Tag: Electoral Bill

  • Electoral bill: I DECLINED ASSENT TO SAVE 2019 POLLS –Buhari

    Yusuf ALLI, Managing Editor, Northern Operation; Gbade OGUNWALE,  Augustine EHIKIOYA, Onyedi OJIABOR and Gbenga OMOKHUNU, Abuja

    PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari yesterday declined signing the Electoral (Amendment) Bill 2018 into law, saying that it was capable of derailing preparations for 2019 polls. It was the fourth time he would reject the bill as previous rejections were based on observed errors. The President said he did not want to impose on the country the electoral uncertainty his assent might cause. He said that changing the rules a few months to the next general elections could lead to disruption and confusion. He asked the National Assembly to save the nation’s democracy by ensuring that the Electoral (Amendment) Bill 2018 comes into effect after the February 2019 polls. He also raised issues on four amendments to the bill and asked the National Assembly to revisit the observations. Buhari, who made his opinion known in a December 6, 2018 letter to the President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon. Yakubu Dogara, said he had decided to place the interest of the country above any other matter. The letter was titled,‘Presidential decision to decline assent to the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill 2018’.

    It reads: “Pursuant to Section 58(4) of Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), I hereby convey to the Senate my decision on 6th December to decline Presidential Assent to the Electoral (Amendment) Bill, 2018 recently passed by the National Assembly. “I am declining assent to the Bill principally because I am concerned that passing a new electoral bill this far into the electoral process for the 2019 general elections, which commenced under the 2015 Electoral Act, could create some uncertainty about the applicable legislation to govern the process. “Any real or apparent change to the rules this close to the election may provide an opportunity for disruption and confusion in respect of which law governs the electoral process.

    “This leads me to believe that it is in the best interest of the country and our democracy for the National Assembly to specifically state in the Bill that the Electoral Act will come into effect and be applicable to elections commencing after the 2019 General Elections. “It is also important for the following drafting amendments to be made to the Bill: •Section 5 of the Bill, amending Section 18 of the Principal Act should indicate the subsection to which the substitution of the figure “30” for the figure “60” is to be effected. •Section 11 of the Bill, amending Section 36 should indicate the subsection in which the proviso is to be introduced. •Section 24 of the Bill which amends Section 85(1) should be redrafted in full as the introduction of the “electing” to the sentence may be interpreted to mean that political parties may give 21 days’ notice of the intention to merge, as opposed to the 90 days provided in Section 84(2) of the Electoral Act which provides the provision for merger of political parties •The definition of the term “Ward Collection Officer” should be revised to reflect a more descriptive definition than the capitalised and undefined term “Registration Area Collation Officer.” “Please accept, Distinguished Senate President, the assurances of my highest consideration.”

    President Buhari had refused to sign the Bill the first time as a result of the reordering of the election sequence by the National Assembly, and the second time because of what the Presidency called “drafting errors.” He also declined signing the bill the third time because of what the Presidency called “drafting issues that remained unaddressed.”

    Read also: Ogun PDP crisis deepens

    National Assembly may override Buhari There were indications yesterday that the National Assembly may override President Buhari’s withdrawal of assent on the Electoral Act, 2018. Although several calls made to obtain the reaction of the Chairman, Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Senator Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi, yielded no result, a source close to the leadership of the Senate said the National Assembly would likely override the President on the Bill. It is, however, not clear whether the two chambers of the National Assembly can muster the required two-thirds majority to override the President. The source said: “It is obvious that the National Assembly has bent backward almost to breaking point to give the President the benefit of the doubt. “The National Assembly has no other alternative but to override the President because nobody is in doubt that he does not want to sign the Bill.” “The days ahead will determine what will happen.” Senators express divergent views Former Senate Leader, Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume, and Clifford Ordia, who spoke with our correspondent in separate interviews yesterday, expressed divergent views on the refusal of the President to sign the Electoral Act amendment Bill. Ndume said the President must have his reasons for declining assent to the Bill. But the Borno South senator said the National Assembly was at liberty to respond as it deemed fit. He added that the rejection would not affect the conduct of the 2019 general elections, saying “the President does not conduct elections.” He said that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is the body in charge of elections.

    “All the president needs to do is to provide the necessary support, which I am certain that he has done,” he said. Ndume added: “I cannot fully comment right now since I am not aware of the reasons given by the President. “I am sure his reasons will be contained in the letter addressed to the leadership of the National Assembly. Let us wait and see till next week.” Senator Ordia, on his part, noted that the rejection of the amendment bill by the President was a clear sign that the APC was not ready to conduct a free and fair election. The Edo Central senator said that the rejection will further cast doubt on the ability of the President to give Nigerians an election that will be accepted by all. Ordia said: “Many of us are not surprised. We knew the amendment bill was not going to be signed.

    “The earlier excuses advanced were just to distract everyone. “Now that we know, we also need to go back to the drawing board as a party and find a way to counter any plans the APC will be hatching.” PDP campaign urges N/Assembly to override Buhari The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Presidential Campaign Organization (PPCO) yesterday charged the National Assembly to save the nation’s democracy by immediately overriding President Muhammadu Buhari’s refusal to sign the amendment of the Electoral Act. The PDP Campaign said the legislative action had become imperative as the President’s decision was a calculated attempt to hold the nation to ransom. In a statement signed by the spokesman, Kola Ologbondiyan, the party said the President’s action was capable of injecting crisis into the electoral process and ultimately scuttle the conduct of the 2019 general elections.

    The opposition party insisted that the President was avoiding free and fair contest. The statement said: “President Buhari’s repeated refusal to sign amendments passed to check rigging in the election raises issues of his sincerity of purpose and has the capacity to trigger political unrest and violence, which can, in turn, truncate our hard-earned democracy. “The PPCO invites Nigerians to note that this is the fourth time President Buhari is withholding assent on the amendment, without any cogent reason following his rejection by Nigerians. “Nigerians can recall how the Buhari Presidency plotted to plunge the 2019 elections into a needless controversy by delaying the submission of the election budget to the National Assembly, presenting it at the time the legislators were commencing their annual vacation and asking for virement of funds already approved for development projects, instead of sending a fresh supplementary budget for the election.

    “It is unfortunate that Mr. President, in his desperation to hold on to power, has resorted to taking steps that are capable of destabilising our nation, just because the people are resolute in voting him out of office democratically. “It is also instructive to note that President Buhari is mortally afraid of the amendments because they essentially checked the All Progressives Congress (APC) rigging plans, including the use of underage and alien voters, vote-buying, alteration of results and manipulation of voter register; for which the APC and the Buhari Presidency have been boasting of winning the 2019 elections. “While urging the National Assembly to save our democracy and forestall an imminent electoral crisis, the PPCO also charges all political parties, other critical stakeholders and Nigerians in general to rise in the interest of our nation and demand the entrenching of rules and processes that will guarantee the conduct of free, fair and credible elections, as nothing short of that would be accepted.”

    It may affect deepening of democracy— CNPP The Conference of Nigeria Political Parties (CNPP) warned yesterday that the negative impact of not assenting to amendments to Nigeria’s Electoral Act as contained in the Electoral Act Amendment Bill (2018) before next year’s general elections will endanger the deepening of the country’s democracy. In its reaction to the rejection of the amendments to the bill by President Buhari, CNPP’s Secretary General, Chief Willy Ezugwu, said in a statement issued in Abuja that “there are indications that a cabal that resents credible electoral process is bent on frustrating the signing of any amendment to the electoral laws ahead of 2019.” It urged the National Assembly to save the country’s democracy and veto the President’s assent. According to the umbrella organisation of all registered political parties and political associations in the country, “it has become obvious that while President Buhari may ordinarily wish to ensure credible electoral process, some persons around him, which constitutes the cabal, resent free and fair contest and may have again deceived him into withholding assent to the bill.

    “The CNPP as a body conceived as a common platform for political parties in Nigeria shares common concerns of well-meaning Nigerians on issues bordering on rule of law, promotion and defence of democratic principles and practices. “Therefore, this singular rejection of the Electoral Act Amendment Bill (2018) by Mr. President is another repressive attempt to stem multi-party democracy and have completely removed the last hope of level playing ground for all political parties in the forthcoming elections. “It is ironical that President Muhammadu Buhari has been promising free and fair elections and at the same time refusing to give effect to the only instrument that would have proven his commitment to credible electoral process in 2019. “As one of the greatest beneficiaries of free and fair election from the last administration, we thought that Mr. President and the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) should have been at the forefront of promoting transparency in elections. “However, to save our democracy and to take Nigeria’s electoral process to the next level of free and fair polls, not the next level of rigging, we demand that the National Assembly, as a matter of urgency, override Mr. President’s veto with a two-third-majority. “As it stands, the only hope Nigerians have left now rests on the National Assembly’s willingness to do the needful at this trying moment in our democratic journey.”

  • Electoral Bill still alive, says presidency

    The presidency said yesterday that the 2018 Electoral Bill amendment passed by the National Assembly on July 24 and transmitted to President Muhammadu Buhari for assent on August 3 had not been killed.

    This is contrary to the impression created in a report that President Buhari has vetoed the Electoral Act amendment Bill 2018.

    After expunging some controversial provisions of the amendment Bill, including a new sequence of elections, the National Assembly forwarded the Bill to President Buhari for assent on August 3.

    Speaking on the status of the Bill, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters (Senate), Senator Ita Enang, noted that the vetoed Bill was the one sent to the President on June 27.

    He said the Electoral amendment Bill passed on July 24, the day the two chambers embarked on recess, was still very much alive.

    Enang said the vetoed Bill was the one with contentious “provisions and infractions” on provisions of the 1999 Constitution.

    He said: “The reported vetoed Bill was the one passed by the National Assembly and transmitted to the President for assent on June 27, duration of which in line with constitutional provisions expired on July 26, warranting the said veto.

    “Yes, an electoral Bill was vetoed or refused assent by the President, but not the last version of the 2018 Electoral Bill transmitted to the President for assent on the 3rd of this month that has just spent 11 days on his table and still having 19 days more for possible consideration and assent.”

    Besides the vetoed version of the 2018 Electoral Bill forwarded to the President on June 27 and vetoed on July 26 by President Buhari, the President has rejected the 2010 Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill 2018 forwarded to him in February.

    The President cited three reasons for vetoing the Bill, including the insertion of a new sequence of elections as Section 25(1) of the Bill.

    President Buhari noted that the inserted section violates Section 72 of the 1999 Constitution, which empowers INEC to fix dates of elections and see to its conduct in all ramifications.

    The National Assembly in the new Bill forwarded for president’s assent on August 3, deleted the controversial provisions kicked against by President Buhari.

    It is not clear why the National Assembly will transmit two bills on the same subjects for the President’s assent.

     

     

     

  • Presidency, Senate rift over electoral bill ‘ll be over soon – Boroffice

    The lawmaker repre-senting Ondo north senatorial district at the national assembly, Prof. Ajayi Boroffice, at the weekend, urged traditional rulers particularly in the four local government areas of Akokoland to support him in his bid to bring more developments to the area. Besides, he expressed optimism that the disagreement between the presidency and the Senate over the reordering of 2019 general election would soon be resolved.

    Boroffice spoke at Ikaram-Akoko in Akoko North West local government area of Ondo State, during the inauguration of a multi-million skill acquisition centre he constructed. Though he admitted that lawmakers are divided over the issue, he is optimistic that the controversies would soon be resolved in the interest of the nation. “After we passed the bill, some of us, including myself, had a second thought and we are thinking it should be reviewed,” he said.

    “This is a democratic society and you’re free to change your mind. This is not a crisis but a difference in opinion. The Senate has a way of resolving its internal differences,” he added. He said the House would explore all areas over the issue before taking a final stand and decision. On the delay in passing the 2018 budget, Boroffice explained that national assembly was working on the document and would pass the appropriation bill into law by end of this month.

    He noted that unemployment had become a cankerworm in the country, stressing that the skill acquisition centre would provide employment and turn many graduates to employers of labour. Boroffice said the skill centres would be duplicated in three more locations in the district. The Akala of Ikaram, Oba Andrew Momodu, eulogised Boroffice on behalf of other monarchs in Akoko Northwest.

  • Reps to re-transmit Electoral Bill to Buhari

    The House of Representatives said on Wednesday it would re-gazette and retransmit the Electoral Act Amendment Bill to President Muhammadu Buhari for his assent.

    The Bill was passed by the National Assembly in February and sent to the President for assent, but was returned by the Presidency to the lawmakers on Tuesday.

    In the letter announcing the return of the Bill to the lawmakers, Buhari explained why he refused to sign the document.

    He said the amendment to the Act was, among other issues, intended to undermine the functions of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    But, briefing journalists in Abuja, the Spokesman of the House of Representatives, Abdulrazak Namdas, said the House would not override the President’s power on the bill.

    Namdas, who is the Chairman, House Committee on Media and Public Affairs, said the lower chamber agreed with Buhari on two out of the three clauses that made him decline assent to the bill.

    According to him, the House will expunge the two areas from the electoral bill, make it go through the full circle of lawmaking and retransmit to the President for assent.

    “We, as a parliament have looked at the reasons given by the President on why he withheld his assent to the electoral bill.

    “However, we agree with the President on the first and second clauses but we disagree with the third clause where he claimed we have no powers to amend the Electoral Act.

    “That is why we will look at the bill again, correct those errors the President pointed out and send the bill back to him. If he still withholds his assent then we will know what next to do,” he said.

    NAN