There are millions of Nigerians who want to be informed before they vote. They want to know what candidates stand for, how their representatives voted, what INEC is actually doing, and what the numbers mean for their community.
But political intelligence in Nigeria is locked behind paywalls, buried in partisan commentary, scattered across dozens of websites, or written in language that assumes you already have a political science degree.
We exist to close that gap. No spin. No allegiance. Just the information you need to participate in your democracy with confidence.
We use advanced technology to do the heavy lifting — so you get clean, structured political intelligence without wading through the noise yourself.
All articles on Naija Election Watch are sourced from established Nigerian media outlets. Our AI engine summarises and categorises content — it does not generate original reporting. Every summary links to the original source article. We do not alter quotes, fabricate events, or editorialize beyond categorisation. When we make a mistake, we correct it publicly.
Our source list is curated — not exhaustive. We monitor Nigeria's most established outlets across regions, languages, and editorial perspectives. New sources are added only after review.
We do not pay for stories, accept sponsored editorial content, or allow sources to influence how their reporting is presented on this platform.
All content on Naija Election Watch — from news summaries to civic education guides — is produced and reviewed by the Naija Election Watch Editorial Team: a group of Nigerian journalists, civic educators, and policy researchers committed to independent, factual election coverage.
Our team reviews every AI-generated summary before it is published. Civic education guides are written from scratch against primary sources including INEC guidelines, the Electoral Act 2022, and established civic education frameworks.
We cover all 36 states and the FCT, with particular attention to underreported constituencies and communities that are rarely centred in national political coverage.
In a country where media is frequently weaponised for political ends, we think it's important to say explicitly what this platform is not.