The Presidential Campaign Council (PCC) of the All Progressives Congress (APC) says there is no law making it mandatory for INEC to transmit electoral results electronically.
Mr Dele Alake, Special Adviser on Media and Communications at the PCC made the declaration in Abuja on Friday when he spoke at a news conference.
Alake said the transmission of election results was at the discretion of INEC.
According to him, the Electoral Act 2022 does not contain any mandatory provision regarding the transmission of results.
“The complaint over electronic transmission of election results is not supported by law.
“Section 38 of the Electoral Act 2022 relied upon by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Labour Party (LP) to challenge the result of the Feb. 25 presidential election has nothing to do with transmission of election results.
“Section 60, sub-section 2 of the Act deals with transmission of results and it is at the discretion of INEC. The Act does not contain any mandatory provision regarding the transmission of results.
“In any case, the process of transmitting results from polling units, whether real-time, two days later or at any time, cannot in anyway change the results that have been announced,’’ Alake stressed.
He added that what was important was the counting of votes in the presence of party agents and to the hearing of voters.
Alake said it was absurd to insinuate that time variation in uploading results would cause a change in the figures.
“In any case, the process of transmitting results from polling units, whether real time, two days later or at any time, cannot in anyway change the results that have been announced,’’ he said.
He added that except for bad losers, stakeholders should rather be celebrating the tremendous improvement the use of BVAS had brought to the electoral process instead of discrediting the election.
He said that 2023 presidential election was a watershed as it produced unprecedented outcomes and defied conventions.
According to him, the deployment and use of BVAS is the only reason the elections produced strange outcomes and upsets in many cases.
“The loss of Katsina and Lagos states to the PDP and the LP respectively, were contrary to expectations.
“BVAS brought the intended credibility to voters’ accreditation such that many governors and well-established politicians lost elections in what should be safe bet areas.
“The era of ghost-voting and stuffing of ballot boxes is gone. As the experience in the last governorship election in Osun has shown.
“Over-voting would automatically lead to outright cancellation of the results of the polling units based on the provision of the new Electoral Act,’’ he stressed.
Alake said the same PDP trying to pull the wool across the face of Nigerians was the culprit in the Osun governorship election.
He added that contrary to the false claims of Atiku and Obi, the reasons for losing the elections were foretold.
“Besides the delusional expectations created during the campaigns to hoodwink the public, most PDP leaders knew their party had been decimated by Obi.
“The Southeast and South-South that were traditional strongholds of the PDP constituted the core support base for the LP.
“The PDP went into the election without its limbs and lied to itself that it could win the race.
“It is worthy of note that Atiku also accepted this fact during his press conference, when he lamented that his party’s votes in the Southeast and South-South were carted away by the LP,’’ Alake noted.