A fresh standoff has erupted
between the Senate and the National Assembly over a contentious proposal
seeking to punish IEBC officials who conduct elections in ungazetted areas or
delay release of results.
The
dispute centres on the Elections Offences (Amendment) Bill, 2024—one of the
legislative proposals that emerged from the National Dialogue Committee (Nadco)
process.
The
Bill is stuck in Parliament after senators rejected the National Assembly’s
decision to throw out amendments it passed.
Initially,
the Bill proposed changes to section 6 of the Elections Offences Act, 2016,
introducing new offences for IEBC officers who hold elections in polling
stations not officially gazetted or who unreasonably delay declaring election
results.
It
also sought to criminalise the act of knowingly altering declared results.
However,
the Senate took issue with these provisions and made extensive alterations.
They
argued that creating an offence specifically targeting elections conducted in
ungazetted polling stations was unnecessary and could duplicate existing
safeguards.
They
replaced the clause with a broader offence criminalising deliberate acts of
interfering with, altering, destroying or concealing election materials or
declared results, or directing another person to do so.
The
National Assembly rejected this revision, reinstating the original proposal and
splitting the offences into two separate clauses.
The
first reinstated the offence of conducting or holding an election in a polling
station not published in the Gazette and publicised through accessible media.
The
second reintroduced the offence of intentionally altering or causing
interference with declared results.
Despite
this, the Senate’s Justice and Legal Affairs Committee has recommended
rejecting the National Assembly’s stance.
“The
committee therefore maintained its position that the offence of conducting
elections in ungazetted polling stations was unnecessary and that the more
appropriate focus is on criminalising deliberate acts of interference with,
alteration, destruction or concealment of election materials or declared
results,” the committee said.
Another
major point of contention is whether “unreasonable delay” in announcing results
should amount to a criminal offence.
The
National Assembly retained this provision, arguing that accountability is vital
when an IEBC officer takes longer than necessary to release results.
MPs
argue that timelines are already clearly defined: Article 138(10) of the
Constitution requires the presidential results to be declared within seven days,
while section 39(1) of the Elections Act requires other results to be announced
immediately after polls close.
But
senators rejected the term “unreasonable delay,” describing it as legally vague
and prone to controversy.
They
replaced it with a more explicit offence—failure to declare presidential
election results within seven days and failure to announce all other results
immediately after voting closes.
Senators
defended their version, arguing that it avoids legal ambiguity and reinforces
clarity around electoral timelines.
“The
committee passed the Bill with amendments which deleted this phrase and instead
restated the offence of failing to declare the results of a presidential
election within seven days as required under Article 138(10) and failing to
declare the results of an election immediately after the close of polling,” the
Senate committee said.
The
National Assembly also struck out a Senate-backed clause creating new offences
related to sexist campaigning, voter intimidation, assault and digital
harassment during elections.
Senators
had sought to amend section 17 of the Act by inserting a provision
criminalising the use of electronic communication to intimidate, compel or
induce a person to refrain from contesting, withdraw their candidacy, or vote
against a candidate or party of their choice.
MPs
argued that the issues raised by the Senate—particularly undue influence,
intimidation, and interference with political rights—are already covered under
various sections of the Elections Offences Act.
They
dismissed the proposed amendment as duplicative.
However,
the Senate stood its ground, insisting that emerging threats, especially
digital interference, are not adequately addressed in existing law.
“While
the Act addresses offences such as bribery, undue influence, intimidation and
interference with political rights, it does not expressly capture the use of
electronic communication as a distinct and emerging mode of interference,” the
Senate committee maintained.
INSTANT
ANALYSIS
The
core objective of the Elections Offences (Amendment) Bill, 2024, is to
strengthen accountability within the electoral process by introducing offences
targeting IEBC officials who conduct elections in ungazetted polling stations,
delay the declaration of results, or alter declared results. But diverging
positions between the two Houses underscore broader tensions over how best to
tighten electoral integrity laws without creating duplication, ambiguity, or
overly punitive provisions.