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The news says: Confusion and uncertainty have gripped the National Democratic Congress (NDC) as the party delays announcing the results of its primary elections, days after the primaries were conducted.


Who are the people involved in this situation? The National Democratic Congress (NDC), Senator Henry Seriake Dickson (NDC founder and national leader), NDC primary election aspirants across various states, party delegates, NDC State Chairmen, the National Working Committee, and NDC members and supporters waiting for results.

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Where did this happen? The primaries were conducted nationwide. The delay in announcing results is affecting all states where NDC held primaries. The party’s National Secretariat is where the results are expected to be collated and announced.

What is happening? The NDC conducted its primary elections days ago. As of this report, the party has not officially announced the results. Aspirants, delegates, and supporters are waiting in confusion. There is no clear communication from party leadership about when results will be released or what is causing the delay.

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Logo of the Nigeria Democratic Congress featuring the acronym 'NDC' in bold red letters with a peace sign hand gesture in a box next to it, all set against a blue background.

When did this happen? The primaries were conducted days before June 3, 2026 (the publication date). As of this report, the delay continues. The longer the delay, the more speculation and tension rise.

Why is this happening? The news report does not specify the cause. Possible reasons could include: disagreements over collation of results, allegations of rigging or irregularities, internal disputes among party leadership, technical issues with result transmission, or behind-the-scenes negotiations among aspirants before winners are declared.

How is this affecting the party? Confusion and uncertainty are spreading. Aspirants who believe they won may become impatient. Those who suspect foul play may begin to protest. Supporters may lose confidence in the party’s ability to conduct transparent elections. The delay gives room for rumours, conspiracy theories, and potential legal challenges.


8 things you must know.

  1. A delay in announcing primary results is never a good sign in Nigerian politics. In Nigerian political experience, when a party delays announcing primary results, it usually means one thing: there is a fight behind the scenes. Someone is disputing the numbers. Someone is trying to change the outcome. Someone is negotiating. The longer the delay, the more likely the final result will be contested in court.
  2. The NDC is a new party trying to prove it is different from old parties. The NDC was founded by Senator Seriake Dickson as an alternative to the PDP and APC. It has presented itself as a party of transparency, unity, and quality. A delay in announcing primary results undermines that image. If the NDC cannot handle its own primaries transparently, why should voters trust it to handle governance?
  3. This delay follows the NDC’s Delta State success story – making it more embarrassing. Just days ago, the NDC was celebrating its successful resolution of post-primary disputes in Delta State and the endorsement of Deacon Chris Iyovwaye as gubernatorial candidate. Now, the party cannot announce nationwide primary results. The contrast is sharp. Delta worked. The rest may not be working.
  4. Aspirants who believe they won will become restless. Every hour of delay increases tension. An aspirant who thinks they won by 500 votes will wonder: why are they not announcing? Are they changing the numbers? Are they giving the ticket to someone else? That restlessness can turn into protests, media attacks, and eventually court cases. The NDC is sitting on a potential explosion.
  5. Delegates who voted will feel disrespected. Delegates travelled, spent money, and took time to vote. They expect results. When results do not come, they feel that their votes do not matter. They feel that the party leadership is deciding outcomes behind closed doors. That feeling of disrespect can drive delegates away from the party permanently.
  6. Supporters and potential voters are losing confidence. Ordinary Nigerians who were considering the NDC as an alternative are watching. When they see confusion and delay, they conclude: same old Nigerian politics. Different party name. Same problems. The NDC is losing the trust of potential voters with every passing hour of silence.
  7. The delay gives rival parties ammunition to attack the NDC. The PDP and APC will use this delay to mock the NDC. They will say: “You see? Even before the election, they cannot manage their own primaries. How can they manage a country?” That attack will stick if the NDC does not resolve the delay quickly and transparently.
  8. How the NDC handles this delay will define its future. A political party is tested not when things go well, but when things go wrong. The NDC can either: (a) announce results quickly with a clear explanation, or (b) stay silent and let speculation fester. Option (a) builds credibility. Option (b) destroys it. The NDC’s response in the next few days will determine whether the party survives or becomes another footnote.

How this affects Nigerians.

i. It reduces trust in new political parties. Many Nigerians are tired of the PDP and APC. They are looking for alternatives like the NDC, Labour Party, or others. When a new party like the NDC suffers internal confusion, it discourages voters from taking a chance on alternatives. They may stick with the devil they know. That hurts Nigeria’s democracy.

ii. It could lead to legal battles that distract from governance. If aspirants go to court to challenge the delayed or disputed results, the NDC will spend months on litigation instead of campaigning. Lawyers will profit. Politicians will fight. Voters will lose interest. The party’s energy will be consumed by internal wars instead of preparing for 2027.

iii. It shows that building a new party is harder than it looks. The NDC achieved registration, voter registration, congresses, and primaries in a short time. That was impressive. But now the hard part: managing internal democracy. The delay shows that even well-led new parties struggle with transparency and communication. Building a party is not just about speed. It is about trust.

iv. It could cause defections before the party even fights the main election. Aspirants who feel cheated may leave the NDC and join other parties. They may take their supporters, money, and structures with them. A party that loses its best candidates before the election has already lost the election. The NDC must move quickly to keep its talent.


Advice from this analyst.

  1. To the NDC National Leadership: announce the results immediately. Even if there are disputes, announce what you have. State clearly: “These are the results as collated. Any disputes will be resolved through the party’s internal appeal process.” Silence is destroying your credibility. Speak now.
  2. To Senator Seriake Dickson: you are the face of the NDC. Address the nation. Go on camera. Explain the delay. Give a specific time when results will be released. Apologise for the confusion. Your personal intervention can calm tensions. Your absence will fuel speculation.
  3. To NDC aspirants waiting for results: do not rush to court. Use the party’s internal dispute resolution mechanisms first. Give the leadership 48 hours to announce. If they fail, then consider legal options. But a court case now will destroy the party before it is born. Be patient, but be firm.
  4. To NDC delegates and supporters: do not panic. A delay does not mean fraud. It may mean technical issues or administrative delays. But hold the leadership accountable. Demand transparency. Do not accept vague explanations. You voted. You deserve to know the outcome.
  5. To the media: investigate the cause of the delay. Is it technical? Is it political? Are there specific states or aspirants holding up the process? Your job is to inform the public. Do not just report the delay. Explain it. Name names. Follow the money and the power.
  6. To other political parties (PDP, APC, LP): do not celebrate too quickly. The NDC’s problems are your warning. Your own primaries could face similar delays and disputes. Learn from the NDC’s mistakes. Build transparent result-collation systems. Communicate clearly. Do not assume you are immune.
  7. To the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC): monitor the NDC’s primary process. You have the authority to observe and report. If the NDC cannot produce transparent results, INEC should refuse to recognise candidates selected through opaque processes. Your oversight protects democracy.
  8. To Nigerians considering voting for the NDC in 2027: watch how this delay is resolved. If the NDC handles it transparently – with clear communication, timely results, and fair dispute resolution – then the party is serious. If the NDC hides, blames others, or announces results without explanation – then it is just like the old parties. Your vote is your power. Use it wisely.

Rhetorical question for you.

If a political party cannot announce the results of its own primary election days after the votes were cast – if aspirants, delegates, and supporters are left in confusion and uncertainty – how can that party be trusted to manage the finances, security, and governance of an entire state or country?

You know the answer. It cannot. Trust begins at home. If a party cannot be transparent with its own members, it will not be transparent with the public. The NDC still has time to fix this. But the clock is ticking.


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Akahi News reports that the NDC is facing its first major test. The party conducted primaries. Days later, no results. Aspirants are waiting. Delegates are confused. Supporters are losing confidence. The NDC has presented itself as a new kind of political platform – transparent, united, and competent. This delay contradicts that image. How the party responds in the coming hours will determine whether the NDC is truly different or just another Nigerian political party learning the same old bad habits. The country is watching.

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