The Federal Government has proposed ₦135.22 billion in the 2026 budget for what it described as “Electoral Adjudication and Post-Election Provision,” signalling a fresh financial commitment to addressing disputes and obligations arising from Nigeria’s electoral process.
The provision was contained in the House of Representatives Order Paper of March 31, 2026, which presented details of the 2026 Appropriation Bill, according to documents reviewed on Monday.
According to Punch, findings show that the allocation was listed under the Service-Wide Votes, a centrally managed funding pool used by the Federal Government to finance obligations not tied to a specific ministry, department or agency.
Service-Wide Votes are generally regarded as the government’s contingency or general-purpose fund within the national budget.
The fund is often used to finance unforeseen obligations, national commitments, and liabilities that cut across multiple agencies.
In some cases, it also covers items requiring further approval or those not fully defined during budget preparation.
Within this framework, the ₦135.22bn allocation suggests that the government anticipates continued financial pressure from election-related legal disputes, settlements and administrative processes following national polls.
Analysis of the appropriation document further revealed that the provision is listed under Consolidated Revenue Fund charges, reinforcing its classification as a centrally managed obligation rather than a direct allocation to a specific government agency.
The document shows that total CRF charges amount to ₦3.70 trillion, meaning the post-election adjudication provision accounts for about 3.65 per cent of that segment of spending.
The allocation also appeared alongside a ₦1.01 trillion statutory transfer to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the 2026 fiscal proposal.
INEC is the largest beneficiary in the statutory transfer category, accounting for about 21 per cent of the total ₦4.80 trillion statutory transfers.
Statutory transfers are mandatory allocations backed by law and the Constitution, paid directly to institutions such as INEC, the National Assembly, and the National Judicial Council.
These funds are released as first-line charges from the Consolidated Revenue Fund, meaning they are not subject to direct executive control.
This arrangement allows beneficiary institutions a level of financial autonomy to perform constitutionally mandated functions, particularly those related to governance, democracy, and institutional oversight.

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