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Friday, November 22, 2024
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INEC Declares Harris Winner, Tells Trump to ‘Go to Court,’ Nigerians Joke About U.S. Election

Nigerians found themselves passionately involved in the 2024 U.S. presidential election, many vocally supporting candidates Kamala Harris and Donald Trump. As the race heated up, social media buzzed with jabs at Nigeria’s own electoral process, especially recalling the country’s contentious February 2023 elections.

Netizens humorously took the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to task, raising sarcastic comparisons. “Did you see any ballot snatching, thugs disrupting polling stations, or non-indigenes being chased back to their states?” they quipped, challenging Nigerian government supporters reveling in America’s smoother election. The absence of violent disruptions and law enforcement complicity in the U.S. election did not go unnoticed.

As Trump’s lead became clear, Nigerians joked that only INEC’s chairman could save Kamala Harris. Posts like, “Na only this INEC man fit help Kamala right now,” went viral. Even post-election, modified images surfaced with Harris winning a fictional 280 electoral votes to Trump’s 100, captioned with Nigeria’s now-infamous phrase, “Go to court.”

On X, popular influencer Nefertiti (@firstladyship) highlighted differences in transparency: “In Nigeria, media houses can’t project results; INEC is the sole authority. In the U.S., the people govern, while in Nigeria, the ‘Establishment’ rules.” Users pointed out the stark contrast between a U.S. judge extending voting hours in Pennsylvania after a bomb threat and what they called “executive interference” with Nigeria’s judiciary.

Criticism of Nigeria’s electoral pace was a frequent theme. “In the U.S., results came out in less than 24 hours,” wrote @erotichal. “In Nigeria, INEC workers took four to five days and announced results at midnight like a thief.” Others chimed in, with one commenter humorously suggesting that Americans should “learn how to conduct elections from INEC.”

The 2024 U.S. election may be over, but for Nigerians, it sparked ongoing reflection on the nature of democracy and electoral integrity at home and abroad.

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