Thursday March 26, 2026
www.thenewsdesk.ng
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has effectively stalled the Labour Party’s planned national convention, plunging the party into an internal crisis with far-reaching implications ahead of the 2027 elections.
The disruption follows INEC’s decision to tighten the political calendar, compelling parties to align swiftly with regulatory timelines or risk legal setbacks.
At the heart of the crisis is INEC’s refusal to recognise the current composition of the Labour Party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) a move that undermines the legitimacy of any congress or convention conducted under its authority.
The party leadership, led by Nenadi Usman, had earlier mapped out an ambitious timetable, fixing ward, local government, and state congresses, with a national convention scheduled for April 11, 2026.
However, those plans have now collapsed.
While the party’s official communication attributes the postponement to the need for wider participation in its ongoing membership re-registration exercise, sources within the party point to a more fundamental problem the unresolved question of NEC legitimacy.
Without formal recognition from INEC, any internal electoral process risks being declared invalid, exposing the party to potential litigation and further instability.
The development leaves the Labour Party at a crossroads: either resolve its internal structural disputes in line with INEC’s requirements or risk entering the 2027 political cycle weakened by procedural and legal uncertainty.
What began as a routine adjustment to the electoral calendar has now evolved into a defining test of the party’s internal cohesion and institutional credibility.
*National Concord
