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“Anambra Votes: Amupitan Under Scrutiny As 2.8 Million Ballots Are Cast Today”

Today, some 2,802,790 registered voters in Anambra State will cast their ballots in the governorship election, a high‑stakes event seen as the inaugural test for Joash Ojo Amupitan, the newly appointed Chair of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

A First Assignment Under the Spotlight

Amupitan was sworn in as INEC Chairman on 23 October 2025, succeeding Mahmood Yakubu. At his inauguration, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu – explicitly declared the Anambra election his first “litmus test”.

Amupitan has accepted the challenge, proclaiming that his mandate is “credible elections” and that no eligible voter should be disenfranchised.

Stakes and Significance

The election carries multiple layers of importance:

Readiness, Logistics and Security

INEC says it has completed extensive planning: non‑sensitive materials are in place, staff training is underway and the commission extended Permanent Voter Card (PVC) collection amid concerns that only 63.9 % of registered voters had collected their cards.

5,718 polling units were recorded across 326 wards in Anambra state. Security agencies report large deployments, including tens of thousands of officers, to ensure a peaceful process.

Challenges Known

Despite preparatory work, several potential obstacles remain:

What to Watch

As polling proceeds today, attention will be on:

In Conclusion

For Joash Amupitan and INEC, today’s election is more than a state contest — it is a proving ground. If the process is smooth, open and credible, it will strengthen institutional trust and serve as a positive signal ahead of larger national polls in 2027. If distrust arise, the “litmus test” label may become a critique rather than a milestone.

The eyes of Nigerians are on Anambra today — not just to see who wins the governorship election, but to see how the election will be conducted.

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