
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has drawn a battle line against political corruption ahead of the 2027 general elections, warning that the commercialization of votes remains a fundamental threat to Nigeria’s democratic stability and socio-economic progress.
The EFCC Executive Chairman, Mr. Ola Olukoyede, issued this stern warning on Wednesday, June 10, 2026, while delivering the inaugural lecture of the High-Level Guest Speakers’ Series at the University of Ilorin. The event, organized by the Centre for Peace and Strategic Studies (CPSS), was themed: “Mobilising Critical Stakeholders for Setting the Agenda for Peaceful and Credible 2027 Elections in Nigeria.”
The High Cost of Monetized Politics
Addressing an audience of academics, security chiefs, civil society organizations, and media executives, Olukoyede argued that when politicians buy their way into public office, accountability becomes the first casualty. He noted that leaders who secure power through financial inducement inevitably prioritize recouping their personal investments over delivering the dividends of democracy.
“The EFCC is opposed to the commercialization of votes, not only because it is a financial crime, but because it weakens the foundation for good governance by compromising the political recruitment process,” Olukoyede stated. “Leaders who pay their way into public office are unlikely to prioritize public good and accountability. Rather, recouping their investments becomes the overarching objective, to the detriment of the common good.”
Sophisticated New Tactics Exposed
The anti-graft czar revealed that electoral corruption has evolved past open, election-day cash distributions. According to intelligence and recent investigations, perpetrators are now deploying highly sophisticated, covert methodologies.
Olukoyede disclosed that political actors are increasingly using coded communications, off-site financial arrangements, and material commodity offers structured outside the immediate electoral frameworks to compromise voters well ahead of polling dates.
Despite these shifting tactics, the EFCC boss assured Nigerians that the commission remains steps ahead. He reiterated that the anti-graft agency has recorded numerous arrests, prosecutions, and convictions of electoral offenders—including politicians and complicit electoral officials—in recent cycles, promising that the 2027 polls will face even stricter, blind surveillance.
A Call for Collaborative Vigilance
Achieving a credible electoral process requires a multi-sectoral approach. Olukoyede outlined several critical pillars necessary for safeguarding the 2027 polls:
- Issue-Based Campaigns: Political parties must abandon inflammatory rhetoric and focus on policy-driven engagement.
- Media Vigilance: The press must aggressively investigate and expose underground vote-buying networks.
- Neutral Security Operations: Security agencies must maintain absolute professionalism and impartiality to foster public confidence.
Speaking earlier, the Director of the CPSS, Professor G. A. Animasawun, explained that the high-level lecture series was designed to move beyond academic rhetoric and proffer actionable solutions to the structural threats facing Nigeria’s democracy.
Endorsing this vision, the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ilorin, Professor Wahab Olasupo Egbewole, SAN, characterized electoral malpractice as a severe national security threat. He lauded Olukoyede’s preventive anti-corruption strategy and proposed a formal partnership between the university and the EFCC to drive deep-dive research, training, and policy framework development aimed at decoupling corruption from national politics.
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