M.A. Danlami, Esq

M.A. Danlami, Esq Powerful advocacy. Proven results. Win your case with a skilled litigation lawyer.

Taqaballalah minna wa minkum
27/05/2026

Taqaballalah minna wa minkum

FEDERAL HIGH COURT RESTRAINS INEC FROM OVERREACHING ELECTORAL ACT, 2026 βš–οΈIn Youth Party v. INEC  (Suit No. FHC/ABJ/CS/5...
22/05/2026

FEDERAL HIGH COURT RESTRAINS INEC FROM OVERREACHING ELECTORAL ACT, 2026 βš–οΈ

In Youth Party v. INEC (Suit No. FHC/ABJ/CS/517/2026), Hon. Justice M. G. Umar delivered a landmark judgment on 20 May 2026, clarifying the boundaries of INEC's powers under the Electoral Act, 2026.

KEY HOLDINGS:
πŸ”Ή INEC cannot dictate when parties must hold primaries β€” its role is to receive notice, monitor and observe, not to prescribe timetables. (Ss. 29, 82, 84(1))

πŸ”Ή Statutory deadlines (120 days for candidate submission; 90 days for withdrawal/substitution; 60 days for final list publication) are minimum standards that INEC cannot lawfully abridge.

πŸ”Ή INEC lacks authority to end campaigns 2 days before elections contrary to Section 98.

πŸ”Ή Membership register requirements do not apply to substitution primaries for withdrawn candidates. (S. 33)

πŸ”Ή INEC's Revised 2027 Election Timetable has been set aside to the extent it conflicts with the Act.

TAKEAWAY: Administrative agencies derive their powers from statute and cannot expand them by regulation or timetable. The Electoral Act, 2026 is the ceiling β€” not merely the floor β€” of INEC's authority.

This is a significant win for party autonomy, statutory fidelity, and electoral jurisprudence in Nigeria.

M.A. Danlami, Esq
[email protected]

LEGAL POSITION ON THE STATUS OF SENATOR SAMUEL ANYANWU AND A.K. AJIBADE, SANA proper and dispassionate reading of the ju...
08/05/2026

LEGAL POSITION ON THE STATUS OF SENATOR SAMUEL ANYANWU AND A.K. AJIBADE, SAN

A proper and dispassionate reading of the judgments reveals that the widespread public assertion that Senator Samuel Anyanwu and A.K. A.K. Ajibade were β€œsacked by the courts” is not supported by the actual tenor and substance of the decisions.

The judgments, when carefully examined, show that the courts did not make any direct or substantive order removing either Anyanwu or Ajibade from their respective offices within the PDP. Rather, the courts were principally concerned with procedural questions relating to the competence of appeals, authority to institute processes in the name of the party, and the legal consequences of alleged internal actions purportedly taken by certain organs of the PDP.

In Appeal No. CA/ABJ/1695/2025, the Court of Appeal merely considered whether an appeal filed by A.K. Ajibade, SAN could validly subsist in light of fresh evidence tendered alleging that he had been suspended or removed as National Legal Adviser of the PDP. The Court accepted that evidence solely for the limited purpose of determining whether he possessed authority at the material time to file processes on behalf of the party.

Importantly, the Court did not itself conduct any inquiry into the validity, constitutionality, or procedural propriety of the alleged suspension or removal. Neither did the Court make any substantive pronouncement declaring that Ajibade had lawfully ceased to hold office under the PDP Constitution. The Court merely proceeded on the basis of the materials placed before it for the purpose of resolving the procedural dispute regarding representation of the party in the appeal.
Accordingly, the judgment cannot reasonably be interpreted as a judicial removal of Ajibade from office. At best, it amounts to a provisional judicial recognition of an internal claim by one faction of the party for the limited procedural purpose before the Court.

The same reasoning substantially applies to Senator Samuel Anyanwu. There is no express order in the judgments declaring that Anyanwu was removed, sacked, or permanently divested of his office as National Secretary of the PDP. The courts did not undertake a substantive interpretation of the PDP Constitution regarding tenure, removal procedure, or the validity of any purported suspension.

Indeed, the consistent jurisprudence of the Supreme Court in cases such as Onuoha v. Okafor, Dalhatu v. Turaki, and Lado v. CPC establishes that leadership disputes and internal administration of political parties are generally non-justiciable, except where there is clear violation of statute, constitutional provisions, or the party’s constitution.

Consequently, unless and until the alleged suspension or removal of Anyanwu and Ajibade is validly carried out in strict compliance with the PDP Constitution and affirmed through a substantive judicial determination, it cannot safely be asserted in law that they have ceased to hold office.

Furthermore, the judgments appear to recognize only the procedural consequences of competing claims to party authority, not a final determination of the substantive leadership structure of the PDP. The courts were concerned primarily with who could validly maintain processes before the court at the material time, not with conclusively determining the rightful holders of party offices.

It is therefore legally more accurate to state that the courts acknowledged certain internal claims within the PDP for limited procedural purposes, rather than that the courts directly removed or sacked Senator Anyanwu and A.K. Ajibade, SAN from office.

With respect to the purported attempt by the Turaki-led faction to constitute a caretaker committee and assume control of the PDP, such action would face substantial constitutional and legal obstacles unless it is expressly authorized by the competent organs recognized under the PDP Constitution, particularly the National Executive Committee or the National Convention.

A political faction cannot lawfully assume control of a political party merely by political strength or public declaration. Any attempt to dissolve existing structures or establish a caretaker arrangement outside the framework of the PDP Constitution may be challenged as unconstitutional, null, and void.

In view of the present legal uncertainty and absence of a definitive judicial pronouncement removing Senator Anyanwu and Ajibade from office, any unilateral attempt by a faction to take over the party structure may itself be vulnerable to legal challenge for violating the PDP Constitution and the settled principles governing internal party administration.

Β© M.A. Danlami, Esq
Taraba State Legal Adviser
People's Democratic Party (PDP)

GOODWILL MESSAGEI warmly felicitate the Chairman, Executive Committee, and distinguished members of the Nigerian Bar Ass...
28/04/2026

GOODWILL MESSAGE

I warmly felicitate the Chairman, Executive Committee, and distinguished members of the Nigerian Bar Association, Jalingo Branch, on the occasion of your Law Week scheduled to hold from 27th to 29th April, 2026.

The theme, β€œRaising the Bar: Equipping Lawyers for the Modern Legal Landscape,” is both timely and forward-looking. It underscores the urgent need for continuous learning, innovation, and adaptability in a rapidly evolving legal environment.

I commend the Branch for its commitment to professional development and for creating a platform that will empower legal practitioners with the tools and insights necessary to thrive in contemporary practice.

It is my earnest hope that this Law Week will inspire meaningful dialogue, strengthen capacity, and further position members for excellence in service delivery.

Wishing you a successful and impactful programme.

Hadiza Nasir Ahmad, Esq.
Assistant Secretary, Nigerian Bar Association Kano Branch
Head, Young Female Lawyers committee NBAWF

17/04/2026

Today, the 17th day of April 2026, the suit filed by Obidah Bitrus James and eight others against the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and six others came up for the first time before Hon. Justice Ali Bappah Abbare of the High Court of Justice, Jalingo.
Counsel representing the 3rd Defendant, the Taraba State Chairman of the PDP, Alhaji Ibrahim Abba Sale, announced appearance. However, the other Defendants have either not been served or are yet to enter appearance.
The Plaintiffs commenced the action by way of Originating Summons, challenging their alleged dissolution and the subsequent constitution of the Victor Fallack Caretaker Committee, which led to the emergence of a new PDP executive in Taraba State under the chairmanship of Alhaji Ibrahim Abba Sale.
In addition, the Plaintiffs filed a Motion on Notice seeking, among other reliefs, an order of court recognizing them as the legitimate executives of the PDP in Taraba State and restraining the Abba Sale-led executive committee from parading themselves as such.
At today’s proceedings, the court noted that both the Motion on Notice and the substantive suit are not yet ripe for hearing.
Consequently, the matter has been adjourned to the 6th day of May 2026 for hearing.

INVALIDITY OF MULTIPLE NOMINATIONElectoral Act, 2026, Section 35 "Where a candidate knowingly allows himself to be nomin...
07/04/2026

INVALIDITY OF MULTIPLE NOMINATION
Electoral Act, 2026, Section 35
"Where a candidate knowingly allows himself to be nominated by more than one political party or in more than one constituency, his nomination shall be void."
🚫 THE ABSOLUTE PROHIBITION:
Section 35 imposes an automatic, irreversible consequence for multiple nomination. Unlike Section 30's personal penalty for nominators, this provision voids the candidate's nomination entirely.
PROHIBITED SCENARIOS:
Scenario 1 β€” Multiple Parties: A candidate accepts nomination from APC in Lagos Central and PDP in Lagos East. Result: Both nominations void.

Scenario 2 β€” Multiple Constituencies: A candidate accepts nomination for House of Representatives in Abuja and Senate in Kaduna. Result: Both nominations void.

Scenario 3 β€” Knowing Allowance: The candidate must knowingly permit the multiple nomination. Innocent clerical errors by parties do not trigger Section 35 if the candidate promptly rejects the duplicate.

βš–οΈ JUDICIAL AUTHORITIES:
Marwa v. Nyako (2012) 6 NWLR (Pt. 1296) 1 (SC)
The Supreme Court interpreted "knowingly allows" as requiring:
"Actual knowledge or willful blindness to the fact of multiple nomination. A candidate who receives nomination papers from two parties and fails to reject one has 'knowingly allowed' the violation."
Amaechi v. INEC (2008) 5 NWLR (Pt. 1080) 1 (SC)
On the automatic voidance principle:
"Section 35 operates by operation of law. No court order is required to void the nomination; the nomination is void ab initio the moment the candidate knowingly accepts multiple sponsorship. INEC's duty is to recognize this legal fact and exclude the candidate from the ballot."
πŸ” DISTINCTION FROM SECTION 30:
Section 30 penalizes nominators who sign multiple papers β€” the candidate's nomination survives. Section 35 voids candidates who accept multiple nominations β€” the nomination dies instantly.
πŸ’‘ PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS:
1. Candidate Vigilance: Must actively monitor and reject unauthorized nominations
2. Party Coordination: Internal party screening must prevent accidental dual sponsorship
3. No Remedy: Once void, no cure β€” candidate cannot proceed under any party

Β© M.A. Danlami, Esq
Maihanchi, Danlami & Gwampo
[email protected]

PROHIBITION OF DOUBLE NOMINATIONElectoral Act, 2026, Section 30 "(1) A candidate for an election shall be nominated in w...
06/04/2026

PROHIBITION OF DOUBLE NOMINATION
Electoral Act, 2026, Section 30
"(1) A candidate for an election shall be nominated in writing by such number of persons whose names appear on the register of voters in the constituency as the Commission may prescribe. (2) A person shall not nominate more than one person for an election to the same office."
🚫 PROHIBITED CONDUCT:
By section 30(2) of the Electoral Act 2026 Nominating more than one candidate for same office attract a penalty of ₦100,000 fine or 3 months imprisonment or both
CRITICAL: "His or her action shall not invalidate the nomination" β€” penalty is personal, not electoral
βš–οΈ JUDICIAL AUTHORITIES:
Marwa v. Nyako (2012) 6 NWLR (Pt. 1296) 1 (SC)
The Supreme Court addressed candidate eligibility and nomination integrity:
"The prohibition of double nomination protects against voter confusion and ensures each supporter makes a deliberate, singular choice. The law distinguishes between the nominator's personal penalty and the candidate's electoral standing."
Amaechi v. INEC (2008) 5 NWLR (Pt. 1080) 1 (SC)
The Court held that nomination validity depends on:
a) Compliance with statutory form requirements
b) Substantive eligibility of the candidate (age, citizenship, education)
c) Procedural regularity of the primary election

"A valid nomination is the foundation of lawful candidacy; defects at this stage are generally fatal, subject only to the 'substantial compliance' doctrine in Section 139."
πŸ” KEY LEGAL DISTINCTIONS:
A) By section 30(2), Double nomination by same nominator is prohibited and attract Personal penalty only in the form of fine or imprisonment or both
B) By section 35, Candidate standing for multiple offices such Candidate will be disqualified
C) Candidate in multiple constituencies, the Nomination is void ab initio
D) By section 35(5), Withdrawal of nomination is prohibited and the Nominator is locked in
πŸ’‘ PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS:
1. Nominator Lock-in: Once you sign a nomination paper, you cannot withdraw while the candidate stands nominated (s. 30(5))
2. Strategic Nominations: Political parties must coordinate nominators to avoid accidental double-signing
3. Dead Candidate Signatures: Signatures on nomination papers where the candidate dies, withdraws, or is held invalid by court are disregarded (s. 30(4))
πŸ”— LINK TO SECTION 35:
Section 30 regulates nominators; Section 35 regulates candidates. A candidate who knowingly allows multiple nominations by different parties or in multiple constituencies faces void nomination β€” not merely personal penalty.

Β© M.A. Danlami, Esq
Maihanchi, Danlami & Gwampo
[email protected]

SUBMISSION OF LIST OF CANDIDATES AND AFFIDAVITSElectoral Act, 2026, Section 29 "Every political party shall, not later t...
05/04/2026

SUBMISSION OF LIST OF CANDIDATES AND AFFIDAVITS
Electoral Act, 2026, Section 29
"Every political party shall, not later than 120 days before the date appointed for a general election... submit to the Commission, in the prescribed Forms, the list of the candidates the party proposes to sponsor at the elections, who shall have emerged from valid primaries conducted by the political party."
πŸ“‹ MANDATORY REQUIREMENTS:
1. Political parties must within 120 days before election submit List of candidates from valid primaries and the consequences of failure will be Disqualification of party's candidates.
2. Affidavit sworn at Federal/State High Court to be submitted with nomination form, failure of which is Challengeable by rival aspirants.
3.Provide Identifiable address in contest state at time of form submission
βš–οΈ CRITICAL 2026 INNOVATION β€” PRE-ELECTION CHALLENGE:
Section 29(5)-(7): "An aspirant who participated in the primaries... who has reasonable grounds to believe that any information given by the political party's candidate in the affidavit... is false, may file a suit at the Federal High Court... seeking a declaration that the information contained in the affidavit is false."
1. Where the Court finds false information on constitutional requirements, such Candidate AND party will be disqualified
2. Where Election already held, Rerun will be ordered among remaining candidates
πŸ›οΈ JUDICIAL AUTHORITIES:
Ucha v. Elechi (2011) 12 NWLR (Pt. 1261) 227 (SC)
The Supreme Court held that strict compliance with nomination timelines and documentation is mandatory. A party's failure to submit valid primary results within the statutory window renders its candidates ineligible ab initio.
"The Electoral Act does not contemplate a vacuum in nomination procedure; time is of the essence, and courts will not condone procedural laxity that undermines electoral certainty." β€” Ogunbiyi, JSC
PDP v. Sylva (2011) 14 NWLR (Pt. 1268) 1 (CA)
The Court of Appeal emphasized that affidavit verification is not mere formality but substantive protection against unqualified candidacy. The Court held that rival aspirants have locus standi to challenge false constitutional claims in nomination papers.
πŸ’‘ PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS:
1. Aspirant Vigilance: Defeated aspirants must monitor rival's affidavits and act within 21 days of publication (s. 29(3))
2. Party Liability: Sponsoring party bears joint disqualification risk β€” internal primary integrity is essential
3. Address Trap: Failure to provide valid state address means court processes may be deemed served at wrong location, forfeiting defence rights

Β© M.A. Danlami, Esq
Maihanchi, Danlami & Gwampo
[email protected]

CONTINUOUS REGISTRATION PROCESSElectoral Act, 2026, Section 10 "Subject to section 9(6) of this Act, there shall be cont...
02/04/2026

CONTINUOUS REGISTRATION PROCESS
Electoral Act, 2026, Section 10
"Subject to section 9(6) of this Act, there shall be continuous registration of all persons qualified to be registered voters."

πŸ“‹ REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS (Section 10(2)):
Applicants must appear in person with:
βœ… Nigerian birth certificate, OR
βœ… Nigerian passport, OR
βœ… National Identification Number (NIN)
No proxy registration. No online-only registration. Physical presence is mandatory.

βš–οΈ JUDICIAL AUTHORITY:
PDP v. CPC (2011) 15 NWLR (Pt. 1270) 1 (SC)
The Supreme Court held that the integrity of the voter register is foundational to credible elections. The Court emphasized:
"Continuous registration is not a mere administrative convenience but a constitutional imperative under Section 77(2) of the 1999 Constitution. Any break in this continuity undermines the legitimacy of the electoral process."
Okonkwo v. INEC (2014) 15 NWLR (Pt. 1410) 1 (CA)
The Court of Appeal ruled that failure to register during the continuous window does not create a right to late registration. The 90-day cut-off is:
"A reasonable time limit that allows for voter verification, dispute resolution, and logistical preparation. Courts will not extend this deadline absent constitutional violation."
πŸ”
πŸ’‘ PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS:
1. Election Timing Matters: Voters must register well before election announcements; last-minute registration impossible
2. Party Monitoring: Political parties receive annual registration data to verify voter roll integrity
3. By-election Limitation: No "fresh" voter registration for bye-elections β€” existing register applies.

Β© M.A. Danlami, Esq
Maihanchi, Danlami & Gwampo
[email protected]

QUALIFICATION FOR VOTER REGISTRATIONElectoral Act, 2026, Section 12 "Any person shall be qualified to be registered as a...
01/04/2026

QUALIFICATION FOR VOTER REGISTRATION
Electoral Act, 2026, Section 12
"Any person shall be qualified to be registered as a voter if such a person β€”
(a) is a citizen of Nigeria;
(b) has attained the age of 18 years;
(c) is ordinarily resident, works in, and originates from the Local Government, Area Council or Ward covered by the registration centre;
(d) presents himself to the registration officers of the Commission for registration as a voter; and
(e) is not subject to any legal incapacity to vote under any law, rule or regulations in effect in Nigeria."**
🚫 PROHIBITED CONDUCT β€” MULTIPLE REGISTRATION:
By section 12(2), Registering in more than one centre attract punishment ₦100,000 fine or 1 year imprisonment or both
βš–οΈ JUDICIAL AUTHORITY:
Fawehinmi v. INEC (2003) 10 NWLR (Pt. 807) 1 (SC)
The Supreme Court established that the right to vote is fundamental but statutory. While Section 39(1) of the 1999 Constitution guarantees freedom of expression, the specific qualification criteria in Section 12 of the Electoral Act are:
"Valid constitutional limitations that ensure orderly electoral administration. The Act does not create the right to vote; it regulates its exercise." β€” Uwaifo, JSC
PDP v. CPC (2011) 15 NWLR (Pt. 1270) 1 (SC)
The Court reinforced that residence requirements (Section 12(1)(c)) must be interpreted purposively β€” "ordinarily resident" means habitual residence with intention to remain, not mere physical presence.
πŸ’‘ PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS:
1. Student Voters: Can register at university location if "ordinarily resident" there, not just permanent home address
2. Migrant Workers: "Works in" criterion protects economic migrants' voting rights
3. Dual Registration Risk: Biometric capture (NIN linkage) makes multiple registration technically detectable and criminally punishable

πŸ“š REFERENCES:
Electoral Act, 2026, ss. 9, 10, 12
Constitution of Nigeria 1999 (as amended), s. 39
Fawehinmi v. INEC (2003) 10 NWLR (Pt. 807) 1 (SC)
PDP v. CPC (2011) 15 NWLR (Pt. 1270) 1 (SC)

Β© M.A. Danlami, Esq.
Maihanchi, Danlami & Gwampo Legal Services
[email protected]

22/03/2026

Arsenal: They have activated their default setting. Kofi 🍡 haram

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