abuja which nullified parts of INEC’s timetable for pre-election activities, including the schedule for party primaries, on the grounds that the electoral body acted beyond its statutory powers under the Electoral Act 2026.
Although some political parties welcomed the court ruling, they have largely continued to operate within INEC’s original timetable to avoid jeopardising their candidates’ eligibility in the event that appellate courts rule in favour of the commission.
However, concerns have grown that compliance pressure may undermine internal party dispute resolution processes, particularly where rerun primaries are being considered.
In Kaduna State, members of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) are already facing uncertainty following the party’s appeals committee order for fresh primaries in several constituencies over alleged irregularities, exclusion of aspirants and procedural breaches.
The committee, chaired by Dr. Muhammed Fagge, ordered reruns in Ikara/Kubau, Kaduna South and other state constituencies—an action that now risks clashing with INEC’s deadline.
Observers warn that unless the Court of Appeal intervenes, any primaries conducted after May 30 could trigger disqualification disputes capable of weakening opposition parties ahead of the 2027 elections.
Within the ADC, internal tensions have also intensified over leadership and candidate legitimacy. The party is currently divided into factions, with competing claims over its presidential nomination process.
At a convention held on Sunday, a faction led by Abdulkadir Mohammed Bashir adopted former presidential candidate Dumebi Kachikwu as its consensus flag bearer for the 2027 election.
This development comes after former Vice President Atiku Abubakar emerged as the presidential candidate of the David Mark-led National Executive Committee following its primary election.
Party sources said that after the May 25 primary, the Mark-led leadership adopted a dual strategy of managing grievances while processing nominations for submission to INEC, including activating appeal mechanisms established before the exercise.
The party had constituted a Presidential Appeals Committee chaired by Dr. Suleiman Usman (SAN) to handle complaints arising from the primaries.
However, despite public objections to the outcome, there is no indication that former Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, formally submitted a petition to the committee.
Similarly, while businessman Mohammed Hayatu-Deen raised concerns about the process, party officials say there is no record of a formal appeal being filed.
Amaechi had alleged widespread disenfranchisement during the exercise, while Hayatu-Deen boycotted the collation and declaration of results, citing irregularities. Amaechi was also absent at the final announcement of results.
The absence of formal petitions has raised concerns within party circles, particularly as the appeals committee was set up specifically to address such grievances.
Party officials insist reconciliation efforts are ongoing, with internal mechanisms being deployed to resolve disputes across presidential and legislative contests.
At its 101st National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting in Abuja on May 30, 2026, the Mark-led ADC ratified the outcomes of its state, National Assembly, governorship and presidential primaries, except where appeals were still pending or processes had not been concluded as of May 29.
The NEC also approved a 12-month extension of the National Working Committee’s tenure and affirmed the emergence of Atiku Abubakar as the party’s presidential candidate for 2027.
However, the crisis is further complicated by the rival faction loyal to Bashir, which insists its own convention and nomination process followed the ADC constitution.
Announcing Kachikwu’s emergence, chairman of the faction’s convention electoral committee, Hon. Elias Adikwu, said delegates adopted him through a consensus arrangement reached by voice vote.
Although Atiku has appealed for unity among party stakeholders, analysts say unresolved disputes and parallel structures within the ADC may continue to test the party’s cohesion as preparations for the 2027 elections intensify.