Tag: IREV

  • Senate Approves Electoral Act Bill, Denies Scrapping E-Transmission

    Senate Approves Electoral Act Bill, Denies Scrapping E-Transmission

    The Nigerian Senate has approved the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill, 2026, dismissing reports that lawmakers voted to scrap the electronic transmission of election results.

    The bill was passed on Wednesday after more than four hours of heated debate, particularly over the proposed amendment to Clause 60(3), which sparked widespread speculation on social media that the Senate had rejected real-time electronic transmission of results from polling units to the Independent National Electoral Commission’s Result Viewing Portal (IREV).

    Reacting to the controversy, Senate President Godswill Akpabio described the reports as inaccurate and misleading, insisting that the Senate did not vote against electronic transmission.

    “The Senate has not rejected electronic transmission of results,” Akpabio said shortly after the bill’s passage. “What we did was to retain the provision already in the Act, which permits electronic transmission and was applied in the 2022 elections. This Senate cannot afford to go backwards.”

    Debate on the contentious clause began around 2:00 p.m. and concluded at approximately 6:26 p.m., following concerns that a proposed amendment mandating presiding officers to transmit signed and stamped result sheets electronically to IREV in real time could introduce legal complications.

    Instead, lawmakers opted to retain the existing wording of the Electoral Act, which allows election results to be transmitted “in a manner as prescribed by the Commission.”

    Akpabio stressed that the decision does not eliminate electronic transmission from Nigeria’s electoral framework, adding that the provision remains valid and will continue to guide future elections.

    Similarly, Senate spokesperson Yemi Adaramodu said the Senate did not discard the committee’s recommendation on electronic transmission but avoided provisions that could create legal technicalities during election disputes.

    Adaramodu also disclosed that the amendment removed the power to declare a runner-up as winner in cases where a candidate earlier declared elected by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is later found to be unqualified to contest.

    Electronic transmission of election results has remained one of the most contentious elements of Nigeria’s electoral reform discussions since the 2023 general elections, with civil society groups and opposition parties advocating clearer legal safeguards to enhance transparency and public trust.

    Following the bill’s passage, the Senate announced the composition of a conference committee to harmonise its version with that of the House of Representatives. The committee will be chaired by Adeniyi Adegbonmire, with Tahir Monguno, Simon Lalong, Adamu Aliero, Orji Uzor Kalu, Abba Moro, Asuquo Ekpeyong, Aminu Abbas, and Tokunbo Abiru serving as members.

    Meanwhile, the Senate adjourned plenary until February 24, 2026, to allow lawmakers focus on the defence of the 2026 budget by ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs).

  • #EdoDecides: Over 80% of RESULTS released on IREV

    APC RESULTS :

    – Esan North East: 6556

    – Esan Central: 6719

    – Igueben: 5199

    – Ikpoba Okha: 18218

    – Uhunmwonde: 5972

    – Egor: 10202

    – Owan East: 19295

    – Owan West: 11193

    – Esan South East: 9237

    – Etsako West: 26140

    – Oredo: 18365

    – Ovia North East: 9907

    – Esan West: 7189

    – Akoko Edo: 22963

    – Etsako East: 17011

    – Etsako Central: 8359

    – Orhionmwon: 10458

    – Ovia South West: 10636

     

    APC Total= 228,419

     

    PDP RESULTS :

    – Esan North East: 13579

    – Esan Central: 10794

    – Igueben: 7870

    – Ikpoba Okha: 41030

    – Uhunmwonde: 16741

    – Egor: 27621

    – Owan East: 14762

    – Owan West: 11485

    – Esan South East: 10565

    – Etsako West: 17959

    – Oredo: 43498

    – Ovia North East: 16987

    – Esan West: 17434

    – Akoko Edo: 20101

    – Etsako East: 10668

    – Etsako Central: 7478

    – Orhionmwon: 13445

    – Ovia South West: 12659

     

    PDP Total= 288,676

    Final Tally:

    – APC Total: 228,419

    – PDP Total: 288,676

     

    PDP is leading with a total of 60,257 votes margin as it Stands .

     

    #EdoDecide2024

  • IReV Not An Election Result Collation System -INEC

    IReV Not An Election Result Collation System -INEC

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) says its results viewing portal is to enhance election transparency and not a result collation or transmission system.

    The INEC Director of ICT, Paul Omokore, gave the clarification in his presentation titled: “The role of BVAS, IReV for Bayelsa, Kogi and Imo Governorship elections” at a two-day capacity workshop for journalists on Monday in Akwanga, Nasarawa State.

    Omokore advised journalists and members of the public not to confuse uploading of PU results to INEC Result Viewing Portal (IReV) with electronic transmission of results.

    He said that INEC Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) is only used to upload pictures of PUs results on form EC8A to IReV, which does not translate to electronic transmission of results.

    “Form EC8A is the result that we collated at the PUs. We use BVAS to snap this form and upload the same thing to the IReV portal for public viewing.

    “This is not a collecting system. It does not tally a system. What it does is to snap the EC8A which is the result at the polling unit and upload the same to the public view. That is all.

    “I know that 70 per cent of the populace think that the others have collected the figures. No.

    “All what it does is snapping the EC8A that the presiding officers have collected all the scores of the parties, signed and stamped and then sends this same picture to the IReV for public viewing. That is all. So it is not a collecting system,” he said.

    Omokore said that from inception of elections in Nigeria, results were transmitted manually, from the PUs to the collation centres.

    He said that technology deployment had proven to be an effective tool in achieving free, fair and credible elections.

    He said that while challenges were eminent, INEC had put in extra efforts to ensure that they were mitigated.

    “The role of BVAS is to ensure one-person-one-vote.

    “The role of the IReV Portal is to improve the openness and credibility of our elections,” he said.

    Ezenwa Nwagwu, who is also the Chairman, Partners for Electoral Reform, in his lecture titled: “Ethical Dilemma in Election Reporting: Navigating Bias, Balance and Promoting Transparency” urged journalists to uphold accuracy reporting.

    He said that the core issues in election reporting are Independence, unbiased and accuracy report by the media.

    “Accurate and transparent report is the only cure for fake news, which is the responsibility of the media,” Nwagu said.

    He advised the media to always investigate reasons behind some news being presented to the media by people with biased minds on electoral process and balance it with what the provision of the laws.