INEC Declares It Cannot Conduct Elections Without NYSC, Requests 1.4 Million Corps Members for 2027

The Independent National Electoral Commission has declared that it cannot conduct elections in Nigeria without the National Youth Service Corps, formally requesting the deployment of over 1.4 million corps members for the 2027 general election.

INEC Chairman Professor Joash Amupitan made the disclosure on Monday when he paid a courtesy visit to NYSC Director-General Brigadier General Olakunle Nafiu at the corps’ headquarters, Yakubu Gowon House, in Abuja.

“You provide the heartbeat of our field operations. When we speak of election manpower, we are essentially speaking of your corps members. They are the most dedicated, educated, and patriotic election duty staff we have, and their presence at the polling units brings a level of neutrality and public confidence that is irreplaceable,” Amupitan told the NYSC management team.

The INEC chairman broke down the 2027 deployment figures, saying 707,384 corps members would be required for the Presidential and National Assembly elections scheduled for January 16, 2027, and the same number for the Governorship and Houses of Assembly elections on February 6, 2027, bringing the combined total to 1,414,768. An additional 52,446 corps members would be needed for the Ekiti and Osun governorship elections and bye-elections in Nasarawa, Enugu, Rivers, Ondo, Kebbi, and Kano states.

The figures represent a substantial jump from the 2023 general election, where INEC deployed approximately 1.2 million ad hoc staff in total, with over 70 per cent nearly 850,000 individuals drawn from NYSC ranks and student volunteers.

According to Daily Post Nigeria, Amupitan said corps members accounted for nearly 90 percent of registration area officers and presiding officers in many states during the 2023 cycle.

He also acknowledged that the service had come at a cost, pledging that the commission was “constantly refining our insurance and welfare packages to reflect the value we place on their lives.”

Beyond 2027, Amupitan said the commission was preparing for off-cycle governorship elections in Ekiti on June 20 and Osun on August 16, which he described as “critical litmus tests for our innovations before the 2027 general election.”

Responding, NYSC Director-General Brigadier General Nafiu assured INEC of the scheme’s commitment to supporting credible elections, describing corps members as “credible, reliable, and easily trainable manpower.” He noted that the Memorandum of Understanding between INEC and NYSC, first signed in 2011, had continued to strengthen collaboration between both institutions.

“The last batch of millennials will exit the corps soon, leaving behind Gen Z corps members, known for their digital savviness, which would benefit INEC,” Nafiu added, pledging the NYSC’s full support for both the 2027 general elections and the off-cycle polls ahead.

Share this post :

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest