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INEC unveils 2027 election timetable as chairman launches procurement reforms

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has begun preparations for the 2027 general elections, releasing a revised timetable and unveiling a sweeping drive to overhaul its procurement processes.

The announcements came during a three-day, high-level capacity-building workshop in Lagos, held in partnership with the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung (KAS).

The event signalled a strategic shift in INECโ€™s approach to electoral integrity, with transparent procurement positioned as the โ€œinvisible architectureโ€ underpinning credible elections.

Under the recently enacted Electoral Act 2026, which shortened the mandatory election notice period from 360 to 300 days, INEC Chairman Prof. Joash Amupitan, shared the key election dates.

He said the Presidential and National Assembly Elections will hold on Saturday, 16 January 2027 and the governorship and State Assembly Elections will hold on Saturday, 6 February 2027.

Represented by National Commissioner May Agbamuche-Mbu, Amupitan explained that releasing the calendar early is a deliberate effort to provide clarity and certainty for political parties, security agencies, and voters alike.

Reflecting on his first 159 days in office, Amupitan stressed that INEC must move beyond โ€œrhetoricโ€ to actual implementation.

He highlighted procurementโ€”often overlooked in public discussionโ€”as a critical factor in maintaining public trust.

โ€œWhen procurement is handled with integrity, it becomes the bedrock of public confidence,โ€ he said. โ€œWhen it is compromised, it becomes the fault line through which trust collapses.โ€

Dr Adebowale Adekunle, Director-General of the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP), echoed this point, describing procurement as the โ€œhidden engineโ€ of democracy.

He cautioned against โ€œvendor dependency,โ€ stressing that a resilient democracy must never โ€œoutsource its sovereigntyโ€ to a single supplier.

The workshop also addressed challenges arising from the compressed timelines in the Electoral Act 2026.

Amupitan described the shorter window as a โ€œreality to be mastered,โ€ requiring INEC to operate with the precision of a โ€œwell-calibrated machine.โ€

To safeguard operations against risks such as global supply chain disruptions and technology shortages, INEC is implementing early procurement planning to maximise lead time, end-to-end e-procurement systems to enhance transparency and supplier diversification to maintain institutional independence.


Mr Tobias Ruettershoff, KAS Resident Representative, reaffirmed the foundationโ€™s long-standing support for Nigeriaโ€™s democratic progress.

He noted that election credibility begins long before ballots are cast, relying on proper management of materials, technology, and training.

Amupitan concluded by urging the Commissionโ€™s leadership to โ€œunlearn and relearnโ€ practices to meet Nigeriansโ€™ high expectations.

โ€œThe Nigerian people are watching,โ€ he reminded the assembly, โ€œand they deserve nothing less than our very best.โ€

Friday Omosola
Friday Omosola
Friday Omosola is a News Editor at NRTC who's passionate about investigating and reporting under-reported social and political issues in Africa.

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