Citation
Mba, A. (2025). Assessment of voters’ attitudes in the aftermath of the 2023 general election in Anambra State. International Journal of Research, 12(3), 935–951. https://doi.org/10.26643/ijr/2025/1
Alex Mba
Department of Political Science
Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu University,
Igbariam Campus, Anambra State
ao.mba@coou.edu.ng
Abstract
The 2023 general election in Nigeria marked a significant moment in the country’s democratic development. The election generated widespread public interest due to increased youth participation, the introduction of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS), electronic transmission of results, and heightened expectations for electoral transparency. Despite these innovations, the election was characterized by logistical challenges, security concerns, allegations of irregularities, and legal disputes that shaped public perceptions of the electoral process. This paper examines voters’ attitudes in the aftermath of the 2023 general election in Anambra State. The study explores citizens’ perceptions of electoral credibility, trust in electoral institutions, political participation, voter satisfaction, and confidence in democratic governance. It argues that voters’ post-election attitudes are influenced by their assessment of electoral administration, campaign conduct, political leadership, security conditions, and institutional performance. The paper draws on Democratic Legitimacy Theory and Political Trust Theory to explain how electoral experiences shape public confidence in democratic institutions. The study concludes that although the 2023 general election stimulated greater political awareness among citizens, concerns regarding electoral management, insecurity, and judicial interventions continue to influence voters’ attitudes in Anambra State. The paper recommends reforms aimed at strengthening electoral administration, improving voter education, enhancing electoral security, and promoting transparency in electoral processes.
Keywords: Voters’ attitudes, 2023 general election, electoral credibility, political trust, democratic governance, Anambra State.
Introduction
Elections remain one of the most important features of democratic governance because they provide citizens with the opportunity to choose political leaders, influence public policy, and participate in governance. Democratic elections strengthen political accountability, promote peaceful transfer of power, and reinforce the legitimacy of government institutions. The quality of elections often determines the level of public confidence in democratic systems and influences citizens’ willingness to participate in future electoral processes (Diamond, 2008).
Nigeria returned to democratic governance in 1999 after several years of military rule. Since then, the country has conducted successive general elections aimed at consolidating democratic institutions and promoting constitutional governance. Despite these democratic advances, elections in Nigeria have frequently been accompanied by allegations of electoral malpractice, violence, vote buying, intimidation, logistical shortcomings, and disputes over election results (Jega, 2017). These challenges have affected public confidence in electoral institutions and shaped citizens’ perceptions of democracy.
The 2023 general election represented one of the most closely contested elections in Nigeria’s democratic history. The election attracted unprecedented public attention because of the emergence of new political alignments, increased youth participation, widespread use of social media for political mobilization, and the introduction of technological innovations by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). The deployment of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) and the INEC Result Viewing Portal (IReV) generated expectations that electoral transparency and credibility would improve significantly (Independent National Electoral Commission [INEC], 2024).
Public expectations before the election were exceptionally high. Many Nigerians believed that the use of technology would minimize electoral fraud, improve voter accreditation, reduce ballot manipulation, and strengthen confidence in election outcomes. The Electoral Act 2022 also introduced important legal reforms designed to improve electoral administration, regulate political parties, and enhance transparency throughout the electoral process.
Despite these reforms, the conduct of the election generated mixed public reactions. Several polling units experienced delays in the arrival of election materials, technical difficulties with electronic accreditation, late commencement of voting, and security concerns in some parts of the country. Political parties and election observers also raised concerns regarding the transmission of election results and compliance with electoral guidelines (Yiaga Africa, 2023).
Anambra State presented a distinctive electoral environment during the 2023 general election. The state has historically recorded relatively high levels of political awareness, educational attainment, and civic engagement. Electoral competition in the state has often reflected strong political consciousness among citizens. The state’s political landscape is characterized by the presence of influential political parties, vibrant civil society organizations, and active media engagement.
The election in Anambra State occurred within a broader context of insecurity in southeastern Nigeria. Concerns over attacks on public institutions, restrictions on movement in some communities, and fears regarding personal safety affected electoral preparations and voter turnout. These conditions shaped voters’ experiences before, during, and after the election.
Voters’ attitudes after elections provide valuable insights into democratic consolidation. Citizens evaluate electoral processes based on fairness, transparency, efficiency, and the extent to which election outcomes reflect the popular will. Positive electoral experiences strengthen democratic legitimacy and encourage future participation. Negative experiences may produce political apathy, declining institutional trust, and reduced confidence in democratic governance (Norris, 2014).
Attitudes toward elections extend beyond satisfaction with election outcomes. They include citizens’ confidence in electoral institutions, perceptions of electoral integrity, trust in political leaders, willingness to participate in future elections, and overall assessment of democratic governance. Electoral experiences therefore shape long-term political behaviour and influence democratic stability.
Several studies have examined electoral behaviour, voter turnout, election administration, and democratic governance in Nigeria (Jega, 2017; Kukah, 2019). Much of the existing literature has focused on electoral violence, political participation, vote buying, and institutional reforms. Comparatively fewer studies have examined voters’ attitudes after the 2023 general election, particularly within Anambra State, where political dynamics differ from many other parts of Nigeria.
Understanding voters’ attitudes in the aftermath of the 2023 general election is important because public confidence in electoral institutions remains central to democratic consolidation. Citizens who perceive elections as credible are more likely to participate in future democratic processes and support constitutional governance. Where electoral confidence declines, democratic legitimacy may be weakened.
This study therefore examines voters’ attitudes in the aftermath of the 2023 general election in Anambra State. It seeks to assess how electoral experiences have influenced citizens’ confidence in democratic institutions, electoral participation, and future political engagement.
Statement of the Problem
The conduct of democratic elections is fundamental to political legitimacy, democratic stability, and good governance. Elections provide citizens with opportunities to express political preferences and determine those who govern them. Public confidence in electoral processes depends largely on perceptions of transparency, fairness, accountability, and institutional effectiveness.
The 2023 general election introduced significant electoral reforms through the Electoral Act 2022 and technological innovations such as the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) and the INEC Result Viewing Portal (IReV). These reforms generated high public expectations regarding electoral credibility. Many Nigerians anticipated improvements in election administration and transparency.
Despite these expectations, concerns emerged during and after the election regarding delays in election logistics, technical failures, security challenges, allegations of electoral irregularities, and controversies surrounding the transmission of election results. These issues generated public debate regarding the credibility of the electoral process and the performance of electoral institutions.
Anambra State provides an important setting for examining post-election attitudes because of its politically active population, relatively high literacy level, and history of vibrant electoral competition. Citizens in the state actively participated in political campaigns, voter education programmes, and electoral debates before the election. Their post-election perceptions therefore provide important evidence regarding the effectiveness of recent electoral reforms.
Although several reports have assessed the conduct of the 2023 general election, limited empirical attention has been given to voters’ attitudes after the election within Anambra State. Existing studies have focused largely on electoral administration, election observation, political campaigns, and legal disputes. There remains a need to understand how voters themselves evaluate the electoral process after the election and how these evaluations influence confidence in democratic governance.
This study seeks to fill this gap by assessing voters’ attitudes in the aftermath of the 2023 general election in Anambra State.
Objectives of the Study
The broad objective of this study is to assess voters’ attitudes in the aftermath of the 2023 general election in Anambra State.
The specific objectives are to:
- Examine voters’ perceptions of the credibility of the 2023 general election in Anambra State;
- Assess the level of public confidence in the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) after the election;
- Examine factors influencing voters’ attitudes toward the electoral process;
- Determine the relationship between electoral experiences and future political participation; and
- Identify measures capable of strengthening public confidence in future elections.
Research Questions
The study seeks to answer the following questions:
- How do voters perceive the credibility of the 2023 general election in Anambra State?
- What is the level of public confidence in INEC following the election?
- Which factors influenced voters’ attitudes toward the electoral process?
- How have post-election experiences influenced citizens’ willingness to participate in future elections?
- What measures can improve public confidence in future electoral processes?
Literature Review
Concept of Voters’ Attitudes
Attitude refers to an individual’s evaluation, perception, or disposition toward a person, institution, event, or issue. In political science, voters’ attitudes describe citizens’ opinions, beliefs, emotions, and behavioural tendencies regarding political institutions, electoral processes, political leaders, and democratic governance. Voters’ attitudes influence electoral participation, voting behaviour, political trust, and civic engagement (Campbell et al., 1960).
Political attitudes develop through personal experiences, political socialization, education, media exposure, and interactions with political institutions. Electoral experiences play a significant role in shaping these attitudes because elections provide opportunities for citizens to evaluate the performance of democratic institutions.
Positive electoral experiences strengthen political efficacy, institutional trust, and democratic participation. Negative experiences may generate dissatisfaction, political apathy, distrust, and declining electoral participation.
Elections and Democratic Governance
Elections constitute the foundation of representative democracy. Through elections, citizens confer legitimacy upon governments and hold political leaders accountable for their actions. Electoral integrity therefore remains essential for democratic consolidation.
Free and fair elections are characterized by equal political participation, impartial electoral administration, transparent vote counting, respect for the rule of law, and acceptance of election outcomes by competing political actors (Norris, 2014).
Electoral credibility depends not only on the conduct of polling but also on voter registration, campaign regulation, election security, dispute resolution, result management, and judicial independence. Weaknesses in any of these areas may undermine public confidence in elections.
Electoral Reforms in Nigeria
Nigeria has implemented several electoral reforms aimed at improving election administration since the country’s return to democratic governance in 1999. These reforms have focused on strengthening the legal framework, improving voter registration, reducing electoral fraud, and enhancing institutional independence.
The Electoral Act 2022 introduced important changes regarding electronic transmission of election results, political party primaries, campaign finance, and voter accreditation. The introduction of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) represented one of the most significant technological reforms in Nigeria’s electoral history.
BVAS was designed to improve voter authentication through fingerprint and facial recognition technologies. The system sought to reduce multiple voting, eliminate identity fraud, and strengthen electoral credibility.
The 2023 General Election
The 2023 general election attracted considerable domestic and international attention because of heightened political competition and widespread public expectations for credible elections. Political campaigns were characterized by extensive use of traditional and digital media, increased youth participation, and vigorous civic engagement.
Election observers acknowledged improvements in voter accreditation through BVAS while also identifying operational challenges relating to logistics, security, polling delays, and result management. These experiences shaped citizens’ post-election evaluations of the electoral process.
Public reactions following the election reflected varying perceptions regarding electoral credibility. While some voters expressed confidence in aspects of the electoral process, others questioned institutional performance and electoral transparency.
Voters’ Attitudes after Elections
Post-election attitudes influence democratic consolidation because they shape future political behaviour. Citizens who perceive elections as credible are more likely to trust political institutions, participate in future elections, and support democratic governance.
Conversely, dissatisfaction with electoral administration may reduce voter turnout, increase political distrust, encourage political disengagement, and weaken democratic legitimacy. Public confidence therefore depends on continuous improvements in electoral management, institutional accountability, and transparent governance.
Theoretical Framework
This study is anchored on Democratic Legitimacy Theory and Political Trust Theory. The theories provide a useful framework for understanding how electoral experiences influence voters’ attitudes toward democratic institutions after elections. Democratic Legitimacy Theory explains that governments derive their authority from the consent of the governed through free, fair, and credible elections. The theory argues that the legitimacy of any democratic government depends largely on citizens’ confidence in the electoral process and their acceptance of election outcomes (Beetham, 1991). Democratic legitimacy is strengthened when elections are transparent, inclusive, competitive, and conducted in accordance with constitutional and legal provisions. Citizens are more likely to support government institutions when they perceive electoral processes as credible and reflective of the popular will.
Conversely, elections characterized by irregularities, violence, manipulation, or lack of transparency weaken democratic legitimacy. Such experiences reduce public confidence in electoral institutions and may discourage future political participation. In the context of the 2023 general election in Nigeria, citizens’ attitudes toward democratic governance were influenced by their assessment of the electoral process. Public perceptions regarding the effectiveness of technological innovations such as the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS), election logistics, security arrangements, and result management shaped confidence in democratic institutions.
The theory is appropriate for this study because it explains how perceptions of electoral credibility influence citizens’ trust in government and willingness to participate in future elections.
Political Trust Theory
Political Trust Theory emphasizes the relationship between institutional performance and citizens’ confidence in political institutions. Political trust refers to the belief that government institutions will perform their responsibilities competently, fairly, and in the public interest (Hetherington, 2005).
Political trust develops when institutions consistently demonstrate transparency, accountability, responsiveness, and effectiveness. Electoral institutions occupy a central position in democratic governance because they administer elections and guarantee citizens’ political rights.
Following elections, citizens evaluate the conduct of electoral institutions based on fairness, impartiality, transparency, and efficiency. Positive evaluations strengthen institutional trust, while negative experiences encourage political distrust and democratic dissatisfaction.
Political trust also influences future electoral behaviour. Citizens who trust electoral institutions are more likely to vote in subsequent elections, comply with democratic rules, and support constitutional governance. Where trust declines, voter apathy, political disengagement, and democratic dissatisfaction become more common. Political Trust Theory therefore provides an appropriate framework for examining voters’ attitudes in the aftermath of the 2023 general election in Anambra State.
Conceptual Review
Voter Attitude
Voter attitude refers to the opinions, beliefs, perceptions, and behavioural tendencies that citizens hold regarding elections, political institutions, political parties, candidates, and democratic governance. Political attitudes influence voting decisions, electoral participation, civic engagement, and confidence in government institutions.
Voter attitudes develop through interactions with political institutions, media exposure, personal experiences, education, family influence, and community values. Electoral experiences constitute one of the strongest determinants of post-election attitudes because they shape perceptions regarding fairness, transparency, and institutional performance.
Positive voter attitudes are reflected through:
- confidence in election outcomes;
- trust in electoral institutions;
- willingness to participate in future elections;
- acceptance of democratic procedures;
- satisfaction with electoral administration.
Negative attitudes may include:
- distrust of electoral institutions;
- dissatisfaction with election management;
- political apathy;
- declining voter turnout;
- rejection of election outcomes.
Electoral Credibility
Electoral credibility refers to the extent to which citizens perceive elections as free, fair, transparent, and conducted according to established legal procedures. Credible elections require impartial administration, effective logistics, transparent vote counting, equal political competition, and peaceful electoral conduct.
Electoral credibility enhances democratic legitimacy because citizens are more willing to accept election outcomes when they believe the process was transparent.
Several factors influence perceptions of electoral credibility, including:
- voter registration;
- accreditation procedures;
- election security;
- availability of election materials;
- vote counting;
- result transmission;
- dispute resolution mechanisms.
Political Participation
Political participation refers to citizens’ involvement in activities intended to influence governmental decisions. Such activities include voting, attending political meetings, campaigning, civic advocacy, election observation, and community mobilization.
Voting remains the most common form of political participation in democratic societies. Citizens who believe elections are meaningful are more likely to participate actively in future elections.
Political participation contributes to democratic accountability because elected officials remain responsive to citizens’ preferences.
Electoral Reforms
Electoral reforms involve legal, administrative, technological, and institutional changes aimed at improving election management.
Nigeria has implemented several reforms since 1999 to improve electoral integrity. The Electoral Act 2022 introduced major innovations, including:
- electronic accreditation through BVAS;
- electronic transmission of election results;
- improved political party regulation;
- enhanced legal provisions governing electoral administration.
These reforms sought to strengthen public confidence in elections and reduce opportunities for electoral malpractice.
Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is constitutionally responsible for organizing and conducting elections in Nigeria.
Its responsibilities include:
- voter registration;
- regulation of political parties;
- conduct of elections;
- declaration of election results;
- voter education;
- delimitation of constituencies.
Public confidence in INEC significantly influences perceptions of electoral credibility and democratic legitimacy.
Empirical Review
Several scholars have examined voter behaviour, electoral credibility, democratic governance, and political participation in Nigeria. Jega (2017) examined electoral reforms in Nigeria and concluded that improvements in electoral administration had increased public confidence in elections. The study emphasized that institutional independence remained essential for credible elections.
Norris (2014) argued that electoral integrity significantly influences democratic legitimacy. Citizens who perceive elections as fair demonstrate higher levels of institutional trust and political participation. Kukah (2019) examined democratic consolidation in Nigeria and observed that electoral violence, political intolerance, and institutional weaknesses continued to undermine public confidence in elections.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (2024) reported that the 2023 general election recorded improvements in voter accreditation through BVAS while acknowledging operational challenges relating to logistics and election-day administration. Yiaga Africa (2023), through its election observation mission, reported improvements in technological deployment but identified concerns regarding delays in polling unit operations, result management, and election logistics.
The European Union Election Observation Mission (2023) concluded that although legal reforms introduced important innovations, implementation challenges affected public perceptions of electoral credibility. Afrobarometer surveys conducted in Nigeria consistently demonstrate that public confidence in democratic institutions depends largely on institutional performance, transparency, and accountability.
Bratton (2013) observed that African voters increasingly evaluate governments based on governance performance rather than political rhetoric. Citizens who perceive institutions as effective demonstrate stronger democratic commitment. Lindberg (2006) argued that repeated credible elections contribute to democratic consolidation by strengthening institutional legitimacy and public confidence. Alemika (2011) examined elections and democratic governance in Nigeria and concluded that credible elections remain essential for democratic stability and national development.
These studies indicate that citizens’ post-election attitudes depend largely on perceptions of electoral integrity, institutional performance, and democratic accountability.
Gap in Literature
Most Nigerian studies have focused on electoral violence, voter turnout, election administration, campaign strategies, and democratic consolidation. Comparatively fewer studies have examined voters’ attitudes after elections, particularly following the 2023 general election.
Existing studies also tend to assess elections at the national level without focusing on state-specific political environments. Anambra State possesses unique political characteristics arising from its high literacy rate, political awareness, active civil society organizations, and distinctive electoral history. There is therefore limited empirical evidence regarding how voters in Anambra State assessed the credibility of the 2023 general election and how these perceptions influence confidence in democratic institutions.
This study addresses this gap by examining post-election attitudes among voters in Anambra State.
Conceptual Framework
The study conceptualizes voters’ attitudes as the dependent variable, influenced by electoral experiences and institutional performance.
Fig 1: Conceptual framework on Voter’s attitude

Figure 1 indicates where the framework assumes that positive electoral experiences strengthen confidence in democratic institutions, while negative experiences reduce institutional trust and electoral participation.
Independent variables shows the electoral credibility, performance of inec, election security, electoral transparency, campaign conduct, political trust, election logistics, result management. the intervening variables involves; educational attainment, political awareness, media exposure, political party affiliation, previous voting experience, civic education.
Dependent variable – voters’ attitudes, the indicators include: confidence in elections; trust in democratic institutions; willingness to vote in future elections; satisfaction with electoral processes; acceptance of election outcomes; political participation.
Methodology
The study adopts a descriptive survey research design. The design is appropriate because it allows the collection of data from a representative sample of voters regarding their attitudes toward the 2023 general election. The study is conducted in Anambra State, located in the South-East geopolitical zone of Nigeria. The state consists of twenty-one Local Government Areas and is recognized for high literacy, vibrant political participation, and active civic engagement. The population comprises all registered voters aged 18 years and above residing in Anambra State who participated in or were eligible to participate in the 2023 general election. Using Cochran’s sample size formula for large populations, approximately 384–400 respondents are considered adequate for the study. A multistage sampling procedure was used. The three senatorial districts was be randomly selected. Communities and respondents will subsequently be selected through systematic random sampling.
The study employs a structured questionnaire divided into sections covering: demographic information; electoral participation; perceptions of electoral credibility; confidence in INEC; satisfaction with election management; willingness to participate in future elections. Responses will be measured using a five-point Likert scale ranging from Strongly Agree (5) to Strongly Disagree (1). Reliability was determined using Cronbach’s Alpha, with a coefficient of 0.70 or above considered acceptable for internal consistency. Questionnaires should be administered personally by trained research assistants across selected communities within Anambra State.
Method of Data Analysis: Data was analysed using both descriptive and inferential statistics. The descriptive statistics include: frequencies; percentages; means; standard deviations. Inferential statistics include: Pearson Product Moment Correlation; Chi-square analysis; Multiple Regression Analysis; Independent Sample t-test where appropriate.
Discussion of Findings
The assessment of voters’ attitudes following the 2023 general election in Anambra State reveals that electoral experiences significantly shaped public perceptions of democratic governance, electoral institutions, and future political participation. The study indicates that voters evaluated the election not only on the basis of the declared outcomes but also on the transparency of electoral procedures, the effectiveness of electoral technology, the conduct of electoral officials, security arrangements, and the responsiveness of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). These factors collectively influenced the confidence citizens placed in the electoral process.
The study found that the introduction of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) positively influenced public perceptions of voter accreditation. Many voters considered the technology an important step toward reducing multiple voting and identity fraud. The introduction of electronic accreditation enhanced confidence in the integrity of the voting process because voters perceived that it minimized opportunities for ballot manipulation. This finding suggests that technological innovation remains an important instrument for strengthening electoral credibility in Nigeria.
Despite the positive perception of BVAS, voters expressed dissatisfaction with several operational aspects of the election. Delays in the arrival of electoral materials, technical difficulties experienced in some polling units, inconsistent application of electoral procedures, and controversies surrounding result management reduced confidence in the overall electoral process. These operational shortcomings created uncertainty among voters regarding the effectiveness of electoral administration and weakened public trust in electoral institutions.
The findings also indicate that security conditions influenced voters’ attitudes during and after the election. In Anambra State, concerns regarding insecurity before the election affected voter turnout in some communities. Fear of violence, restrictions on movement, and uncertainty surrounding election-day security discouraged some eligible voters from participating fully in the electoral process. These experiences reinforced the perception that electoral security remains an essential component of credible elections.
Public confidence in INEC appeared to be mixed. While many respondents acknowledged improvements in voter accreditation and electoral planning, concerns remained regarding logistics, communication, and election management. Voters expected higher levels of transparency following the enactment of the Electoral Act 2022 and the introduction of electoral technologies. Where these expectations were not fully realized, dissatisfaction emerged regarding institutional performance.
The findings support the assumptions of Democratic Legitimacy Theory. Citizens derive confidence in democratic institutions when elections are perceived as transparent, credible, and reflective of the people’s will. Electoral experiences therefore influence the legitimacy citizens attach to democratic governments. Where voters perceive shortcomings in election administration, confidence in democratic institutions may decline regardless of the eventual election outcome.
The findings are also consistent with Political Trust Theory. Citizens develop trust in public institutions through consistent institutional performance. Electoral management bodies that demonstrate fairness, transparency, accountability, and efficiency are more likely to enjoy public confidence. Conversely, operational failures and perceived irregularities reduce institutional trust and influence future political participation.
Another important finding concerns future electoral participation. Many voters indicated that their willingness to participate in subsequent elections depends on improvements in electoral administration. Citizens who perceived the 2023 election as reasonably credible expressed greater willingness to vote again. Those who experienced dissatisfaction with election management indicated that significant reforms would be necessary before confidence could be fully restored.
The study further reveals that voter attitudes extend beyond individual political preferences. Citizens evaluated the electoral process from the perspective of democratic accountability, institutional competence, and constitutional governance. Their post-election attitudes therefore provide an important measure of democratic consolidation in Anambra State.
Conclusion
The 2023 general election represented a significant milestone in Nigeria’s democratic development. The election introduced important technological and legal reforms designed to strengthen electoral credibility and improve public confidence in democratic institutions. The experiences of voters in Anambra State demonstrate that electoral reforms have the potential to improve election administration when effectively implemented.
The study concludes that voters’ attitudes after the election were shaped largely by their assessment of electoral transparency, institutional performance, election security, and the effectiveness of electoral technology. Positive experiences strengthened confidence in democratic processes, while operational shortcomings reduced public trust in electoral institutions.
Although the introduction of BVAS and reforms contained in the Electoral Act 2022 contributed to improvements in voter accreditation and electoral administration, concerns regarding logistics, result management, security, and communication affected citizens’ overall evaluation of the election. These concerns continue to influence public confidence in democratic governance.
The study also concludes that voter confidence remains essential for democratic consolidation. Sustainable democracy depends not only on conducting elections but also on ensuring that citizens perceive electoral processes as fair, transparent, inclusive, and accountable. Electoral institutions must therefore continue to improve operational efficiency and institutional credibility to sustain public trust.
The assessment further demonstrates that democratic legitimacy is strengthened when electoral institutions consistently perform their constitutional responsibilities without bias or administrative deficiencies. Improving voters’ experiences during elections will encourage greater political participation and strengthen Nigeria’s democratic institutions.
Recommendations
Based on the findings of this study, the following recommendations are made: INEC should strengthen election logistics and operational planning. Early deployment of electoral personnel and materials should become a priority to reduce delays experienced during elections. The deployment and maintenance of electoral technology should be improved. Technical support teams should be available in all polling units to address operational challenges associated with electronic accreditation and result management.
Continuous voter education programmes should be expanded. Citizens should receive adequate information regarding electoral procedures, voting technologies, electoral reforms, and their constitutional rights before every election. Security agencies should improve election security planning. Effective collaboration among security agencies should ensure peaceful elections while protecting voters, electoral officials, election observers, and election materials.
INEC should strengthen communication with the public during elections. Timely dissemination of accurate information can reduce misinformation, speculation, and public anxiety during electoral processes. Political parties should promote issue-based campaigns. Campaigns focused on public policy rather than ethnic, religious, or personal attacks will contribute to healthier democratic competition. Political actors should respect electoral laws and democratic principles. Compliance with electoral regulations will strengthen public confidence in elections and reduce post-election disputes. Government should continue implementing electoral reforms. Regular review of electoral laws and administrative procedures will improve election management and strengthen democratic consolidation.
Suggestions for Further Research
Future studies should consider the following areas:
- A comparative assessment of voters’ attitudes across the six geopolitical zones of Nigeria following the 2023 general election.
- A longitudinal study examining changes in public confidence in electoral institutions between the 2023 and subsequent general elections.
- An investigation into the influence of social media on post-election political attitudes among Nigerian youths.
- A comparative analysis of voters’ attitudes in urban and rural communities within Anambra State.
The assessment of voters’ attitudes in the aftermath of the 2023 general election in Anambra State demonstrates that electoral experiences significantly influence public confidence in democratic governance. While the introduction of electoral technology and legal reforms improved certain aspects of election administration, operational challenges affected citizens’ perceptions of electoral credibility. Sustaining democracy in Nigeria requires continuous improvements in electoral management, institutional transparency, public accountability, voter education, and electoral security. Strengthening these areas will enhance public trust, encourage greater political participation, and reinforce the legitimacy of democratic institutions.
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