TRENDING
2026 World Cup: FIFA confirms African referee has been sent back home • Zamfara: Troops kill terrorist, arrest eight suspects, recover motorcycles, military gear • Police confirm soldier’s death, dispel bandit attack in Ogun • Lagos APC unveils governorship candidate Obafemi Hamzat’s running mate • Xenophobia: Nigeria may retaliate against South Africa — Foreign Minister • WORLD IN BRIEF: Iran, Israel pause strikes, US court blocks $100,000 H-1B visa fee, Congo’s Ebola death surpasses 100 and other stories • Ex-Premier League Star Backs Bafana Bafana To Beat Mexico 2-0 • The money is changing. Africa’s institutions should be ready for it • When silence becomes a banking risk • When political exposure enters the pension vault • Shaping future markets through strategic foresight • The hidden gap in strategy execution • At Aig-Imoukhuede Memorial Lecture: Political position isn’t leadership, Kukah tells Nigerians • NPA, NIMASA, others watch as tankers shut down Mile 2-Apapa expressway • Msongamano wa malori Dar shida, suluhu ipo hapa • Abducted Oyo principal speaks from captivity, begs Nigerians to secure their freedom • Xenophobia: Nigeria may retaliate against S-Africa —FG • How high prices’re degrading quality of food Nigerians eat • Aliyekatwa Chadema kukata rufaa, wenyewe wasema anatapatapa • Abdul Samad Rabiu pockets N189bn BUA Cement dividend • 2026 World Cup: FIFA confirms African referee has been sent back home • Zamfara: Troops kill terrorist, arrest eight suspects, recover motorcycles, military gear • Police confirm soldier’s death, dispel bandit attack in Ogun • Lagos APC unveils governorship candidate Obafemi Hamzat’s running mate • Xenophobia: Nigeria may retaliate against South Africa — Foreign Minister • WORLD IN BRIEF: Iran, Israel pause strikes, US court blocks $100,000 H-1B visa fee, Congo’s Ebola death surpasses 100 and other stories • Ex-Premier League Star Backs Bafana Bafana To Beat Mexico 2-0 • The money is changing. Africa’s institutions should be ready for it • When silence becomes a banking risk • When political exposure enters the pension vault • Shaping future markets through strategic foresight • The hidden gap in strategy execution • At Aig-Imoukhuede Memorial Lecture: Political position isn’t leadership, Kukah tells Nigerians • NPA, NIMASA, others watch as tankers shut down Mile 2-Apapa expressway • Msongamano wa malori Dar shida, suluhu ipo hapa • Abducted Oyo principal speaks from captivity, begs Nigerians to secure their freedom • Xenophobia: Nigeria may retaliate against S-Africa —FG • How high prices’re degrading quality of food Nigerians eat • Aliyekatwa Chadema kukata rufaa, wenyewe wasema anatapatapa • Abdul Samad Rabiu pockets N189bn BUA Cement dividend
Women May Hold Just 2.7% of Senate Seats After 2027 Elections, Coalition Warns
Back to Home

Women May Hold Just 2.7% of Senate Seats After 2027 Elections, Coalition Warns

This Day about 2 hours 2 mins read

Kuni Tyessi in Abuja

A coalition of women-led groups have declared that Nigeria could see its lowest female representation in the Senate since the return to democracy, with women projected to hold only 2.7% of seats after the 2027 general elections.

The warning came during a press conference in Abuja yesterday where civil society organizations presented findings from an audit of the 2026 party primaries across 22 political parties.

The coalition is calling for immediate policy and legislative action, while emphasizing that the Special Seats Bill is “the most practical pathway to close the gap with a progress that requires legal reform and not just training or advocacy.

Invictus Africa Executive Director, Bukky Shonibare said the audit revealed persistent barriers including forced withdrawals, opaque consensus arrangements and last-minute candidate substitutions.

She revealed that female participation remained critically low with only three parties that recorded female aspirant rates above 20% namely “PDP with 28.2%, YPP 22.2% and YP 20%. The lowest rates were NRM at 11.8%, APC 10.4% and NNPP at 0.0%.

“Only three women won Senate primaries across all parties. “At this rate, women may occupy just 2.7% of Senate seats after the 2027 elections,” Shonibare said as against 3.6% of women in the 2023 of Senate seats.

Toun Okewale Sonaiya of the Voice of Women Empowerment Foundation described the primaries as “gatekeeping institutionalised.” She warned that without intervention, “2027 will deliver worse representation for women than 2023.”

Cynthia Mbamalu of Yiaga Africa urged INEC to publish a comprehensive, gender-disaggregated audit reports to strengthen accountability.

The coalition issued a seven-point charter addressed to state governors, party chairmen, INEC, and President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Key demands include: “Publish data on women who bought forms, were pressured to withdraw, or lost tickets to consensus. End consensus as a tool to sideline women. Adopt female deputy governors for all male gubernatorial candidates. 

“Strengthen oversight to ensure constitutional fairness and non-discrimination. Influence passage of the Special Seats Bill, which the coalition called “a temporary democratic correction, not charity.”

The coalition pledged to continue monitoring the 2027 electoral process, documenting exclusion and holding political actors accountable. “Women’s inclusion is not charity but a democratic imperative,” the statement concluded.

Signatories include Voice of Women Empowerment Foundation, Women in Politics Forum, EneObi Centre for Development, and Gender Strategy Advancement International.

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!

OneClick Africa Logo

Africa's premier digital hub for impactful news, entertainment, and business insights.

© 2026 OneClick Africa. All rights reserved.