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    INEC Must Not Usurp the Courts

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    By Tony Okafor

    The pronouncement by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) freezing the leadership and activities of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) has brought into sharp focus a fundamental question about the limits of administrative laws.

    There is no doubt that INEC, like any public institution, can interpret court rulings to the extent necessary to carry out its statutory responsibilities.

    However, there is a clear and consequential line between interpreting a ruling for administrative purposes and assuming the role of the court itself.

    In the case in issue, by declining to recognise any leadership within the ADC and effectively freezing the party’s operations, INEC has elevated its own interpretation of a judicial order above that of the judiciary. Such a posture is not only legally questionable but also institutionally dangerous.

    Administrative bodies are not arbiters of legal finality; they are executors of judicial intent. Where that intent is unclear or contested, the proper course is to return to the court for clarification. Anything short of this amounts to administrative discretion substituting for judicial authority.

    In a democratic system that relies on the vibrancy of multiple parties, the paralysis of one inevitably distorts the broader political landscape.

    Whether intended or not, the effect is the weakening of opposition voices and the narrowing of democratic space.

    This is why restraint is as important as action. INEC’s constitutional role as an impartial umpire demands not only neutrality in intention but also caution in execution.

    Where legal ambiguity exists, neutrality is best preserved not by decisive but potentially flawed action, but by recourse to the judiciary—the only body empowered to speak with finality on its own orders.

    The courts, for their part, must also recognise the weight of their words. In  sensitive matters, especially politics, clarity of rulings is essential. Orders that lend themselves to multiple interpretations create fertile ground for institutional conflict and unintended consequences.

    The ADC issue, therefore, is more than a party issue. INEC must act, but it must act within limits. It may interpret a ruling to the extent necessary to function, but it must never assume the role of the court.

    Where doubt exists, INEC should seek judicial clarification, not administrative finality.

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