53 Political Parties Up For Extinction

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There are strong indications that the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, may invoke a section in the amended Electoral Act to deregister more than 53 political parties anytime from now.

Only 10 political parties which include Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN, Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Congress for Progressive Change, CPC, All Nigerian Peoples Party, ANPP, Labout Party, LP, Progressive Peoples Alliance, PPA, Peoples Party of Nigeria, PPN, All Progressive Grand Alliance, APGA, Accord Party, AP, Democratic Peoples Party, DPP and KOWA, would likely survive when the privision is invoked.

Part V, Section 7 of the Electoral Act 2011 stipulates that “the commission (INEC) shall have powers to deregister political parties on the following grounds:

i. Breach of any of the requirements for registration and ii. Failure to win a seat in the National Assembly or state assembly election.”

In the last election, 63 political parties participated and were expected to win at least one seat in the National Assembly or state Houses of Assembly or risk deregistration. But the results of the elections showed that only the above 10 political parties fulfilled the requirements.

About 53 parties did not meet the requirement and, therefore, may be deregistered by the time cases at the election petition tribunal are concluded in 180 days, as stipulated by the Electoral Act.

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Political Platform reliably gathered that the realisation that INEC may wield the big stick has caused a division in the polity.

While some sections ask INEC to bare its fang and delist the erring political parties, others especially the beneficiaries, urge INEC to cause no harm to the offending parties in the interest of democracy.

Political Platform reliably gathered that the way and manner some political parties were formed after the successful battle for the liberalization of the political space spearheaded by the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi was very funny.

Some parties were hurriedly put together within the living rooms of their sponsors, the husband as chairman, wife or relation as secretary, while a few of the party leaders have remained chairmen and presidential candidates of their parties since 2003, contesting the various presidential elections.

Founding and owning parties have become an avenue to wield influence, attend functions and wait in the wings for the elusive grants. But their chickens are gradually coming home to roost.

 

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