A Federal High Court in Abuja has barred the Independent National Electoral Commission from recognising or participating in any state congress organised by the caretaker leadership of the African Democratic Congress headed by former Senate President David Mark. Justice Joyce Abdulmalik ruled that only duly elected state executive committees have the authority to conduct party congresses, not appointees of a national caretaker body. The court also restrained the Mark‑led leadership from interfering with the tenure and duties of existing state executives.
The ruling followed a suit filed by aggrieved party members who challenged the legality of the caretaker committee’s plan to conduct state congresses, arguing it violated the party’s constitution. The court agreed, affirming that the four‑year tenure of current state executives remains valid and that internal party processes must comply with constitutional provisions and democratic principles.
From an institutional integrity perspective, the judgment reinforces the principle that political parties cannot bypass their own constitutions through caretaker arrangements. This matters for Nigeria’s broader democratic health because party governance directly affects the quality of candidate selection, electoral competition, and ultimately the legitimacy of elected officials. When party leaderships ignore internal rules, they create a cascade of legal disputes that distract from policy debates and weaken public trust in the political system. The ADC, like many Nigerian parties, has struggled with internal democracy; this ruling may prompt other parties to review their compliance with their own governing documents.
For investors and business leaders who monitor political stability as a proxy for policy predictability, clear judicial enforcement of party rules reduces the risk of sudden, extra‑constitutional leadership changes that can alter legislative alignments or state‑government priorities. The decision also signals that Nigerian courts are willing to intervene in party affairs when constitutional violations occur, providing a check against executive overreach within political organisations.




