ADC “Won by 3PM” Claim: Ogigi Rejects AMAC Election Result

By 3pm I had already won the elections across board and then magic began to happen

A result the candidate refuses to accept

The ADC “won by 3PM” claim emerged after Dr Moses Paul Ogigi, candidate of the African Democratic Congress in the Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC) election, rejected the outcome announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission.

INEC declared the candidate of the All Progressives Congress as winner of the contest. However, Ogigi insisted he was already leading “across board” before the result trajectory shifted.

“By 3pm I had already won the elections across board and then magic began to happen,” he said during an interview.

Allegations of curfew and vote buying

Ogigi alleged that the election was marred by multiple irregularities.

Among the concerns he raised were:

  • Imposition of movement restrictions
  • Harassment of party agents
  • Late arrival of election materials at some polling units
  • Heightened vote buying activities

He described the process as “deeply flawed” and claimed it did not reflect the will of voters in the area council.

At the time of publication, INEC had not issued a specific response to these particular allegations beyond its general statement defending the conduct of the poll.


When perception overtakes procedure

Election disputes frequently move from numerical outcomes to narrative battles.

While official results stand unless overturned through legal challenge, candidates often frame perceived irregularities as structural failures rather than isolated lapses.

In tightly contested environments, phrases like “magic began to happen” can quickly shape public perception, regardless of whether procedural breaches are formally established.

The legal path remains open

Nigeria’s electoral framework provides a defined channel for challenging declared results through tribunals.

If Ogigi chooses to pursue legal action, the burden of proof will rest on demonstrating substantial non-compliance capable of altering the result.

Until such proceedings occur, the official declaration by INEC remains operative.

A defining test for electoral confidence

The ADC “won by 3PM” claim now joins a growing cluster of post-election narratives testing voter trust in administrative transparency.

Whether the dispute escalates into litigation or remains a political statement may determine how enduring its impact becomes.

In electoral democracies, the management of post-result tensions can influence confidence as much as the voting process itself.


This is IDNN. Independent. Digital. Uncompromising.

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