Nigeria’s fiscal landscape has been plunged into a constitutional and procedural crisis as the National Assembly (NASS) has publicly disowned the versions of the four major tax reform laws recently published in the Federal Government’s official gazette. The controversy, which peaked in early January 2026, centers on allegations that the documents signed into law by President Bola Tinubu contain significant “insertions” and “alterations” that were never debated or passed by the legislative chambers.
The dispute involves four landmark pieces of legislation: the Nigeria Tax Act, the Nigeria Tax Administration Act, the Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Act, and the Joint Revenue Board (Establishment) Act. While the executive branch intended these laws to take full effect on January 1, 2026, to modernize revenue collection, the rollout has been marred by what lawmakers describe as a “legitimacy crisis.”
Allegations of Forgery and Alteration
The outcry began when members of the House of Representatives, led by the Minority Caucus and supported by several high-ranking legislators, raised the alarm over discrepancies between the bills transmitted to the Presidency and the final versions that appeared in the official gazette. Lawmakers alleged that “criminal insertions” were made during the gazetting process—specifically sections that purportedly granted the executive sweeping powers or altered the jurisdictional reach of the Tax Appeal Tribunal.
The African Democratic Congress (ADC) and other opposition voices went further, labeling the alterations as “forgery” and a direct attack on the integrity of the Nigerian lawmaking process. One particularly controversial section reportedly allowed for the seizure of movable assets without a court order, a provision that NASS members insisted was never part of the original agreement.
Institutional Backlash and Investigation
In a swift institutional response, the Clerk to the National Assembly, Kamoru Ogunlana, was directed to release Certified True Copies (CTCs) of the original bills as passed by parliament. This unprecedented move was designed to allow the public and legal experts to compare the legislative intent against the executive’s published version. The House of Representatives has also constituted a seven-member investigative committee to determine at what stage—and by whom—the documents were tampered with.
The National Assembly has effectively called for a “re-gazetting” of the laws, asserting that any provision not found in the legislative CTCs is null, void, and unenforceable. Despite this legislative pushback, the Presidency has initially stood its ground, with officials insisting that the reforms are “here to stay” and that no substantial issues exist to justify a delay.
Economic and Legal Uncertainty
The standoff has created a vacuum of certainty for businesses and taxpayers. While the Federal Capital Territory High Court recently declined to halt the implementation of the laws on the grounds that they had already been signed, legal experts warn that the disputed sections face a barrage of litigation.
Industry leaders, particularly in the aviation and manufacturing sectors, have expressed deep concern over how to comply with laws whose very text is currently under dispute. If the gazetted versions are found to be fraudulent, it would not only undermine the government’s revenue targets for 2026 but also severely damage public trust in the country’s fiscal governance. As it stands, the “once-in-a-generation fiscal reset” promised by the administration is currently overshadowed by a bitter battle over legislative authority and constitutional propriety.




