Few developments have damaged Nigeria’s party politics as deeply as political defections. Across successive political eras from the First Republic to the current democratic period elected officials have frequently secured victory under one political platform and later switched allegiance after assuming office. This recurring pattern has weakened party identity, reduced public confidence in elections, and steadily undermined opposition politics.
Against this backdrop, the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) has introduced what may become one of the boldest anti-defection policies in Nigeria’s democratic history. The party now requires all aspiring candidates to sign affidavits and indemnity agreements committing to vacate their positions if they abandon the party after winning elections.
Announced at the party’s headquarters in Abuja, the policy makes execution of these documents compulsory before candidates’ names can be submitted to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).
According to the NDC, the documents are intended to create a formal obligation ensuring that public officials elected on the party’s platform cannot retain office if they later decamp. In a political climate where defections have become increasingly common, the initiative has attracted both support and criticism.
NDC National Chairman, Senator Moses Cleopas, explained that the policy emerged from years of concern over politicians using parties merely as temporary vehicles to gain power.
Cleopas stated that the party was established after observing how repeated defections have weakened political organisations and diluted accountability.
“We could no longer accept a situation where politicians win elections through party structures and later abandon those same parties once in office,” he said.
He maintained that electoral victories belong not only to individuals but also to the political organisations and voters that made them possible.
“If someone is elected through our platform and later decides to leave, retaining the seat becomes difficult to justify because the mandate originates from the party and the electorate,” he argued.
He added that the decision received approval from the party’s National Executive Committee and forms part of broader efforts to strengthen discipline and protect electoral integrity.
At the same time, Cleopas insisted the policy does not interfere with constitutional freedoms.
“Citizens remain free to join or leave political parties at any time. However, public office secured under a party platform carries obligations to that platform,” he stated.
Party officials have described the measure as an attempt to discourage political opportunism and encourage stronger ideological commitment. National Secretary Ikenna Enekweizu defended the policy by noting that political parties, like other organisations, are entitled to regulate internal membership conditions.
Legally, the NDC points to Sections 68(1)(g) and 109(1)(g) of the 1999 Constitution, which require legislators at federal and state levels to lose their seats if they defect, except where internal divisions or mergers occur.
The party believes these constitutional provisions reinforce the principle that elected mandates are closely connected to the political platforms through which they are obtained.
To understand the significance of the proposal, it is necessary to consider Nigeria’s history of defections. Earlier republics witnessed internal crises that weakened parties such as the PRP and later the SDP. In the Fourth Republic, defections became even more widespread, affecting parties like APGA and altering the balance of political influence nationwide.















