The Supreme Court has adjourned indefinitely, its judgment in the appeal challenging the election of Senator Monday Okpebholo as the governor of Edo state.
The apex Court adjourned the judgment indefinitely after taking submissions of parties in the matter.
Justice Garba Lawal who presided over the hearing of the appeal filed by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its governorship candidate in the election, Mr Asue Ighodalo said, the date of the judgment would be communicated to parties in the matter.
Ighodalo, represented by a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Ken Mosia prayed the Apex Court to nullified Okpebholo’s election and pronounced him winner on the ground that he scored majority of the lawful votes in the said election.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) represented by Kanu Agabi, SAN however, asked the Apex Court to dismiss the appeal in its entirety.
Agabi argued that Ighodalo and PDP had, in their petition stigmatized the Edo state governorship election as invalid and unlawful on the ground of non compliance with the Electoral Act 2022.
The electoral body said, having declared the election as unlawful and illegal, Ighodalo and PDP cannot turn around and pray the court to declare them as winners of illegality.
INEC accused Ighodalo and PDP of being inconsistent in their grievances against the election and pleaded that their case be dismissed for want of merit.
The Abuja Division of the Court of Appeal had in a judgement delivered on May 29, affirmed the election of Senator Monday Okpebholo in the September 21, 2024, governorship election in the state.
A three-member panel of Justices of the court, presided over by Justice Mohammed Danjuma, upheld Okpebholo’s election and dismissed the appeal filed by the PDP and its governorship candidate in the election.
The PDP and Ighodalo had sued the INEC, the governor, and others for declaring Okpebholo of the All Progressives Congress (APC) the winner of the poll, alleging that the election was marred by irregularities.
It would be recalled that, the Edo state Governorship Election Petition Tribunal, which sat in Abuja had, on April 2, 2025, dismissed the petition filed by the PDP and its governorship candidate challenging Okpebholo’s election.
Justice Wilfred Kpochi who delivered the unanimous judgment, of the three-member panel, stressed that the petitioners failed to prove their allegations of over-voting and non compliance to the Electoral Act.
Okpebholo and Dennis Idahosa were sworn in as governor and deputy governor of Edo State on November 12, 2024, after
INEC had, in September 2024, declared Monday Okpebholo the winner of the September 21, 2024, governorship election.
Dissatisfied with the outcome, the PDP and its candidate approached the Tribunal for redress, insisting that the governor did not win with the majority of lawful votes cast as required by law.
The PDP and its candidate urged the Tribunal to nullify INEC’s declaration of the APC and Okpebholo as winners, citing non-compliance with provisions of the Electoral Act, 2022, particularly regarding vote counting.
However, the APC and Okpebholo’s legal team urged the tribunal to dismiss the petitions as baseless and lacking in merit, arguing that the petitioners failed to substantiate allegations of an “invalid” poll.
Justice Wilfred Kpochi, in the judgment, agreed with the defendants that the petitioners failed to present polling unit agents and presiding officers to prove their claims.
He said it was “clear to us that the documents tendered from the bar (by the petitioners) were dumped on the Tribunal without any competent witness” to substantiate claims of over-voting and electoral non-compliance.
“These witnesses (presented by the petitioners, comprising Local Government agents and others) are total strangers,” the judge stressed and subsequently dismissed the petition for failing to prove its case against the governor’s election.
The PDP and others then approached the Appeal Court for the setting aside of the judgement of the Tribunal.
The Appeal Court in its Judgment held that, “The petitioners failed woefully to prove their allegations of over-voting,” and added that, cogent evidence is needed to dispute an election, not “presumptions” by witnesses who could not testify to what they observed at the polling units and collation centres.
Subsequently, the Appeal Court dismissed the appeal and affirmed the judgement of the Tribunal which upheld the election of Senator Okpebholo as the governor of Edo state.
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