The National Assembly recently approved the electronic transmission of election results with manual collation retained as a fallback, sparking protests and heated debates in both legislative chambers. The discussions were marked by intense partisan divisions ahead of the 2027 general elections. In the Senate, a group led by Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe challenged a controversial provision in Clause 60(3) that designated manually completed Form EC8A as the primary source of results collation if electronic transmission fails. The House of Representatives' minority caucus staged a walkout in response to perceived attempts to push through amendments without enforcing mandatory real-time electronic transmission. Ultimately, both chambers passed the bill allowing the electronic upload of results to the Independent National Electoral Commission’s Result Viewing Portal, yet stopping short of ensuring real-time transmission without exceptions.The proceedings were complicated when discrepancies in the earlier passed Electoral Act (Repeal and Re-Enactment) Bill, 2026 led to a re-examination of certain clauses. The tension escalated particularly around Clause 60, which governs the transmission and collation of results, resulting in a vote that maintained the manual backup provision. The Senate’s majority supported keeping manual collation as a safety measure in case of technological failures.