ADVERTISEMENT
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
NewsOnline Nigeria
  • Headlines
  • Top Stories
  • Politics
  • Crime Watch
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
  • Headlines
  • Top Stories
  • Politics
  • Crime Watch
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
NewsOnline Nigeria
No Result
View All Result
  • Headlines
  • Top Stories
  • Politics
  • Crime Watch
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Home 2027 Election

FG Budgets N135.22bn for 2027 Post-Election Legal Battles, Sparks Transparency Concerns

Service-Wide Votes are often regarded as contingency funds within the federal budget and are used to cover expenses that cut across multiple institutions, including unforeseen national obligations and liabilities that cannot easily be assigned to a single agency.

by NewsOnline Nigeria
April 7, 2026
in 2027 Election, Headline
0
FG

FG has budgeted N135.22bn for 2027 post-election legal battles.

NewsOnline Nigeria reports that the Federal Government of Nigeria has proposed N135.22 billion in the 2026 budget for what it described as “Electoral Adjudication and Post-Election Provision,” signalling a major financial commitment to managing legal disputes and obligations that typically follow elections in the country.

The provision was contained in the House of Representatives Order Paper for March 31, 2026, which includes the report on the 2026 Appropriation Bill. The allocation was listed under Service-Wide Votes, a centrally managed pool of funds used by the government to finance obligations not tied to a specific ministry, department, or agency.

ALSO: Remita Faces Regulatory Heat as NDPC Launches Investigation Over Alleged Data Breach

Service-Wide Votes are often regarded as contingency funds within the federal budget and are used to cover expenses that cut across multiple institutions, including unforeseen national obligations and liabilities that cannot easily be assigned to a single agency.

Within this framework, the N135.22bn provision indicates that the government anticipates continued fiscal pressure arising from election-related legal disputes, settlements, and administrative processes.

Further analysis of the appropriation document shows the provision is part of the broader Consolidated Revenue Fund charges, which stood at about N3.70 trillion in the 2026 proposal. The electoral adjudication allocation alone accounts for roughly 3.65 per cent of that segment of spending.

The budget proposal also includes a much larger N1.01 trillion statutory transfer to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), making it the largest recipient within the statutory transfer category, which totals N4.80 trillion.

Statutory transfers are constitutionally backed allocations paid directly from the Consolidated Revenue Fund to institutions such as INEC, the National Assembly of Nigeria, and the National Judicial Council. These funds are released as a first-line charge and are not subject to direct executive control, giving recipient agencies a degree of financial autonomy.

Earlier in February, INEC informed the National Assembly that it would require N873.78bn to conduct the 2027 general elections, alongside N171bn for its operational activities in the 2026 fiscal year. The proposed election budget represents a significant increase from the N313.4bn spent on the 2023 general elections.

Opposition parties raise concerns

Opposition parties, including the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the African Democratic Congress (ADC), have questioned the transparency and rationale behind the N135.22bn provision for post-election legal matters.

PDP National Publicity Secretary Ini Ememobong argued that the allocation suggests an expectation of widespread disputes following the 2027 polls, which he said raises concerns about the credibility of the electoral process.

Similarly, ADC spokesperson Bolaji Abdullahi acknowledged that the electoral commission is often involved in post-election litigation but described the scale of the proposed allocation as excessive.

Experts and civil society react

Political economist Pat Utomi questioned why the federal government should budget for election-related litigation, arguing that elections are contested by candidates rather than the government itself.

Human rights lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) also criticised the amount as unjustifiably high, noting that INEC already has a legal department and typically pays limited fees even to senior advocates handling election cases. According to him, the electoral commission may not spend up to N20bn on election litigation in reality.

Civil society organisations also expressed concern over the allocation. The Executive Director of FixPolitics Africa, Anthony Ubani, warned that budgeting heavily for election disputes could weaken public confidence in Nigeria’s democracy by shifting the focus from credible elections to courtroom battles.

Similarly, the Executive Director of the Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre, Auwal Rafsanjani, said credible and transparent elections would significantly reduce the need for costly post-election litigation.

The controversy highlights broader concerns about the rising cost of elections and the growing reliance on courts to determine electoral outcomes in Nigeria.

Previous Post

Remita Faces Regulatory Heat as NDPC Launches Investigation Over Alleged Data Breach

Trending Stories

No Content Available

Latest Stories

FG

FG Budgets N135.22bn for 2027 Post-Election Legal Battles, Sparks Transparency Concerns

Remita

Remita Faces Regulatory Heat as NDPC Launches Investigation Over Alleged Data Breach

Sterling Bank

Sterling Bank in Fresh Crisis as NDPC Launches Probe Over Alleged Data Breach

ADC Youth Wing

ADC Youth Wing Gives INEC 72-Hour Ultimatum to Restore David Mark–Led Leadership, Threatens Nationwide Protest

Peter Obi

Presidency Slams Peter Obi for ‘Unfairly Targeting’ Tinubu Over ADC Crisis

Atiku

Atiku Hires US Lobbying Firm For $1.2m To Boost 2027 Presidential Election Chances

FCT Minister Wike

NUJ Condemns Wike’s Threat Against Channels TV Journalist Seun Okinbaloye

Wema Bank

Wema Bank Launches New Jingle to Promote ALAT: The Evolution Digital Banking Experience

L-R: Alhaji Shehu Sampam D.G SWAC 4 ABAT AGAIN and Mr. Tayo Ayinde, chief of staff to the governor, Lagos State, during a meeting at Lagos House, Alausa

Tayo Ayinde Backs SWAC for Asiwaju 2027, Reaffirms Support for Tinubu’s Second-Term Bid

Trump

BREAKING: Trump Gives Iran 48-Hour Ultimatum, Warns of “Severe Consequences”

NewsOnline Nigeria

Get the Latest Naija News, Breaking News, Top Stories, World News, Business, Politics & Entertainment from NewsOnline Nigeria.

RELEVANT PAGES

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

ALERT US

Important Press Releases, Special Investigations: admin@newsonlineng.com

OFFICE ADDRESS

13 Poland Street, London, United Kingdom (UK)

Copyright © 2026 NewsOnline Nigeria

No Result
View All Result
  • Headlines
  • Top Stories
  • Politics
  • Crime Watch
  • Entertainment
  • Sports

Copyright © 2023 Newsonline Nigeria