Tag: national assembly
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Saraki, Dogara were wrong – APC Scandinavia
The All Progressives Congress (APC) Scandinavia Chapter has vehemently condemned the result of the elections held at the National Assembly on Tuesday which produced Senator Bukola Saraki as senate president.The APC Scandinavia Chapter condemned what it called the ‘manner and way, Saraki and his APC cohorts treacherously worked against the party to emerge the president of the 8th Senate and Honourable Yakubu Dogara as speaker of the House of Representatives respectively.“It is ignominy and derogatory drama that some APC members could pull together with PDP members to elect a PDP deputy Senate president and majority leader of the 8th Senate.“It is a clear pointer that some APC members are still having the mindset of Jonathan led administration in the present APC led administration,” noted Ayoola Lawal, National Coordinator, APC Scandinavia Chapter.According to Lawal, the chapter urges the national leadership of the party to weigh in and set the record straight by meting out the appropriate sanction and punishment against any individual or group for any anti-party activity.“This is a litmus test and a clear opportunity for the party leadership to send the clear signal that the party’s interest supersedes any individual ambition or interest and this is real change and business unusual,” he maintained. -
The leadership hold-up in the National Assembly
The emergence of the new leadership for the Senate and House of Representatives after the proclamation of the Eighth Assembly on Tuesday will remain controversial for a very long time. In its editorial, huhuonline.com says the elections were anything but dignifying.
If Nigerians ever thought that nobility found its way into the nation’s high offices with the conduct of the last general elections, the unfolding drama in the National Assembly, has banished that thought. If Nigerians ever hoped that high offices would ennoble their occupants, the disgraceful conduct of some All Progressives Congress (APC) lawmakers, who conspired to torpedo the election of the new leadership of the National Assembly, have indicated how misplaced that hope was. Rancorous and highly distracting, the fallout is a sickening reflection of the despicable depth of politicking in Nigeria and testifies to the incapacity of the governing class to even self-govern. This is bad for Nigerian democracy; this is not how serious nations do things. It is just as well that the APC has read the riot act against the clandestine election of Senator Bukola Saraki and Hon. Yakubu Dogara as Senate President and House Speaker respectively.
The bizarre development is also a damaging comment on the abysmal failure of the governing APC to meet the very basic requirements of unity of thought and action, discipline and coherence. This is best illustrated by the fact that the crisis is engineered by greed and ambition of some APC lawmakers, who refused to submit to the dictates of the party on whose platform they were elected. It is a shame that individuals in whose hands the destiny of Nigerians is placed can hold a rancor-free mock election into their own leadership and desperation for power would not allow graceful concession of victory to the winners! It speaks volumes about their credentials as democrats. Contrary to the desire of Nigerians who rallied behind the APC war cry of change, the APC has become another distraction, turning its internal troubles, fuelled by ego and vanity, into the trouble of Nigeria and its people. This is evidently a betrayal of trust and a great disservice to the nation.
Against the euphoria and hope for change, engendered by the last election, what transpired in the Senate was indicative of leadership dysfunction and a failure by the President (Muhammadu Buhari) to exercise control over his party’s caucus. The theatre of the absurd that unfolded on Tuesday saw Senator Bukola Saraki (APC, Kwara Central) sworn-in as President of the Eighth Senate, while Ike Ekweremadu (PDP, Enugu West) was sworn in as Deputy Senate President. Saraki’s swearing in by Clerk of the National Assembly, Mr. Salisu Maikasuwa, followed his nomination by Senator Ahmed Yerima (APC, Zamfara West) and seconded by Senator Dino Melaye (APC, Kogi West). Saraki was elected unopposed by 57 out of 108 senators-elect. Ekweremadu was sworn in as Deputy President of the Senate, after he polled 54 votes to defeat Senatr Ali Ndume (APC, Borno South), who polled 20 votes, while one vote was declared invalid. Fifty-one senators, including Senator Ahmed Lawan (APC, Yobe North), were absent when
Saraki was elected. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reported that Lawan alongside other supporters had allegedly gone for a meeting with the President aimed at resolving the impasse among the contenders.
The bizarre development has challenged sundry observers of Nigeria to query the meaning of politics in the country. If there ever will be a vote of “presidential distrust”, then this must be it. And it is truly regrettable. The APC leadership had endorsed Senator Lawan to be the next Senate President and Mr. Femi Gbajabiamila as House Speaker. It is an indication that the party moved to consolidate its election victory strategies (President (Daura), Katsina, Northwest), Vice President (Ikenne, Ogun, Southwest), Senate President (Yobe South, Northeast) and House Speaker (Lagos, Southwest). But it is a pity that Saraki and Dogara, propelled by greed, decided to subject themselves to a reversal of party discipline. For a man who decamped from the PDP to the APC; and to whom much had been given; much was expected. The election was anything but dignifying; not only did it drag Saraki’s reputation to a new low, it took down the reputation of the office he purports to hold as well. It’s a shame!
The debacle in the Senate is representative of corrupt, greedy, and conscienceless politicians, who gain power only to use it to serve selfish interests. The rapacity for political power is translated into avarice for filthy lucre and a sustained impoverishment of the citizenry. Indeed, the brazenness has become so widespread and has become something of a culture of governance.
In the face of the current debacle, the APC has been an untold embarrassment. Instead of calling its senators to order, it stands idly by, helplessly as its officials are used against each other by the PDP to break the party into factions. This is no time for prevarication; the APC must ensure Saraki’s election does not stand, or face irreparable reputational damage.
In jurisdictions where the current style of government is borrowed from, elections into leadership positions in the legislature are more or less procedural. The desperation, to the point of blackmail, with which the PDP endorsed aggrieved APC candidates for leadership positions in the legislature is however baffling. And the point must be made that, the practice in other climes does allow for direct involvement of opposition legislators only in the case of a coalition government. But as is the case with the Nigerian politicians, ideas are borrowed and implemented with all the wrong motives – self-interest, group interest and everything in-between.
By their defiant decision to feather their own nest, Saraki and his supporters have shown utter insensitivity to the prevailing conditions of the average citizen as well as a lawless arrogance of power. Given that this is a new government which took power less than two weeks ago, it is difficult not to conclude that their primary and foremost motive for public office is pecuniary benefit. This is a pity because rather than signalise a new and better dispensation, this action falls squarely in line with the attitude and behavior of most of their former counterparts in the Seventh Legislature. Indeed, if as it is popularly stated, democracy is a government of the people, by the people and for the people, then the Saraki and Dogara-led National Assembly chambers are defying Nigerian democracy.
It is a crying shame that so soon after general elections, Nigerians are being provoked by their so-called elected representatives. They cannot but wonder in amazement if these are the same persons that begged to serve and were duly obliged with a mandate to govern for the greatest good of, not the elected only, but the greatest number in the polity. If the behaviour of the rebel senators is a sign of things to come, then Nigeria may be in for rough times. And the blame will lie squarely upon the self-seeking political class. The hold-up by Saraki and his gang is an affront on the sensibility of Nigerians and creates the impression that the wrong people are in the National Assembly.
By this circuitous rigmarole to get elected after losing the straw poll, Saraki and Dogara reinforced the image of Nigeria as a country with deeply dysfunctional institutions where bizarre things can happen. The APC leadership is sufficiently outraged by this malign display of indiscipline and anti-party activities, to summon the courage to vow that the party will resolve the matter, using all constitutional and legal means available to it. This bare-faced exercise in self-indulgence should not be allowed to stand. Nigerian lawmakers need to be told that governance is about the people and not about their prebendal privileges. To assume this mindset is to misunderstand the goal of governance.
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Punish treacherous National Assembly members
SIR: The purported elections elected of both Senator Bukola Saraki as the Senate President and Yakubu Dogara as Speaker of the House of Representatives is a clear transgression of both the tenets of democracy and party politics. The APC must come down strongly to mete out sanctions and punishments against treacherous members that perpetrated this ugly charade at this early stage of the party’s life and history.
Party discipline must be out rightly enforced at this stage to prevent selfish speculators from derailing the dreams of the party. Outright expulsion is not out of place to send forceful messages to those that will hope to profit from the kind of treachery that produced this leadership of the National Assembly.
As a party and given the circumstances of our present politics, the APC stands no risk of being eroded by this treachery. Rather, we see the clear road to enforce discipline in the treacherous conduct of some members of the National Assembly. We see the need for the party to wield the big stick now to send a message home that treachery will not profit those who might want to cash in on similar circumstances to spite the party and cash personal benefits in the long run. It is certain that these sell outs are not members of the APC and we feel the party must weigh in now and discipline these betrayers.
We see this development as a blessing in disguise coming at the time it came for it will enable the party to do a thorough check of its membership and sieve the grain from the chaff so as not to allow those with heavy baggage to inadvertently drag Nigerians back to the PDP cesspool they overwhelmingly voted against in March. The party must respond to this challenge and weed itself of these traitors so as to pave way for party discipline.
As it stands now, those that connived with the PDP to ridicule and embarrass the APC must be shown the way to the PDP. The party must not blink or hesitate on this for the earlier the battle is drawn, the better for Nigeria and the APC. We call for comprehensive and far reaching sanctions on these treacherous members who are PDP but hiding under APC cloaks. We also charge the APC hierarchy to improvise legal means of removing this treacherous leadership of the National Assembly and instilling discipline on members of the party. This treachery must not be allowed to stand!
• Joe Igbokwe
Publicity Secretary,
Lagos APC.
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Workers, guests denied access to National Assemby
Workers and guests were on Tuesday morning denied entrance to National Assembly ahead of the inauguration of the 8th Assembly later today.The Senate is billed to conduct the exercise by the Clerk of the National Assembly before the House of Representatives.Workers and guests of lawmakers that were at the National Assembly early this morning could not access the complex as all access gates were locked.A security man that spoke to The Nation, though refused to offer any explanation for the lock out, he however said the gates would be opened by 7.00am.He said the lock out was on the orders of the Commissioner of Police.30 minutes after the said time, the gates were still locked.Journalists that found their ways into the complex before the lock out were driven out by security men that claimed that the inauguration would not take place.The entire area of the first gate has been taken over by armed policemen and Department of State Services (DSS).Though the area is calm, workers and guests of lawmakers that came for the inauguration were seen in groups discussing the lock out.No lawmakers is however sighted around the gate. -

APC governors meet over National Assembly leadership
•Osinbajo’s parley with federal lawmakers fails to hold
Governors elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) were locked in a meeting last night over today’s election of the leadership of the National Assembly.
Many of the governors, including Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode and Chairman of the Progressives Governors’ Forum and Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha, were spotted at the Imo State House venue. The outcome was being awaited at press time.
But the scheduled meeting between senators-elect and House of Representatives members-elect on APC’s platform could not hold.
The lawmakers who converged for the meeting left the venue in high spirits at about7.00pm when it was obvious that the Vice President would not make it to the venue.
It was gathered that National Chairman Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, who arrived at about 6. 20p.m, addressed the lawmakers. He appealed to them to allow the party and national interest over ride personal interest
Hon. Parry Iriase, representing Owan Federal Constituency (Edo State) said the legislators had already conducted a mock-election, pointing out that the meeting was to ensure unity among members.
He said: “We have met at various levels and we have been meeting. The essence of this meeting is for the Vice President to address all the lawmakers, including those who are not happy with the mock elections.
“For those of us in the House of Representatives, we believe that out of the about 209 elected APC members, we have over 70 per cent on our side and we are confident that when we get to the House, we will muster enough members to get the position of Speaker.”
Asked why they were dispersing before the arrival of the Vice President, he said: “We were told that the Vice President was coming to address us. But we have waited and he is not here. We are told he is airborne and that he will come. But we have other things we need to iron out before tomorrow.
“Nigerians should expect a united APC at the end of tomorrow because we are a family and we believe that this is democracy in action. We are confident that things will work out well.”
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National Assembly Nigerians deserve
SIR: As the Eighth National Assembly is being inaugurated today, Nigerians want to see blunt, wise, brave, intelligent, thorough and courageous lawmakers. Those who will not spare even their party members and colleagues who choose a wrong path to the detriment of the citizens; those that will be unmovable when they reach a conclusion about the right thing that ought to be done, those that have sense of details and deep knowledge of policy, especially given their roles as monitors of federal agencies.
Nigerians expect lawmakers that will not be the proponents of ‘take a bow and go’ during the screening of nominees for appointments; those that will consider congressional and committee hearings as critical part of their jobs, those that will not compromise committees and probe panels, those that won’t allow evasive witness to outwit them.
We need those that will fight for the working class, health care, education; those that will penalise discriminations and those that will shun playing religious, ethnic, tribal and regional cards for the betterment of our country.
As one of the highest paid legislators in the world, we expect various legislative committees to employ Professors, Ph.D holders, retired career civil servants, analysts and professionals as technical /special/legislative assistants who are more update with the current global challenges and trends. The change Nigerians are yearning for will not come to be without the dedication, patriotism and scarifies from the legislative arm of government.
- Ibrahim Muye Yahaya
Muye, Niger State.
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Group faults Mark over National Assembly’s budget
A transparency and budget awareness group, BudgIT, has described as false the statement created to the outgoing Senate President, David Mark, that the budget of the National Assembly is open and transparent.
Mark had said last Monday at a retreat organised for the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) National Assembly members-elect in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, that the budget of the National Assembly was not a secret.
But BudgIT, in a statement, said every release of the National Assembly budget in the last five years only presented a single, total figure, without stating how much of taxpayers’ funds went into the personnel cost of assembly’s members.
It faulted the position of the Senate President, saying it was at odds with transparency norms of any democratic nation.
The group said Mark was under an “erroneous” impression that a single blanket figure is sufficiently transparent enough.
“The Overwhelming desire of Nigerians is not Senator Mark’s definition of transparency, but a full, line-by-line declaration of expenditure, available to citizens across every literacy class as evidenced by our #OpenNASS campaign.”
The group said while it is clear that the National Assembly has N150 billion allocated to it every year in the last four years, there has been very little of details to show how the funds have been disbursed.
“Since 2011, a sum of N37.5bn on a quarterly basis was given to the National Assembly without any refunds or detail of expenses. This does not follow international practices in the United Kingdom (UK) or the United States (U.S.), where all expense sheets of parliamentarians are available added that it had also sent a Freedom of Information (FoI) request to the Clerk of the National Assembly requesting detailed breakdown of budget of N600 billion between 2011 to 2014, which was refused by its Legal Services Department, claiming the information is “personal, third party related and protected under Sections 14 and 15 of the Freedom of Information Act.”
This development, the group noted, necessitated its court action against the National Assembly and called for an immediate end to secrecy regarding the budget of the lawmakers.
“ We hereby ask Senator Mark to stop being economical with the truth and accept that he presided over a National Assembly that spent N600 billion with no records of accountability and worse still a NASS with no willingness to start becoming accountable to the same Nigerians Senator Mark purports to serve.
“For the umpteenth time, BudgIT demands a full breakdown of the NASS budget, so we can make it available to the public. The current vagueness of the NASS budget emboldens us to dispute Marks’s spurious claim that lawmakers have made sacrifices by cutting their budget from N150 billion to N115 billion; because there are no documents in the public domain to prove this.
“We insist that the NASS does not need more than N80 billion to run its operations and therefore challenge Senator Mark to open his books and allow Nigerians to be the judge of a situation where the lawmakers who spend N600 billion in four years amid widespread socio-economic turmoil can still claim to be making sacrifices.”
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NASS seeks removal of fuel subsidy
Members of the National Assembly on Wednesday urged President Muhammadu Buhari to prioritize the removal of fuel subsidy as a first step in the fight against corruption and sanitization of the economy.
The members, under the auspices of the National Assembly Anti-Money Laundering and Cyber Security Coalition, spoke during its valedictory session in Abuja.
The Chairman of the Coalition, Senator Aloysius Etok, in his address, said fuel subsidy as presently operated, only benefits a few rich persons at the detriment of the poor masses.
Etok noted that the country has so far lost over N2trillion to indiscriminate tax waivers, tax evasion and cyber crimes.
He commended Buhari for making the fight against cybercrime top priority of his administration.
He added that fighting tax evasion in the country is no longer a “choice” but a “necessity.”
Etok said, “With President Buhari’s administration which was inaugurated few days ago, it is generally believed that corruption and related crimes would be frontally tackled.
“We would expect, among other issues, the present government, to remove fuel subsidy which is seemingly a conduit-pipe for corruption.
“Setting up of corruption court for speedy trials of corrupt officials and tax evaders and overhauling of expatriate quota policy.
“Repositioning of the Free Trade Zones by giving specific tenure of not more than 10 years to enterprises to revert to normal company just like Singapore, Malaysia and other countries of the world.”
He lamented that the operation of FTZ in perpetuity without payment of taxes has resulted in revenue loss and poor infrastructure “which in most cases makes the government to become a tenant instead of a landlord.”
He said: “As Chairman of this body, I am aware of the dangers of tax evasion and indiscriminate tax waivers present to our economy.
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Constitution: Jonathan, NASS agree to settle dispute
President Goodluck Jonathan and the National Assembly have agreed to an amicable resolution of the dispute between them in relations to the last amendment to the Constitution.
Lawyer to Mohammed Adoke (SAN), Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), who sued for the President, Bayo Ojo (SAN) and lawyer to the National Assembly, Adegboyega Awomolo (SAN) confirmed before the Supreme Court today that parties met on Tuesday and agreed to some concessions.
They were silent on the nature of the concessions made by parties. They said terms of settlement will be endorsed by parties later on Wednesday and filed before the court, following which parties will be free to make details of the resolution public.
When the case was called, Ojo and Awomolo informed the court that parties met the previous day and made some concessions.
Ojo, who said the outcome of the meeting was yet to be communicated to the President by the AGF, and sought time for parties to finalise the terms of settlement and present it before the court for adoption, disagreed with Awomolo, who wanted the court to strike out the case outrightly, since parties have agreed to an out of court settlement.
Ruling, the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Mahmud Mohammed, who led a seven-man panel that is hearing the case, directed parties to file the terms of settlement by 4pm today and adjourned till then.
The President had withheld his accent to the Fourth Constitution Alteration Bill 2015, passed few months ago by the National Assembly and presented to him.
He hinged his refusal to sign the Bill on the ground that the procedure adopted by the Legislature for the passage was faulty.
He also queried some new provisions in the amended Constitution, which he felt were capable of reducing the power of President and conferring undue privileges on the Legislature.
Moved by threat by the National Assembly to override his veto, the President, acting through the AGF, filed the suit, asking the court to among others, declare the Fourth Constitution Alteration Bill unconstitutional and illegal.
