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    Home»Politics»The battle before the 2027 ballots
    Politics

    The battle before the 2027 ballots

    Chukwu GodloveBy Chukwu GodloveJuly 19, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    It is in these quieter arenas, not merely on election day, that democracies flourish or unravel. Nigeria can take pride in sustaining civilian rule since 1999. On a continent shaken by coups and constitutional reversals, elections are a significant achievement. Governments have changed through the ballot box, opposition parties have defeated incumbents, and institutions have gained experience. Yet longevity must not be mistaken for consolidation.

    A country may become skilled at organising elections while growing less faithful to the principles that give them meaning. Democracy is measured not by regular voting, but by open competition, impartial institutions, protected freedoms, and confidence that every contender plays by the same rules. Across Nigeria’s political landscape, leadership disputes, factional struggles, and litigation have weakened several parties. More troubling is the perception that institutions created to arbitrate disputes are themselves viewed through partisan lenses.

    Whether every suspicion is justified is arguably secondary. Democracy depends as much on public confidence as on constitutional procedure. Institutions derive legitimacy not only from law but from citizens’ trust in their neutrality. Once that confidence erodes, stability becomes fragile even when formal processes remain intact. Democracies rarely collapse in one dramatic moment. They weaken gradually through selective law enforcement, shrinking political space, unequal competition, and the normalization of once-unacceptable conduct.

    The deterioration of political discourse deepens danger. Debate increasingly rewards outrage over reason, suspicion over dialogue, and personal attack over policy alternatives. Social media accelerates misinformation, hardens polarization, and spreads narratives designed to inflame, not inform. Opponents are treated not as legitimate competitors but as enemies whose participation must be resisted. Yet pluralism is not democracy’s weakness; it is its defining strength. Nations do not weaken because citizens disagree, but when disagreement becomes dangerous.

    The months ahead demand restraint, beginning with the use of public power. State renments administer the state for all citizens; parties campaign for themselves. Every naira appropriated from the treasury belongs to the Nigerian people, not to any party. Public institutions, official platforms, and state infrastructure exist to serve the Republic, not those entrusted with its administration

    The greatness of democratic leadership lies not in the exercise of power, but in the discipline to restrain it. Yet safeguarding democracy is not government’s responsibility alone. Opposition parties cannot demand stronger institutions while neglecting democracy within their ranks. Opaque candidate selection, unstable leadership, and organizational indiscipline erode confidence. Political parties are training grounds for leadership; when internal democracy collapses, national democracy is weakened.

    The media and civil society also carry a burden. Journalism fulfills its highest calling when it scrutinizes power rigorously while remaining faithful to facts rather than partisan preference. Civil society must defend constitutional principles consistently, resisting selective outrage based on whose interests are affected. Principles acquire moral authority only when applied impartially.

    Citizens, too, are not spectators. The 2023 election revealed an electorate increasingly determined to demand transparency, accountability, and credible processes. That civic awakening remains one of Nigeria’s greatest democratic assets. Yet no electoral commission can compensate for citizens who normalize vote-buying. No constitutional amendment can eliminate ethnic or religious prejudice from political choices. No judicial pronouncement can substitute for civic responsibility. Democracy reflects the political culture of its people.

    As 2027 approaches, Nigeria must resist reducing political debate to who will win. The larger question is what kind of democracy will remain after victory is declared. Every administration eventually leaves office; every governing party eventually confronts opposition; every election becomes history. What endures are institutions, constitutional conventions, and democratic norms. These foundations deserve greater protection than the ambitions of any leader, party, or generation.

    The battle before the ballots is therefore not fundamentally between parties, personalities, or regions. It is a contest between principle and expediency, institutional integrity and institutional capture, democratic restraint and democratic excess. The election will last only a day, but the character of Nigeria’s democracy will endure long after the votes are counted. History will remember not only who won in 2027, but whether the nation preserved the values that made victory worth having for every citizen.

    2027 ballots battle before
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    Chukwu Godlove

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