Inclusion Starts at the Ballot
Inclusion Starts at the Ballot
Billions of dollars are sent home every year. Streets are named after returnees. Diaspora real estate summits are packed, and homecoming festivals now double as brand activations. Yet when election season arrives, a simple question lingers in the air like unfinished business: Why can’t Nigerians in the diaspora vote?
As Nigeria prepares for its 2027 general elections, this question is more urgent than ever. From biometric enrollment via the BVN for non-residents to the bold promises of Motherland 2025, the government has made clear efforts to court the diaspora community. But one foundational right still hangs in the balance—representation. For a nation that calls its diaspora “the 37th state,” it’s time that rhetoric meets rights.
Voting is not just a mechanism—it’s the currency of trust. And in the coming years, the push for diaspora voting may become Nigeria’s most important test of whether inclusion means more than ceremonial welcome.
The Gap Between Contribution and Control
According to World Bank data, Nigerians abroad remitted an estimated $20.1 billion in 2022, and the Central Bank of Nigeria reported over $4.2 billion in remittances via IMTOs alone between January and October 2024. Beyond financial contributions, diaspora Nigerians are increasingly building startups, mentoring youth, and funding local infrastructure. So why are they still excluded from one of the most basic democratic rights?
The contradiction is glaring. Diasporans are encouraged to register businesses, buy land, obtain BVNs, and pay taxes. They are invited to headline conferences and sponsor innovation challenges. But when the time comes to shape the country’s leadership and policy direction, they’re asked to sit out.
This is more than an oversight—it’s a design flaw in the very architecture of civic inclusion.
Diaspora Voting Works Elsewhere—Why Not Nigeria?
Nigeria is far from South Africa provides a compelling model. Since 2009, following a Constitutional Court ruling, South African citizens living abroad have been allowed to vote in national elections. The Electoral Commission of South Africa (IEC) facilitates this by enabling online voter registration and coordinating in-person voting at embassies, consulates, and high commissions worldwide. In the 2024 general elections, over 76,000 South Africans registered to vote abroad, with voting conducted at 111 foreign missions .y nations that have successfully created pathways for their citizens abroad to vote.
The United States has long allowed absentee voting, enabling American citizens to mail in ballots or vote at consulates during federal elections. South Africa permits its citizens abroad to vote in national elections through embassies and high commissions. Ghana, which launched the “Year of Return” in 2019, passed legislation enabling diaspora voting back in 2006, although the implementation remains patchy.
These systems are not without flaws, but they prove one thing: it is technically possible. The real barriers are usually political will, administrative planning, and legal readiness—not infrastructure.
The BVN, Digital Identity, and the Foundation for Inclusion
Interestingly, the building blocks for diaspora voting may already be falling into place.
In 2024, the Central Bank of Nigeria rolled out the Non-Resident Bank Verification Number (NRBVN) initiative. This allowed Nigerians in the diaspora to obtain verified digital IDs and financial access—even without local bank accounts or SIM registration. For the first time, millions of Nigerians abroad had a pathway to formal identification.
This is more than a banking policy—it’s a gateway. The BVN could form the digital backbone for diaspora voter registration. Biometric data, tied to a secure national database, creates the potential for remote identity verification—one of the biggest challenges in diaspora voting.
If Nigeria can provide digital tools for real estate, taxes, and remittances, then it can certainly develop a secure portal for electoral participation. The question isn’t capacity—it’s commitment.
What’s Really at Stake: Trust, Transparency, and the Social Contract
Allowing diaspora voting is not just about rights—it’s about rebuilding faith.
Many in the diaspora are skeptical of governance at home. Some are disillusioned by years of unfulfilled promises, erratic policies, and political stagnation. Others have begun to re-engage, building startups, leading accelerators, and launching community projects in their home states. But one thing continues to erode confidence: lack of a clear pathway to help shape the system from within.
Giving diaspora Nigerians the right to vote would send a powerful message: “We don’t just want your money—we want your mind, your mandate, your participation.”
It would also compel the government to build systems that are more transparent and secure—because now, the eyes of the world would be watching, not just as observers, but as voters.
What We Can Learn from the U.S. and Others
In the United States, over 8 million Americans living abroad are eligible to vote. Through the Federal Voting Assistance Program (FVAP), the U.S. has built systems allowing citizens to vote by mail, email, or fax, depending on the state. Embassies are trained to guide citizens through the process. While these systems are not flawless, they offer a useful model.
Nigeria can build its own diaspora voting program by studying these three pillars: Secure digital ID integration (via NIN or BVN), Embassy-coordinated logistics, and Legislative clarity backed by cross-party support.
Countries like the Philippines and Mexico have also embraced diaspora voting using hybrid systems. Their examples show that a mix of physical and digital participation—anchored in transparency—is not only possible, but beneficial.
Compulsory Voting: A Misguided Solution?
In response to low voter turnout, Nigeria’s National Assembly has considered a compulsory voting bill, which would mandate that all eligible citizens participate in elections or face penalties .
However, critics argue that this approach addresses the symptom rather than the cause. As journalist Bola Bolawole notes, “Elementary Civics describes voting as a civic responsibility or duty which a good, responsible, and responsive citizen is expected to discharge enthusiastically and without compulsion.”
Instead of coercion, efforts should focus on making the electoral process more inclusive, transparent, and accessible—particularly for the diaspora, whose engagement could significantly bolster voter participation and trust in the system.
Ballots Beyond Borders, and the Future of Citizenship
If Nigeria wants to take its diaspora seriously, it must go beyond visibility. It must embrace inclusion.
Motherland 2025 is a powerful gesture. The NRBVN rollout is a meaningful step. But the real test—the real trust signal—will be whether a Nigerian abroad, with a valid BVN and passport, can cast a vote in 2027 that counts.
The question isn’t whether it can be done. It’s whether we want it badly enough to make it happen.
The diaspora has built companies, schools, tech platforms, and even waterparks back home. Now they’re asking for one thing in return: a voice. Not a symbolic voice, but a ballot-powered one.
Because for democracy to mean something in the 21st century, it must travel with its people—even across oceans.