THE Senate will on Tuesday (today) reconvene for an emergency plenary session as mounting national outrage trails its handling of amendments to the Electoral Act, particularly the controversial decision to remove the clause mandating real-time electronic transmission of election results.
The extraordinary sitting comes less than a week after the passage of the Electoral Act 2022 (Repeal and Re-enactment) Amendment Bill, 2026, and follows sustained pressure from civil society organisations, opposition leaders, labour unions, professional bodies, regional groups, and an increasingly vocal youth movement that has taken its protest to the gates of the National Assembly.
The President of the Senate, Senator Godswill Akpabio, is expected to preside over the session, which will be attended by 105 senators.
In the past six months, the Upper Chamber has lost two lawmakers — Senator Okechukwu Ezea of Enugu State and Senator Godiya Akwashiki of Nasarawa State — to death. Another senator, Jimoh Ibrahim, recently vacated his seat following his appointment as an ambassador-designate by President Bola Tinubu, reducing the number of serving senators from 109 to 106.
The emergency plenary was formally announced on Sunday in a statement signed by the Clerk of the Senate, Emmanuel Odo.
“The President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio, has directed the reconvening of plenary for an emergency sitting on Tuesday, February 10, 2026,” the statement read.
The decision to reconvene follows intense backlash over the Senate’s passage of the Electoral Act Amendment Bill, which deleted the phrase ‘real-time’ from provisions relating to the electronic transmission of election results.
Critics argue that while electronic transmission was retained in principle, the removal of the phrase “real-time” creates loopholes for post-poll manipulation, undermining the credibility of elections ahead of the 2027 general polls.
Investigations revealed that several senators, particularly those appointed to the Harmonisation Committee, were thrown into defensive mode after their personal phone numbers circulated on social media. The development reportedly triggered a wave of angry calls, threats, and verbal attacks from citizens accusing lawmakers of sabotaging democracy. Some senators were said to have switched off their phones entirely.
“The reactions were unpredictable. Many people were laying curses and asking them, ‘How do you sleep at night after this action?’” a National Assembly source disclosed.
Despite repeated clarifications from Senate leaders that electronic transmission was not rejected outright, public distrust has continued to grow, with critics insisting that the Senate’s explanations have been inconsistent and unconvincing.
As tensions escalated, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) warned of nationwide protests and possible election boycotts if lawmakers failed to take a clear and unambiguous position on mandatory electronic transmission of results. The labour union accused the Senate of sowing confusion and undermining confidence in the electoral process.
Simultaneously, a coalition of political activists under the banner of the Movement for Credible Elections staged a mass protest in Abuja on Monday, tagged “Occupy NASS.”
The protest gained renewed momentum when the former presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Mr. Peter Obi, joined demonstrators at the National Assembly Complex.
The protesters, largely drawn from the Obidient Movement and other pro-democracy groups, accused lawmakers of deliberately weakening electoral safeguards ahead of the 2027 elections. Chanting solidarity songs and waving placards with inscriptions such as “Our votes must count,” “No to electoral robbery,” and “Protect democracy now,” they marched from the Federal Secretariat towards the National Assembly.
A heavy security presence comprising personnel of the Nigeria Police Force, Nigerian Army, and Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps prevented the protesters from gaining access to the complex.
Addressing journalists outside the barricaded gates, Obi condemned what he described as the steady erosion of Nigeria’s democratic gains.
“We must dismantle this criminality and prove that we are now a nation that shows light in Africa,” he said.
Obi’s presence electrified the crowd, reinforcing his symbolic status among young Nigerians who view him as the face of the 2023 political awakening that challenged Nigeria’s entrenched political order.
The National Coordinator of the Obidient Movement Worldwide, Dr. Yunusa Tanko, warned that protests would persist until lawmakers explicitly restored real-time electronic transmission of election results.
“If there is no electronic transmission of results, there will be no election. Our elections must be credible,” Tanko said.
Popular activist Randy Peters also vowed sustained demonstrations, invoking the spirit of the June 12, 1993 election.
“Tomorrow (today), we will be back here until the Senate does the right thing. June 12 was about free and fair elections. Why should democrats be afraid of credible polls?” he asked.
Meanwhile, the Nigerian Guild of Editors also warned that the controversy was breeding mistrust. In a statement signed by its President, Eze Anaba, the guild cautioned that uncertainty around the law could discourage voter participation.
Similarly, the Southern and Middle Belt Leadership Forum demanded the retention of compulsory real-time transmission, describing any weakening of the clause as an assault on Nigeria’s democracy.
In a joint statement signed by Oba Oladipo Olaitan, Dr. Bitrus Pogu, Senator John Azuta-Mbata, and Ambassador Godknows Igali, the forum warned Nigerians would resist any attempt to alter what the Senate initially approved.
As the Senate reconvenes today, the nation watches closely, with many seeing the emergency session as a defining moment for Nigeria’s democratic future ahead of 2027.

