Daily Trust Editorial, Monday November 3, 2025
The recent declaration by Governor Charles Soludo of Anambra State, promising cash payments to every ward won by his party, has once again drawn attention to one of Nigeria’s most persistent electoral maladies — vote buying. What he described as a “ward-winning incentive” risks reinforcing a culture of inducement that has, for years, corroded the country’s democratic institutions and public trust in elections. The statement must be condemned in the strongest terms.
While Governor Soludo’s party later described the pledge as a motivational tool to boost participation, the very idea of linking electoral outcomes to financial rewards sends the wrong message at a time when Nigeria is striving to strengthen the integrity of its elections. In any credible democracy, leaders are expected to inspire voters through performance, not promises of cash or material inducements.
Vote buying, whether subtle or blatant, has become a recurring feature of Nigeria’s elections. From local contests to national polls, reports of cash distribution, food items, and other incentives are widespread. This growing normalisation of inducement has distorted voter behaviour and reduced democratic competition to a transactional affair. It is a symptom of deeper institutional decay and economic desperation that must be urgently confronted.
Particularly troubling is how the governor’s pledge exposes the rot in appointment practices across Nigeria. When public office is allocated to those capable of delivering votes rather than to those with competence, the incentive structure degenerates. In Anambra, the governor’s directive can only spur a ferocious scramble among appointees — commissioners, aides, local functionaries — to prove their loyalty via vote inducement. Professionals expected to serve as technocrats, unfortunately, become vote hustlers.
The Anambra election, scheduled for November 8, therefore presents a crucial litmus test for the new leadership of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) under Prof. Joash Amupitan (SAN). His early pronouncements on curbing vote buying have been reassuring, but Nigerians will judge the commission by its actions, not its words. INEC must demonstrate the political will to enforce the law, working closely with security and anti-graft agencies to ensure that no individual or political party subverts the process.
Last week, barely days after the governor’s statement, Prof. Amupitan reminded the country that any attempt to induce voters before or during the election must be resisted and curtailed. That statement was necessary but not sufficient. It is not enough to warn in theory. The commission must name and shame offenders and ensure enforcement.
We also note approvingly that the commission has admitted collaboration with law enforcement and anti-graft agencies to prevent vote buying. But Nigerians will judge this administration not by pronouncements but by action.
Daily Trust, therefore, calls on anti-graft agencies such as the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) to treat Governor Soludo’s pledge not merely as campaign hyperbole, but as a red flag. They should investigate possible diversion of public funds or abuse of office connected to the promise, and ensure that others in this and future elections understand there is no immunity for electoral corruption.
The law is unambiguous. Section 121 of the Electoral Act prohibits the giving or receiving of money or any valuable consideration to influence voting. The Act equates such conduct with bribery, punishable by fine, imprisonment, or both. The Act’s provisions are reinforced by INEC’s Regulations and Guidelines for the Conduct of Elections, 2022. These regulations reinforce this, mandating political actors to uphold transparency and fairness. To protect the integrity of the ballot, the commission must actively monitor campaign financing, name and shame offenders, and ensure that violators face prosecution.
If unchecked, statements like Governor Soludo’s, even if intended rhetorically, risk emboldening others and escalating the already corrosive practice of electoral inducement. It also distorts governance by rewarding loyalty over competence, turning public service into a contest of political patronage.
Yet the problem extends beyond Anambra. Across the federation, the commercialisation of democracy has become an unfortunate norm. Many citizens acknowledge that selling votes is wrong, but see it as inevitable, a reflection of declining public confidence in the political system. Unless the tide is reversed, Nigeria risks entrenching a democracy of buyers and sellers, rather than of citizens and leaders.
As the November 8 election approaches, INEC and its partners must go beyond issuing warnings. They must deploy credible monitoring mechanisms, enforce sanctions, and send a clear signal that vote buying in any guise will not be tolerated. The Anambra poll is not just another state election; it is an early test of whether Nigeria’s new electoral leadership can reclaim the credibility of the ballot and begin reversing the country’s deepening culture of political inducement.