- Safiu Kehinde
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has again warned political parties and politicians against premature campaigns.
INEC gave the warning at a one-day Roundtable discussion The Electoral Institute, (TEI) Abuja, where stakeholders deliberated on the Challenges of Premature/Early Political Campaigns, on Wednesday.
Speaking at the event, the INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, expressed concern over what he descrived as the “perpetual election mode” of parties, candidates, and their supporters, who engage in advertising, rallies, and media blitz even before the electoral timetable is released.
Citing Section 94(1) of the Electoral Act 2022, Yakubu recalled that campaigns are only permitted from 150 days to polling day and must stop 24 hours before the vote.
However, the law, according to the INEC Chairman, only prescribes mild sanctions of up to N500,000 for campaigns carried out within 24 hours to election day, while remaining silent on campaigns conducted earlier than the 150-day threshold.
Yakubu said the campaign activities orchestrated by politicians, candidates, and third-party agents, undermine the Commission’s ability to track campaign finance limits.
“Section 94(1) of the Electoral Act 2022 prohibits the commencement of campaign earlier than 150 days (i.e. 5 months) before polling day and must end 24 hours prior to that day.
“The idea is to prioritise governance over electioneering from one electoral cycle to another.
“However, political parties, candidates and their supporters seem to be perpetually in election mood even when the Electoral Commission is yet to release the Timetable and Schedule of Activities for elections or ahead of the timeframe provided by law.
“Around the country, we have seen outdoor advertising, media campaigns and even rallies promoting various political parties and candidates.
“These actions and activities undermine the Commission’s ability to track campaign finance limits as politicians, prospective candidates and third-party agents expend large amount of money that cannot be effectively monitored before the official commencement of campaigns.” He said.
The INEC Chairman further identified the leniency of the law as a major constraint to the Commission’s ability to the premature campaign activities in check.
“Quite correctly, Nigerians expect INEC, as registrar and regulator of political parties, to act in the face of the brazen breach of the law on early campaign.
“However, the major challenge for the Commission is the law itself. Sections 94(2) and (3) of the Electoral Act 2022 imposes sanctions, albeit mild (a maximum amount of N500,000 on conviction), on any political party or a person acting on its behalf who engaged in campaigns 24 hours before polling day.
“However, there is no sanction whatsoever concerning breaches for campaigns earlier than 150 days to an election.
“Here lies the challenge for the Commission in dealing with early campaign by political parties, prospective candidates and their supporters.” Yakubu added.
In his welcome remarks, Chairman of the Board of The Electoral Institute, Prof. Abdullahi Abdu Zuru, described premature campaigns as “a creeping danger” to Nigeria’s democracy.
He cited the growing use of cultural festivals, religious gatherings, and philanthropy as camouflage for veiled campaign messages, alongside billboards, branded vehicles, and social media content that skirt the law.
Such activities, according to Zuru, distort the political environment.
“They not only inflate the cost of elections but also distract office holders from service delivery, erode public confidence in institutions, and feed cynicism about whether laws can ever be enforced.” He said.
Zuru called for clearer definitions in the law, stronger enforcement mechanisms, civic education for citizens, and active collaboration with media platforms to check the trend.
Delivering the keynote address, former INEC Chairman Prof. Attahiru Jega gave a comprehensive analysis of the dangers of premature campaigns and the weaknesses of Nigeria’s current legal framework.
“Premature campaigns are not just technical violations,
“They are aberrations that confer undue advantage, entrench impunity, and compromise electoral integrity.
“When incumbents commission projects or allow proxies to campaign years in advance, they normalize illegality and make it almost impossible to ensure a level playing field.” He said
Jega further noted that premature campaigns are rampant in Nigeria, particularly among incumbents at both federal and state levels, often disguised as third-party initiatives.
He cited international examples from Australia, Mexico, the Philippines, and India, where premature campaigns attract stiff sanctions, ranging from fines to imprisonment.
Jega called for the adoption of similar measures by Nigerian lawmakers.
He further recommended ways to tackle premature campaign which as highlighted on INEC News include;
“Clearly defining premature campaign offences in the Electoral Act and attaching stiff penalties.
“Holding candidates and political parties vicariously liable for third-party campaigns.
“Empowering the EFCC and ICPC to investigate the financing of premature campaign activities.
“Factoring third-party campaign expenses into official campaign finance audits.
“Establishing an Electoral Offences Commission and Tribunal before the 2027 elections to ensure effective prosecution of violators.”
Jega harped on the urgency of these reforms, warning that if premature campaigns are not checked, they will heat up the polity, escalate costs, promote hate speech, and fuel ethno-religious tensions as we move towards 2027.