Who will decide Nigeria in 2027?

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By Prof. Chiwuike Uba, Ph.D.

Nigeria is fast approaching the 2027 general elections, yet the real contest is not on campaign posters or ballot boxes. It has already begun—in boardrooms, in party offices, in the flow of money, in the manipulation of structures, and in the quiet shaping of who gets to govern. For too long, Nigerians have been presented with outcomes already negotiated behind closed doors. Waiting for INEC’s timetable is already too late to influence the forces that truly determine the country’s future.

Elections in Nigeria have never truly begun on the day campaigns are officially announced. They start long before, in elite negotiations, in the capture of party structures, in the shaping of narratives, in the exclusion of credible aspirants, and in the slow sidelining of citizens from decisions that are supposed to belong to them. If Nigerians wait until campaign posters appear, they will already be late to their own future.

The months ahead are not merely a prelude to voting. They are the battleground on which who can run, what can be discussed, what is possible, and who ultimately governs will be decided. This is the moment to set the stage, define the agenda, and establish the talking points capable of mobilising the critical forces that can shift Nigeria from managed elections to people-driven choices.

Understanding the political economy of elections in Nigeria is essential to this task. Elections do not operate primarily as contests of ideas. They function, largely, as political investments. For many actors, elections are not about service but about access: access to state power, public resources, institutional protection, and economic advantage. This is why politics has become one of the most capital-intensive ventures in the country. Nomination forms cost fortunes. Delegates are monetised. Party structures are purchased. Courtrooms replace party members. Godfathers replace citizens.

In this political economy, power precedes the people, not the other way around. Those who control resources often determine who controls parties. Those who control parties often determine who appears on the ballot. And those who appear on the ballot frequently determine what choices Nigerians are permitted to make. This reality explains why elections repeatedly reproduce leadership that does not reflect the competence, character, or aspirations of the majority. Until this political economy is confronted, technical reforms alone will remain insufficient.

Public attention often fixates on election day, on voter cards, turnout figures, polling units, and result sheets. Yet the most decisive rigging in Nigeria often happens long before the first vote is cast. It happens in the hijack of party structures at ward, local government, and state levels. It happens in the imposition of ad hoc executives loyal to money rather than members. It happens in the weaponisation of court orders to determine party leadership. It happens in the systematic exclusion of credible aspirants through inflated costs and manipulated processes. It happens in the conversion of delegates into commodities.

By the time candidates emerge, the people are often presented not with options, but with outcomes already negotiated. If Nigerians want to truly decide who governs them, then citizen engagement must shift upstream, into party processes, civic pressure, community organising, professional associations, student movements, faith-based networks, labour platforms, and issue-driven coalitions. The struggle for 2027 will not be won primarily at polling units. It will be won in who controls the processes that produce the names on the ballot.

Candidate emergence remains the point at which democracy most often dies. In functional democracies, parties recruit leaders. In Nigeria, leaders often capture parties. Primaries have increasingly become ceremonial endorsements of decisions taken elsewhere. Consensus is frequently a euphemism for coercion. Aspirants who lack access to large war chests are screened out, not by ideas, but by price tags.

The consequences are severe. Competence becomes secondary to capacity to pay. Integrity becomes less valuable than loyalty to patrons. Vision loses to violence, inducement, and litigation. Citizens must therefore insist that 2027 is not merely about who wins elections, but about how candidates emerge. Transparent primaries, open membership systems, verifiable delegate lists, and community scrutiny of aspirants must become national demands, not internal party favours. If Nigerians do not democratise the gate, they cannot democratise the state.

Beyond party capture, Nigerians are painfully familiar with the manipulation that characterises voting itself: voter suppression, logistical sabotage, intimidation, inducement, technological interference, result rewriting, and the judicialisation of outcomes. These practices do more than distort numbers. They hollow out citizenship. When announced results consistently fail to reflect lived realities at polling units, people stop seeing elections as instruments of choice and begin to see them as rituals of legitimisation. Participation declines. Cynicism grows. Extremism finds space. The social contract erodes.

The danger before Nigeria is not merely flawed elections. It is the steady normalisation of disbelief. Rebuilding confidence requires more than promises. It demands organised citizens who monitor processes, protect polling units, document outcomes, challenge illegalities, and refuse to retreat once votes are cast. Democracy is not an event. It is a sustained confrontation with power.

Increasingly, however, even voting and collation are no longer seen as the final arbiters of electoral outcomes. Across election cycles, Nigerian courts have gradually replaced voters and, in many instances, the electoral commission itself as the institutions that ultimately decide who governs. Candidates who never meaningfully campaigned, who were rejected at primaries, or who lost at the polls have emerged victorious through judgments. Entire mandates have been conferred or withdrawn not at polling units, but in courtrooms.

This growing judicialisation of politics represents one of the most profound distortions of Nigeria’s democracy. Courts are no longer merely resolving disputes arising from elections. They are increasingly determining the substance of electoral outcomes. Technicalities eclipse popular will. Procedural errors overshadow millions of votes. Party paperwork sometimes outweighs public mandate. In this environment, elections become provisional exercises, pending judicial confirmation, and citizens are subtly taught that their votes are only the opening arguments in a much longer legal contest.

The dangers of this trend are far-reaching. It weakens the authority of INEC and erodes public confidence in the electoral process. It relocates political struggle from communities to court registries. It privileges those with the resources to sustain prolonged litigation over those with genuine grassroots support. It transforms judges, rather than citizens, into the final constituency that candidates must court. Even more troubling is what this does to the judiciary itself. A system repeatedly dragged into the centre of partisan warfare becomes vulnerable to pressure, inducement, blackmail, and political bargaining. Whether fair or not, public perception hardens. Many Nigerians already view the judiciary as the most corruption-infested arm of government, a belief fuelled by contradictory rulings, last-minute injunctions, forum shopping, and judgments that appear to defy both logic and popular reality. As courts increasingly decide political destinies, they also increasingly inherit the anger, suspicion, and delegitimisation that follow contested power.

When every major political contest ends in litigation, the judiciary is forced into roles it was never designed to play. It becomes an alternative electoral commission. It becomes an extension of party warfare. It becomes a bargaining arena for elite settlements. In the process, its moral authority is compromised, its institutional integrity is strained, and its image as an impartial arbiter is steadily eroded. A judiciary that should stand above politics is gradually being submerged within it, and a society that loses faith in its courts risks losing one of the last anchors of constitutional order. The tragedy is not only that votes are displaced, but that justice itself becomes politicised. As confidence in judicial neutrality weakens, citizens are less inclined to seek redress through lawful means. Rumours replace rulings. Ethnic and partisan interpretations replace legal reasoning. Violence and self-help gain appeal. What should resolve conflict instead multiplies it.

Another critical layer that must not be ignored is the growing security economy around elections. Across Nigeria, political competition is increasingly intertwined with armed groups, cult networks, criminal gangs, and militarised state responses. Elections are no longer only contests of influence but theatres of fear. Communities are threatened into silence. Turnout is suppressed through insecurity. Opponents are discouraged not only by money, but by risk. When violence becomes a campaign strategy, citizenship becomes a hazard. Democracy cannot thrive where participation endangers life, and no election can be truly free when fear shapes who can speak, organise, or vote.

Equally decisive in modern elections is control of narrative. Media capture, algorithmic manipulation, propaganda networks, and paid disinformation now shape political reality as much as party structures. Lies travel faster than manifestos. Ethnic and religious frames are amplified to distract from material failures. Opponents are delegitimised not only through courts, but through coordinated digital assaults. In this environment, citizens are not only voters; they are targets. The battle for 2027 will also be a battle for truth, and without civic media literacy and independent journalism, even technically sound elections can be socially corrupted.

Nigeria approaches 2027 as one of the youngest nations on earth, yet one of the oldest political systems in practice. A country whose median age sits below twenty continues to be governed largely by structures, figures, and cultures detached from youth realities. This demographic contradiction is not merely unfair; it is destabilising. When a political system systematically excludes its largest population block from meaningful participation, it accumulates anger, alienation, and exit. Youth disengagement is not apathy; it is often a verdict. Reclaiming the political process is therefore not optional for Nigeria’s young people. It is existential.

The cost of compromised elections is not abstract. It is measured in collapsing infrastructure, failing schools, unaffordable healthcare, deepening poverty, runaway inflation, and the normalisation of insecurity. When leaders do not emerge from popular accountability, they rarely govern through it. When power is acquired through manipulation, it is exercised through extraction. Nigeria’s governance crisis is not separate from its electoral crisis; it is its consequence. Every rigged process eventually becomes a rigged economy, a rigged justice system, and a rigged social order.

Nigeria’s democratic failures are compounded by what happens after elections. Civic energy often collapses once results are announced or cases concluded. Office holders return to isolation. Campaign promises dissolve into silence. Constituency relationships disappear. Without structured post-election accountability, even well-conducted polls can yield unresponsive governments. Democracy does not end at inauguration. It begins there. Budgets, appointments, policy choices, and institutional reforms must become sites of organised citizen engagement, otherwise electoral victories, even when genuine, quickly lose meaning.

Ultimately, the struggle for 2027 is not only political; it is moral and generational. It is about whether Nigerians will continue to hand over the future to closed circles or reclaim it for open society. It is about whether children inherit institutions that protect them or systems that prey on them. History will not only record who won elections. It will record who stood when democracy was being hollowed out, and who chose comfort over country.

The ongoing political crisis in Rivers State offers Nigerians a real-time lesson in how the struggle for 2027 is already unfolding. The face-off involving the former governor, the sitting governor, and a State House of Assembly widely perceived as still being controlled by the former power structure is not merely a local quarrel. It is an early expression of the deeper contest over who controls political machinery, institutional loyalty, and ultimately, the future electoral outcomes.

At its core, the Rivers crisis is not about personalities. It is about capture. Capture of the legislature. Capture of party structures. Capture of state institutions. Capture of political destiny. When a sitting governor governs under the shadow of a predecessor’s continuing grip on the assembly and party apparatus, it exposes a fundamental weakness in Nigeria’s democracy: elections may change office holders, but they often fail to dismantle entrenched power networks. The will of the electorate becomes secondary to internal elite settlements.

This kind of political warfare, fought through impeachments, parallel assemblies, court orders, and federal alignments, is not an exception. It is a preview of what awaits the country if citizens remain disengaged from the foundational layers of politics. Rivers State today mirrors, in concentrated form, the national struggle between democratic choice and elite continuity.

Equally instructive is the growing wave of defections by governors, legislators, and political heavyweights into the ruling party. While party switching is legal, its pattern in Nigeria often reveals less about ideology and more about survival, access, and protection. These defections weaken opposition parties and reduce electoral competition. They encourage a politics of convenience rather than conviction. They concentrate power in ways that make institutional capture easier. They signal to citizens that elections are less about public mandate and more about proximity to federal authority.

When political actors migrate en masse toward the centre of power, democracy begins to resemble a one-way traffic system. The danger is not merely the dominance of one party, but the erosion of meaningful alternatives. Without strong, credible, and organised opposition platforms, elections risk becoming formalities rather than choices. For 2027, this trend raises urgent questions. Will Nigerians be offered genuine options, or will the political marketplace be so tilted that outcomes are largely predetermined before campaigns even begin?

Nigeria’s past elections, from the early years of the Fourth Republic to the most recent cycles, reveal consistent patterns: logistical failures, monetisation of votes, violence and intimidation, abuse of incumbency, selective enforcement of rules, inconsistent application of technology, prolonged litigation, and frequent divergence between polling-unit realities and final announcements. Each election cycle has produced not only winners, but wounds. Mandates have often been settled in courtrooms rather than communities. Public confidence has risen briefly, only to decline again. Hope has repeatedly given way to fatigue. Outcomes have too often reinforced existing power blocs rather than disrupt them.

From heavily disputed results to elections where turnout collapsed in many urban centres, the story has been the same: Nigerians vote, but structures decide. This historical experience must shape how citizens approach 2027. Not with naïve optimism. Not with fatalistic withdrawal. But with organised, informed, and strategic engagement aimed at breaking these entrenched cycles.

The most important work of the 2027 elections is not for politicians. It is for citizens. Now is the time to define the national agenda so that jobs, security, education, healthcare, inflation, governance reform, institutional accountability, youth inclusion, restructuring of public finance, and the political economy of development dominate public discourse. Personalities must not replace problems.

It is time to occupy the civic space so that town halls, community dialogues, professional forums, religious platforms, campuses, labour spaces, and digital communities become arenas of political education rather than entertainment. It is time for citizens, especially young people and professionals, to engage political parties early, to join them, contest internal positions, monitor congresses, and disrupt the idea that parties are private estates.

It is time to build issue-based coalitions that cut across ethnicity, religion, and region, organised around concrete demands capable of shifting the balance of power away from isolated outrage toward coordinated influence. It is time to establish red lines: no more opaque primaries, no more monetised delegates, no more violent congresses, no more judicial substitution of candidates, and no more stolen mandates without sustained resistance.

Elections do not fail in Nigeria because Nigerians do not vote. They fail because Nigerians are structurally excluded from the processes that make voting meaningful. The year 2027 offers a choice beyond candidates. It offers a choice between continuing as spectators in elite transactions or emerging as organised stakeholders in national direction.

The question before the country is no longer simply, “Who will win?” It is, *“Who will decide?”*

If Nigerians set the stage, define the agenda, mobilise critical forces, and remain engaged from party formation to post-election accountability, then 2027 can mark the beginning of a new political culture: one where leaders emerge from society, not above it; where results reflect citizens, not arrangements; and where power answers, not commands.

Democracy does not arrive on election day. It is built, patiently and courageously, before it. God is with us!

About the Author
Prof. Chiwuike Uba, Ph.D. is an economist and governance expert with over 25 years of experience in public financial management, policy advisory, and development consulting. He has authored multiple publications on fiscal policy, governance, and the political economy of development. He can be reached at chiwuike@gmail.com
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