The measure of elections in democratic societies is the result of polling day. But history shows that credible elections are rarely won or lost on Election Day. These are often decided months, sometimes years, in advance, the result of painstaking planning, institutional reforms, prudent financing and investment in systems most citizens never see.
The weeks after the off-cycle governorship elections seem to signal a subtle but significant shift in institutional thinking for Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). The Commission has begun to make conscious moves that suggest an organisation that is looking to reposition itself from just conducting elections to creating a permanent electoral institution instead of waiting for political activity to gain momentum before responding to the enormous logistical demands of a general election.
The developments have come fast and thick.
The Federal Government has released about N500 billion to kick off preparations for the 2027 general election. INEC has made the CVR process more flexible and accessible. Discussions have also been opened with the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) on voter identity management and with the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) on sustainable institutional financing and staff welfare. It is working with the British Government on mock election exercises to test operational readiness. Its Chairman has also publicly urged better pay and welfare for electoral staff to halt the increasing exodus of skilled personnel.
Each of these initiatives may look routine in isolation. Taken together, however, they reveal something deeper – a conscious attempt to institutionalise electoral governance in ways that are reminiscent of practices in some of the world’s most admired democracies.
This change merits closer scrutiny.
Among the most important reforms is the early release of election funds. In the past, Nigeria has handled elections with a sense of urgency that has put electoral managers in a race against time. Budgets are delayed, procurement is compressed, training timelines are shortened and logistics are cobbled together under intense political pressure. Such conditions drive up costs, subject procurement to unwarranted scrutiny, and provide little opportunity for testing or improvement.
Lack of planning time has long been one of the biggest threats to electoral integrity, say election management specialists. Institutions pushed into emergency preparations are pretty much bound to make mistakes.
The early release of large amounts of funding alters that equation.”
It allows you to spread out the purchases, instead of rushing them. You can test the election technology time and again before you use it. Logistics can be refined over a few phases instead of cobbled together at the last minute. Training programmes can be increased for both permanent and ad hoc personnel. Civic education campaigns can reach communities long before political campaigns dominate the public discourse.
In India, where the Election Commission conducts the biggest democratic exercise on earth, preparations for national elections begin years before polling day. Materials are procured in phases, voter registers are updated on a continuous basis, logistics are mapped way before campaigns commence and election officials undergo repeated training. Australia’s Electoral Commission follows a similar deliberate planning cycle, knowing that institutional readiness cannot be crammed into a few months.
The importance of Nigeria’s first funding, therefore, is not only in its monetary value but also in the opportunity it offers to replace emergency management with strategic planning.
One reform that has received less public attention than it deserves is the Commission’s work to make Continuous Voter Registration truly continuous. The move, apparently administrative, is among the most significant global changes in election management in two decades.
In Nigeria, voter registration has for years been treated as an event and not a perennial public service. The windows for registration often led to long queues, overwhelmed registration centres, and many eligible citizens struggling to secure voter credentials ahead of elections.
That model is dying out slowly all over the world.
Countries like Canada, New Zealand and Estonia now regard voter registration as a living national database that is updated on an ongoing basis, rather than rebuilt on a periodic basis. When citizens move, come of voting age or legitimately change personal information, they can easily update their records. The emphasis is on keeping the register up to date throughout the electoral cycle, and not on a rush to clean it up just before elections.
This evolving philosophy is reflected in INEC’s decision to broaden access, promote online pre-registration and decentralize aspects of voter registration. It recognises that electoral inclusion begins well before polling day.
Perhaps more importantly, the Commission has decided to deepen its collaboration with the National Identity Management Commission. This may sound like a simple administrative partnership, but it sits at the heart of one of the most advanced discussions in contemporary electoral governance: the integration of national identity systems.
Globally, governments are increasingly moving away from fragmented identity databases to interoperable digital identity ecosystems. The world benchmark is still Estonia. Identity verification, along with its digital governance architecture, is the backbone of nearly everything in public administration, even elections. A similar approach has been adopted by Finland, Denmark and Sweden, where civil registration, taxation, healthcare and electoral records interact safely under strong privacy protections.
Such systems remove duplicate identities and simplify verification to improve the accuracy of voter registers. They also reduce the potential for identity-related fraud, and free electoral authorities to focus resources on election administration, rather than repeated identity-validation exercises.
For Nigeria, the collaboration between INEC and NIMC does not necessarily mean the replacement of biometric voter registration. Rather it provides the opportunity to build another layer of identity assurance that can help to strengthen the integrity of the voters’ register.
“Equally remarkable is the engagement with the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission by INEC. Talk of funding frameworks and staff welfare may at first glance seem far removed from election administration. But comparative democratic experience suggests otherwise.
Electoral commissions are only as independent as the financial institutions that finance them.
In some African democracies, for example Botswana, Namibia and South Africa, the electoral institutions have funding arrangements that are relatively predictable, which facilitates long-term planning and lessens the over-reliance on last-minute appropriations. Financial certainty permits institutional independence as election managers spend less time searching for emergency resources and more time developing operational capacity.
Stable financing also enhances accountability, as procurement and planning can be driven by institutional rather than political timelines.
The collaboration with the British Government on mock elections is also a sign of a global best practice that is taking shape. Modern election management is increasingly looking to aviation, cyber security and emergency response systems for guidance, and all of these systems conduct simulations as a matter of course prior to major operations.
Mock elections are not just symbolic gestures to impress observers. They work as stress tests.
They find weak points in communication networks, technology roll-out, logistics, result transmission systems and emergency response methods before they erupt into public crises.
Countries such as the United Kingdom, Germany, Australia and New Zealand routinely run operational simulations to test their election readiness. Such exercises often expose vulnerabilities that are not identified in traditional planning documents.
Given Nigeria’s large geography, difficult terrain and over 176,000 polling units, institutional rehearsal may be as important as institutional planning.
The least visible but most consequential reform currently under consideration may be the Commission’s focus on staff welfare.
Across the globe, election management has become ever more reliant on specialized expertise. The electoral commissions now need people who are professionals in the fields of cybersecurity, software engineering, logistics, procurement, legal drafting, data analytics, communications and artificial intelligence. These skills are in demand in both the public and private sector.”
When experienced people leave, institutions lose far more than employees. They lose the institutional memory.
The knowledge acquired over election cycles – how to react to emergencies, troubleshoot technology failures, coordinate national logistics, or solve unforeseen operational challenges – isn’t easily captured in manuals. It is largely in experienced professionals.
Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom shell out large sums to maintain permanent electoral professionals because they know that institutional competence is a function of continuity. Samuel Huntington’s famous remark that the strength of political institutions lies in their organisational capacity and not in individual personalities, remains particularly relevant for electoral management.
If INEC manages to improve staff welfare and stem the loss of skilled professionals, it would be investing not just in personnel but institutional resilience.
These two initiatives indicate that the Commission is beginning to embrace a philosophy that is common among leading electoral democracies. Elections are not seen as separate events that happen every four years. They are increasingly seen as continuous governance processes that require ongoing institutional investment.
There are a few markers of the most successful electoral commissions. They keep up to date voter rolls. They embed identity management within large national administrative systems. They get stable long-term sources of finance. They spend a lot of money on professional development and keeping staff. They work closely with other public institutions but are operationally independent.
These are precisely the areas in which INEC’s recent activities seem to be preoccupied.
But optimism is to be tempered with realism.
Institutional ambition alone cannot ensure credible elections. Major challenges still face Nigeria that require continued attention leading up to 2027. Transparency must be used to continually build public confidence in election technology. “Investment in cyber-security will be unparalleled, and digital threats are becoming more sophisticated. Procurement processes need to be transparent. The Electoral Act may be amenable to legislative improvement. Giving priority to the inclusion of internally displaced persons and citizens in hard-to-reach communities is essential.
Communication to the public is just as important. The legitimization of electoral reforms is the fruit not only of their technical quality but also of the understanding by citizens of their relevance. Regular, transparent and proactive communication from institutions builds trust.
Ultimately, the most important significance of INEC’s recent activities may not be any one reform, but rather the larger institutional culture that they seem to represent. Democracies are not strengthened by loud statements but by steady improvements in systems, processes and administrative competence.
The world’s best-respected electoral commissions rarely make the news. Their greatest accomplishments tend to happen before the campaign even begins. They win by making sure that when polling day finally comes, the great majority of the problems that could otherwise damage public trust in the election have already been foreseen by the institutions behind it.
If the current path is pursued through disciplined implementation, transparency, and continuing institutional independence, Nigeria may well be seeing the gradual emergence of an electoral commission that is striving to align itself with international best practices not through rhetoric, but through the patient work of institutional reform.
Of course, the real test will come in 2027. But the credibility of that election is already being shaped today—in decisions about funding, technology, identity management, institutional partnerships and professional capacity that may never receive the same public attention as campaign rallies or election results, but could ultimately prove far more decisive.