International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation (IJLLT) ISSN: 2617-0299 (Online); ISSN: 2708-0099 (Print) DOI: 10.32996/ijllt www.ijllt.org 142 A Corpus-Based Critical Discourse Analysis of Pre-2019 General Elections Reports in Selected Nigerian Newspapers Samuel Oyeyemi Agbeleoba 1 *, Edward Owusu 2 and Asuamah Adade-Yeboah 3 1 Lecturer of English language, Department of English and Literary Studies,Ekiti State University Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State, Nigeria 2 Senior Lecturer of English language, Department of Communication Studies; and Director, Directorate of Quality Assurance and Academic Planning, Sunyani Technical University, Ghana 3 Senior Lecturer of English Language and Literature; and Head, Department of Communication Studies, Christian Service University College, Kumasi, Ghana Corresponding Author: Edward Owusu, E-mail: edwardowusu@minister.com. ARTICLE INFORMATION ABSTRACT Received: August 05, 2020 Accepted: September 26, 2020 Volume: 3 Issue: 9 DOI: 10.32996/ijllt.2020.3.9.15 Generally, language experts believe that there are inherent ideologies in language use. The aspect of discourse study that discloses such ideologies is known as Critical Discourse Study (CDA). This paper seeks to exhume the various inherent ideologies that presuppose selected news reports on the Nigeria’s 2019 General Elections in Nigerian newspapers. This study is, however, corpus-based. Scholars have established that discourse is a kind of constructively conditioned public exercise. They believe that power relations exist at different levels of daily social interaction; revealing superiority or inferiority of interlocutors involved. News reports relating to the General Elections were electronically collated from the various newspaper platforms for a sizable language corpus. The name Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was selected and analysed purposively with the aid of Digital Humanities (DH) tool to observe the frequency of the acronym INEC and the textual context in which it occurs in five newspapers’ reports about the electoral body via the authority it gives; the warning it issues, and the appeal it makes to the stakeholders. The paper finds out that the negative perceptions of many observers about the elections have actually been predicted by the various reports in the newspapers, prior to the elections. The paper concludes that reporters of news items do not account for issues concerning electoral body with the same constructive and destructive dispositions; and this gives room for subjectivity and prejudice. KEYWORDS Critical Discourse Analysis, corpus, INEC, Nigerian newspapers, reports 1. Introduction 1 One of the primary aims of Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) is to apply critical approach, position or stance on research works on writing and oral conversation. Because there are inherent ideologies in language use, it is the focus of CDA to exhume these ideologies, beliefs and perceptions as reflected in the use of language. CDA attempts to reveal and uncover the implicit ideas that are not immediately inferred while considering the discursive relations in a text. According to Van Dijk (1993), CDA typifies ‘discourse investigative study that predominantly researches the manner social abuse of influence, supremacy and disparity are legislated, replicated and repelled by writing and speech in societal and governmental settings.’ Scholars beli eve that CDA set out to expose ‘the philosophical and irregular control systems that dwell in communal, governmental and traditional processes’. This shows that language elements have some kind of expressive power which can characterize and reveal any given communicative event just like how the Latin tag puts it: Stilus virum arguit (the style proclaims the man). This paper critically looks at the various reports about the 2019 General Elections in Nigeria through the lens of CDA by relying on the ‘mining’ power of linguistic corpora tool to bring about valid generalization of our findings. Nigeria came into a fully democratic dispensation on the 29th day of May, 1999 and vested the authority to conduct free, fair and acceptable elections in the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). This institution has since carried out Published by Al-KindiCenter for Research and Development. Copyright (c) the author(s). This is an open access article under CC BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)