Tag: Senate Presidency

  • Lawan, Goje, Ndume, Adamu battle for Senate Presidency

    •PDP in fresh plot to pitch Dogara against Gbajabiamila as Speaker

    The race for the leadership of the 9th session of the National Assembly is on, just a week after the election into the legislative arm.

    Already in contention are the Senate Presidency and the Speakership of the House of Representatives.

    The Nation can now reveal that no fewer than five candidates are seeking to head the 9th Senate when it is inaugurated in June.

    They are the outgoing Senate Leader  Ahmad Lawan; a former Senate Leader,  Ali Ndume; a former Governor of Gombe State and the outgoing Chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriation,   Danjuma Goje; and the Chairman of the Parliamentary Support Group (PSG), ex-Governor Adamu Abdullahi.

    Governor Ibikunle Amosun of Ogun State who is also being touted as a possible candidate does not seem to stand a chance on account of zoning as he is from the same zone -Southwest- and same state -Ogun- as Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.

    He was suspended by the National Working Committee of APC on Friday for alleged anti party activities and recommended for expulsion by the party’s National Executive Council (NEC).

    For now, only the current Majority Leader of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, is the front runner in the race for the Speakership of the Green Chambers, although the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is allegedly hatching a plot to push outgoing Speaker Yakubu Dogara for a return to the seat.

    Dogara emerged in controversial circumstances in 2015 to clinch the post and sources said the PDP to which he now belongs may look for an alternative to Dogara in a desperate bid to stop Gbajabiamila, on the strength of his closeness to the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.

    PDP is banking on a likely split in the All Progressives Congress (APC) House Caucus to return Dogara as Speaker.

    But pressure is mounting on President Muhammadu Buhari to take charge to avert a repeat of the political scheming which led to the emergence of the outgoing President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki and Speaker Dogara in 2015 against the directive of the APC.

    The Nation also gathered that some forces in APC want party leaders to prevail on the President to give members of the National Assembly a free hand to elect their leaders.

    Results of the last  National Assembly elections released by the Independent National Electoral Commission(INEC), shows that the  APC won 65 of the 109  (about 59%) senatorial seats in the country, leaving the  PDP with  41 Senatorial seats (37%) and Young Progressives Party’s (YPP) one seat (1%).

    The APC has also won 200 of the 360 House of Representatives seats – leaving PDP with well over 100 seats. The final figure for the two major parties is still not clear as there are still unresolved election contests for several House of Representatives seats.

    Investigation by our correspondent revealed that although the APC has the majority of the seats in the Senate and House of Representatives, the emergence of the President of the Senate and the Speaker will still require the input of the PDP.

    It was learnt that the APC will need two-thirds majority in the Senate (about 73 votes) to be able to pass any bill.

    The APC   secured 61 seats in the Red Chambers in 2015 before the PDP infiltrated its ranks to secure the office of the Deputy President of the Senate for Senator Ike Ekweremadu.

    Following the development, all the candidates aspiring to lead the Senate and the House have started reaching out to elected PDP members.

    A top source, who spoke in confidence, said: “The horse-trading to lead the Senate and the House of Representatives has begun.

    “It is going to be a tough contest because all the candidates are ranking. For example, Ndume has been in the National Assembly for 16 years with eight years spent in the House and another eight years in the Senate. Lawan has been a Senator since 2007 with Adamu and Goje joining in 2011.

    “Some governors and APC stalwarts are gambling with the choice of Governor Ibikunle Amosun to lead the Senate as a bosom friend of the President. They have linked the suspension of the governor to the plot to install him as Senate President.

    “This jostling for power is despite of the fact that the APC is yet to define its zoning or power sharing formula. Those aspiring to lead the National Assembly are banking on the 2015 formula of the APC, which ceded the Senate Presidency to the Northeast and the Speaker to the Southwest, before the President of the Senate, Speaker Dogara and some APC lawmakers revolted.

    “The lack of zoning formula made ex-Governor Abdullahi Adamu from Nasarawa State in the Northcentral to join the race. As the chairman of the Parliamentary Support Group which resisted the outgoing Senate President to save President Buhari, he believes he should lead the Senate.

    Responding to a question, the source said: “All the candidates are already lobbying not only to have the Senate presidency and House Speaker zoned to their areas but to be anointed.

    “Unless it is carefully managed, the Senate may witness a repeat of the 2015 crisis which PDP took advantage of.”

    Sources said that although Gbajabiamila has a brighter chance to be the next Speaker, the PDP might still resist him.

    It was reliably gathered that the PDP might back Dogara’s return as Speaker by depending on a possible split in the APC caucus. It was also learnt that the PDP might throw mud at Gbajabiamila like it did in 2015 in order to stop the APC candidate.

    Another source said: “The PDP is working on another joker to checkmate Gbajabiamila’s ambition again. Some PDP leaders are uncomfortable with Gbajabiamila, who is a political son of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu who worked harder to ensure the defeat of PDP at the presidential poll.

    “PDP actually wants Dogara back in line with its pre-election plans. The opposition can only succeed if the APC Caucus in the House is disunited.

    “The only challenge APC is facing is about likely imposition of the Senate President and the Speaker. Most of the candidates want the race left open equitably.

    “This is why some APC leaders are pleading with President Muhammadu Buhari and party leaders to meet and work out an equitable power sharing module.”

    The source added: “I think in the next two months, the game will be more interesting. If Dogara’s candidacy does not fly, PDP might sponsor another ranking member from the Southwest to be the Speaker.”

    A source in government said: “President Buhari has really not shown interest now on those who will lead the National Assembly. Maybe he has a mindset but he is yet to discuss with party leaders.”

    Lawan is spending his 2oth year in the National Assembly having being elected into the House of Representatives between 1999 and 2003 before becoming a Senator.

    Set up zoning mechanism for NASS leadership to avoid 2015 scenario, Nabena tells APC

    The Deputy National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Mr. Yekini Nabena, yesterday asked the leadership of the party to set in motion machinery for the zoning and selection of preferred principal officers of the incoming 9th National Assembly.

    In a statement in Abuja, he said this was necessary to avoid a repeat of the crisis that engulfed the party in 2015 over the struggle for the leadership of the legislative arm.

    Describing the National Assembly as strategic to APC’s change agenda for the country, he said President Muhammadu Buhari’s direct involvement and views on the matter “will be very important as the party works around the zoning and selection arrangements for principal NASS officers.”

    He added:  “The Peoples Democratic Party has lost the presidential election and they have now adopted a plan B from their infamous Dubai strategy meeting.

    “The plan is to hijack the incoming National Assembly leadership by repeating their heinous coup in the previous Assembly.

    “The APC must prevent a repeat of a situation where despite our overwhelming majority in the outgoing 8th Senate and House of Representatives, its leadership was hijacked by saboteurs and their opposition PDP collaborators.”

  • More pressure on Saraki to quit Senate presidency

    APC, North’s youths, Sagay demand resignation

    ‘I won’t descend into gutter’

    Senate President Bukola Saraki was under more pressure yesterday to quit his seat.

    The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) from which he defected to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) delivered a blistering attack on him. Legal expert Prof. Itse Sagay said he should go – as a matter of honour. Some youths in the North marched on the party’s secretariat in Kaduna, demanding Saraki’s resignation.

    The APC said in a statement by National Publicity Secretary Yekini Nabena that the Senate President had been surrounded by controversies since “hijacking” the position in 2015, adding that the Senate must remove him.

    Nabena said all over the world, the leadership of the legislature is provided by the political party with majority members, pointing out that Saraki capitalised on the absence of many members of the APC to connive and conspire with members of the opposition PDP to become Senate President, trading off the Deputy Senate President to the PDP.

    Describing Saraki’s action as “political betrayal” and “treachery”, which even the devil would be envious of, Nabena said even after defecting to the opposition PDP, and with APC still in the majority in the Senate, Saraki still has the impudence to present himself as the Senate President.

    The statement reads: “In every democratic country, the position of the Senate President is one of the highest political offices one can attain. It is a position reserved for the best of the best, experienced and exemplary politicians who by their character and conduct in public offices, the younger generation look up to as role models.

    “In terms of exemplary personage, the reverse is the case in respect of the current Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, who has been a dismal failure and has been involved in one controversy or the other – budget padding, filibustering, legislative rascality, sabotage of matters of national interest, among other criminalities too numerous to mention.

    “Having suffered under the 16-year misrule of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Dr. Saraki will go down in our country’s history as the worst Senate President Nigeria has had the misfortune to have.

    “Since his usurpation of the coveted seat, achieved through a wicked conspiracy with members of the opposition PDP, it has been from one controversy to another – the Code of Conduct trial for false declaration of assets and conspiracy with his deputy to fraudulently alter the rules of the Senate.

    “All over the world, the leadership of the legislature is provided by the political party with majority members. But Dr. Saraki would in the absence of many members of his former party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), connive and conspire with members of the opposition PDP to emerge Senate President, and in the process trade off the Deputy Senate President position to the opposition PDP – a political betrayal and treachery even the devil would be envious of.

    “Even at this time, he has defected to the opposition PDP, and with APC still in the majority in the Senate, Dr. Saraki still has the impudence to present himself as the Senate President. Political ambition should be made of nobler stuff.

    “The Senate must do everything possible to put Dr. Saraki where he rightly belongs – the back seat. He is definitely not a fit and proper person to preside over the country’s upper and revered legislative house.

    “A man who betrayed his father, sister (many times), his party PDP in 2014, the APC in 2015 by conspiring with opposition PDP senators to emerge Senate President, APC administration by sabotaging the executive and defecting to the PDP in 2018 has no character, principles, values and integrity.

    “His only interest is Bukola Saraki, Bukola Saraki and Bukola Saraki. The question is not IF he will defect again from PDP if Bukola Saraki’s interest is not served, but WHEN he will do so. Such mean men are not interested in the Nigeria of our dreams.”

    The Senate President in a statement by his media adviser Yusuph Olaniyonu, said: “We can’t descend into the gutter with these characters. Apparently they have not recovered from the shock of their Tuesday’s failed attempt to subvert democracy.”

    Saraki had at a news conference on Wednesday rejected the call to quit, saying: “I was not given the seat of the Senate President. I was elected by members.

    “Secondly, according our Constitution, members of the National Assembly who are elected can elect their leaders. It does not say you have to come from a political party.”

    He added: “The day, two thirds of our members feel they do not have confidence in our leadership, we will gracefully bow out.

     

     

  • Apathy cost Southeast Senate presidency, says Moghalu

    Apathy cost Southeast Senate presidency, says Moghalu

    The National Auditor of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief George Moghalu has said that the Southeast could not clinch the Senate presidency slot because of the zone’s apathy to politics.

    Moghalu was speaking in Umuahia, the Abia State capital, during an event to officially welcome a group of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) defectors to the APC.

    Moghalu attributed the leadership squabble in the Senate to the inability of the southeast to vote Senator Chris Ngige of Anambra State into a position that was ceded to the Southeast even before the 2015 election was concluded.

    “I remembered clearly when we started supporting APC; nobody gave us a chance to succeed. We were just about eight; Ogbonnaya Onu, Rochas Okorocha, Senator Chris Ngige, Senator Osita Izunaso, George Morghalu, Hon. Emma Onyeukwu and Chineneye Nyerere…And because of our apathy to politics, the thing cost us a serious problem. If we had a senator elected on the platform of this party, today we will have senate president because it was conceded to us even before the election, but since we left a vacuum, we have nobody to be there and that is why the seat has been under contention and that is what created the crisis in the entire structure of the national assembly because we had nobody.

    “If we had voted one of our sons who contested this election as a senator the story will be different and I want to imagine what would have happened if the Igbo had produced the senate president in an APC government. Today what we have to do is to lament”, Moghalu stated.

    The National auditor who called for more support from the members of the party in the state and the entire southeast said it was time that they (APC) members became serious with political activities in the region as they aspire to produce the president of the country in 2023.

    “APC today needs the support and involvement of every Igbo man and woman. If you don’t say you are, nobody will say thou art. We need to come and take over the structures of the party because we desirous of producing a president of Igbo extraction. The laws of natural justice stands in favour of Igboman come 2023.

    “The southwest has done 8years of the presidency before it went to the north briefly for 2years and went back to the southsouth that has done 6years.

    “It has returned back to the north, the maximum they will do is 8years and thereafter, we have every right to claim that it is our turn. My brothers and sisters, power is not given, power is taken. If we sit down and expect that after 8years they will put it in an envelope to come and deliver it in Enugu, we are wasting our time.

    “I have no apologies to preach political hijacking so long as that I am going to be a beneficiary. My appeal therefore is that this is the time to hijack the structure of the APC across the entire southeast and the only way we can do this is for us to be involved in the party and elect individuals into positions where they can negotiate”.

    Moghalu also used the opportunity to reinstate the concern of the Federal Government on the zone and therefore disabuse the insinuations making rounds from the opposition that the party was anti-igbo.

    He therefore assured the new entrants that the party would give them the necessary support they needed and asked them to be part of the change the APC was preaching.

    Speakers among the defectors including Senator Chris Adighije, Chief Tony Ukasoanya, Eze Chikamamnayo (former Abia Commissioner of Information), Senator Ifeanyi Okoroafor said that they left their former party because of the impunity that were going on there and promised that they were going to help APC garner support and capture Abia State.

    In his speech, the chairman of the party in the state, Hon. Donatus Nwankpa described their defection as a sign that APC was the only choice the southeast need to embrace if the zone was to move out from the doldrums the PDP led administration has thrown the state and the southeast zone in their 16 years of rulership.

    Nwankpa described them as people who were capable of taking the party beyond where they met it and urged Abians to keep supporting the party.

  • The untold story of PDP’s coup behind Saraki’s Senate presidency

    The untold story of PDP’s coup behind Saraki’s Senate presidency

    Despite some reservations, the new leaders of the Eighth National Assembly emerged yesterday. Managing Editor YUSUF ALLI revisits some of the intrigues behind the choice of Bukola Saraki and Ike Ekweremadu as leaders of the Red Chamber. 

    SAN faults process

    A Senior advocate, Robert Clarke, has faulted the process that produced a new leadership for the Senate yesterday.
    Clarke, who spoke on Channel Television, asserted that what the senators did amounted to disenfranchising 51 other members at a time they were not sworn in.
    He noted that the rule of the Senate that the senators quoted to support their claim on quorum formation was equally wrong.
    He called on the leadership of the All Progressives Congress (APC) to fight the matter in court.

    After two weeks of horse-trading, lobbying and outright conspiracy, the battle for the soul of the Senate climaxed in a coup d’etat by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) that led to the emergence of ex-Kwara State Governor Bukola Saraki as the President of the Eighth Senate and the return of Chief Ike Ekweremadu as the Deputy Senate President for the third term. With a configuration of 59 All Progressives Congress (APC) senators to PDP’s 49, the development saw the PDP regaining a little rebound from the devastating defeat it suffered in the hand of the rival APC on March 28 and April 11 elections.

     

    Countdown to inauguration

     

    Prior to the inauguration, there had been bitter straw polls in the APC which led to the selection of Ahmed Lawan and George Akume as the party’s candidates for the Office of the Senate presidency and and Deputy Senate Presidency.  Former Minority Leader Femi Gbajabiamila and Tahir Monguno also emerged as the party’s preferred candidates for the leadership of the House of Representatives. The outcome of the shadow elections created rumpus in the party with those defeated threatening to defy the APC leadership. Worried by the threats, APC National Chairman John Odigie-Oyegun, said: “I want to appeal to APC members of the National Assembly, both Senate and the House of Representatives, to please respect the party, the views of the party and the decision that they themselves took in selecting the persons that will be presented to the National Assembly as presiding officers.”

     

    Buhari’s neutrality

    lacuna and G-7 meeting

     

    Despite the choice of National Assembly leaders being a mixture of party politics and legislative duty, the aloofness, or the perceived neutrality of the President allowed the ‘fight’ wthin APC to fester until it went of hand. Until President Muhammadu Buhari left for the G-7 meeting last Friday, the jostle for the Senate Presidency was still an open race between Saraki and Lawan. But pro-Saraki loyalists used the opportunity to work on strategists, friends, associates and relations of the President on why Lawan is loyal to APC National Leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.

    A respected source said: “In what appeared like a brainwash, they warned these people not to allow Tinubu to form a ring around the President. They even attributed some concocted statements to Tinubu to create a gulf between him and the President. The overall target was to instigate the relations and associates of the President to influence him. And these propagandists spoke with those who have the ears of the President.

    In order to checkmate Femi Gbajabiamila, who enjoyed considerable followership, loyalists of the new Speaker of the House of Representatives dug into archives and recruited some elements to approach the court to hang moral issues on his neck over his alleged disrobing in the United States of America (USA). And the last straw that broke the Carmel’s back was the twilight propaganda among members from the Northwest, Northeast and Northcentral that Gabajabiamila is not a Muslim as being claimed. It was therefore not a surprise that Dogara, who could barely garner 56 votes among his APC colleagues went on to clinch the speakership position with 182 votes yesterday.

    The hefty funding of the anti-APC project by some PDP governors, stalwarts and those who served as ministers under the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan assisted in deepening the crisis over the scramble for power between the camps of Saraki and Lawan.

    Huge funds were spent to camp and cater for potential voters such that those otherwise rated as conscientious lawmakers sold out in the end. “I think the highest bidder had an upper hand, “said a Senator from the Northwest. The target of these PDP moneybags is to prove that the APC is not prepared for governance at all.”

    One major issue that dominated the pre-inauguration politics of the National Assembly leadership was the alleged marginalisation of members of the New PDP which defected from the PDP to the APC in the power-sharing formula of the Buhari administration. President Buhari’s delay in appointing key aides like the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and Chief of Staff also fuelled the suspicion of the New PDP elements that they might be completely edged out. These fears were shared with new senators and representatives leading to leaders of the New PDP taking their destiny in their hands by hijacking the Senate and House leadership. By the time some APC governors convened in Abuja on Monday, it was difficult and too late to salvage the situation

     

    Botched meeting with Buhari

     

    Against all predictions of a possible neck-to-neck contest between Saraki and the former Chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Accounts, Sen. Ahmed Lawan, the PDP played a smart one on the ruling APC to “install” Saraki. The day began with suspense and a water-tight security siege on the National Assembly. The militarisation left most mobile phones of Senators and members-elect, guests, workers and journalists buzzing, seeking intervention on how to gain entrance into the sprawling Assembly Complex. No one was sure the election of the principal officers of the Senate would hold. In ensuing  confusion, a terse statement by the APC National Publicity Secretary Lai Mohammed inviting the Senators and members-elect for a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari at the International Conference Centre (ICC) provided some relief. The invitation was said to be at the behest of the President. The summons however provided the PDP an opportunity to act faster to install Saraki.

    While 51 pro-Lawan Senators relocated to the ICC, Abuja for an emergency audience with the President, 57 Senators (mostly PDP) hurriedly left for the Senate Chamber for the inauguration of the Eighth Senate. The bewildered 51 APC Senators, who were waiting endlessly for the President in ICC, watched the proceeding of the inaugural session from a nearby TV box.  Before the 51 APC Senators could race down the five-kilometre stretch from ICC to the Assembly Complex, Saraki had emerged as an unopposed candidate. To add insult to injury, President Muhammadu Buhari neither showed up nor sent apology to the stranded Senators at the ICC. They were left at the mercy of troops from the Brigade of Guards, who had already been deployed in the centre ahead of the supposed arrival of the President.

     

    Conspiracy and the

    Buhari factor

     

    According to investigation, the initial plan by the President was to delay the inauguration of the Senate by one hour for fence mending by APC members of the National Assembly and re-strategise on how to stop the PDP from capitalising on the crack in the party.  If the strategy had walked, the inauguration would have held at about 11am.

    A highly-placed source, who spoke in confidence, said: “The President had actually made up his mind to be at the ICC but there were feelers that some associates and strategists prevailed on him not to dabble in the selection of the Assembly leadership because he will portray himself as an inconsistent leader having promised not to interfere in the internal affairs of the Legislature.

    “Probably acting pro-Saraki’s script, these associates/ strategists made the President to realise that his last-minute intervention would amount to dancing to the tune of one man: Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.

    “The joker probably made sense to the President and he chose to abandon the meeting at the ICC. Unfortunately, there was no communication between his office and the 51 APC Senators who heeded his invitation.

    “It was around 10.35am, we saw that the inaugural session was already on and Saraki had been elected. If we were to be defeated, it should have been done on the floor.”

     

    A battle of forces at play

     

    The forces behind Saraki were as intimidating as those for Lawan. These include: former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, some of the former G-5 governors (like Rabiu Kwankwaso, Aliyu Wammako), who defected from the PDP. Others are former governors Ahmed Sani Yerima (Zamfara), Danjuma Goje (Gombe), Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom), Theoodore Orji (Abia) as well as governors Aminu Waziri Tambuwal (Sokoto), Ayo Fayose (Ekiti), Dr. Rahman Mimiko (Ondo) and Nyesom Wike (Rivers).

    As for Lawan, he pulled heavyweights from the APC National Working Committee (NWC), Asiwaju Tinubu, Chief Bisi Akande, APC governors, ex-governors Abdullahi Adamu (Nasarawa), Bukar Abba Ibrahim (Yobe and Adamu Aliero (Kebbi).  They include: senators Kabir Gaya, Ajayi Borrofice, Gemade Barnabas, Adamu Abdullahi, Jide Omoworare, Abu Ibrahim, Bayero Nafada, Gbenga Ashafa, Sola Adeyeye, Abdullahi Abubakar Gumel, Suleiman Hunkuyi, Ahmed Barau Jibrin and Isiaka Adeleke.

    Others are: senators Nazif Suleiman, Nafada Ibrahim, Mrs. Oluremi Tinubu, Shehu Sani, Solomon Olamilekan, Kabiru Marafa, Fatai Buhari, Mrs. Monsurat Sunmonu, Soji Akanbi, Bala Na’Allah, Umaru Kurfi, and Mustapha Sani.

     

    Last-minute deal

    between Saraki and PDP

     

    The last-minute deal between the PDP and Saraki was sealed at the residence of former Senate President David Mark in Abuja. At the meeting which held Sunday night were PDP Senators and governors. The meeting lasted till the wee hours of Monday. The session was tense on who to support for the leadership of the Senate and House of Representatives.

    A top source said: “At the end of the day, we could not agree on bloc votes for any of the candidates for the Senate and House of Representatives. In fact, Governor Ayodele Fayose pleaded with party leaders to see the battles as one between PDP and Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. He begged the party to ‘clip’ Tinubu’s wings.

    “But some senators-elect warned Fayose against going personal. They queried the morality behind PDP supporting candidates who defected from the party to APC. They alleged that their defection led to the defeat of PDP at the Centre.

    “The governors also split on who to back for the National Assembly offices. At the end of the day, we could not reach a consensus on casting our votes en bloc for any of the candidates for the leadership of the National Assembly. I can tell you that everyone was on his own.”

    Notwithstanding, the PDP senators later opted to vote on Monday night on who to back in the Senate. In the wee hours of yesterday, 28 opted for Saraki/Ekweremadu ticket and 17 consented to Ahmed Lawan/George Akume ticket. The same voting strength was taken to the inaugural session of the Eighth Senate.

    A source added: “We were at a crossroads on whether to forgive Saraki for defecting to the APC or paying back the APC in its own coins for making Aminu Tambuwal, the Speaker of the Seventh Senate, to defect in defiance of the PDP directive. We basically went for vengeance because all is fair in politics.

    “Our assumption is that were it not for mismanagement of PDP crisis, the likes of Saraki are PDP in spirit and APC by circumstance. When there is realignment of forces, we believe we can still work together.”

    But findings confirmed that the choice of Saraki was with a cost. The new President of the Senate was ‘forced’ to sacrifice his favourite for the Office of the Deputy President of the Senate, Sen. Ali Ndume, who was the arrowhead of Saraki’s campaign in the North. Although Ndume got a wind of the plot on Monday evening, he dismissed it as “distracting and impossible for Saraki to dump him.”

    Another source added: “Till the last minutes, they sold a dummy to Ndume that he will be Deputy Senate President of the Senate if Saraki gets the ticket.

    “But as soon as Saraki won, Ekweremadu was nominated for delivering bloc votes of the Senators-elect from the Southeast in collaboration with Senator Andy Uba.”

    Five reasons Saraki emerged as Senate President

     

    •Gang up against Tinubu and the Southwest.

    The outcome of the results of the election of leaders of the National Assembly showed a deep-seated hatred for Asiwaju Tinubu. Some APC leaders were said to be angry that President Buhari at every forum had always acknowledged Tinubu as if he was the only hero of change in the country. A few ones assumed that the President was conceding too much to Tinubu and that former Lagos governor must be cut to size. Others also felt that with the Office of the Vice President, the Southwest has got more than its fair share of power. The amalgam of forces merely used Saraki as the springboard.

    •Sheer politics of betrayal.

    Many, who won tickets into the National Assembly on the goodwill of Tinubu, opted to betray him. They just keyed into the plot against Tinubu without weighing the consequences.

    •Absence of a power-sharing formula in APC

    The refusal of the APC leadership to address this important index of power-sharing formula deprived its National Assembly members of the much-needed unity. If there had been an acceptable formula in place, the situation may not degenerate to this extent. What Saraki did was to be tactical in conceding the Deputy Senate President to the Southeast which is almost relegated to the background by the Buhari administration.

    •Emerging politics of realignment.

    Saraki’s election has signposted the looming realignment of forces between some APC and PDP leaders in the race to 2019. Ekweremadu has been saddled with the responsibility of repositioning the PDP and he is already reaching out to aggrieved APC leaders.  In christening their group, pro-Saraki forces branded it as ‘Senators of Like Minds’. The successful alliance between PDP and loyalists of Saraki might be the beginning of what the nation should expect in the next few months. According to sources, one of the sections which the Eighth National Assembly might review is the one which makes defection unlawful. This will enable APC members in the National Assembly to romance the PDP, or engage in anti-party activities. Some APC leaders saw some hope in the proposed realignment and embraced Saraki.

    •Saraki’s antecedents

    The records of Saraki has built a huge political network for him. The mileage includes being a former governor, a former Chairman of the Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF), his role in the administration of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, experience as a former presidential endowment with charitable war chest and now a two-term Senator.

     

    Consequences of

    PDP’s coup for Buhari

     

    Responding to the emergence of leadership in the Senate, Buhari said “though a constitutional process has somewhat occurred”, he would have preferred that the wish of the APC leadership was respected on the choice of candidates. The agenda of PDP in supporting Saraki smacked of “vengeance.” The coup is a signal of of likely antagonism, criticisms and reckless opposition politics that Buhari should expect henceforth. At least, President Buhari will be kept on his toes by the PDP if he has the political temperament to withstand it. The PDP is ready to hold him responsible for all his campaign promises and he might not have a rest of mind until he delivers.

     

    What becomes of Saraki’s tenure? Will there be peace in the National Assembly?

     

    Since yesterday, the debate has focused on the legality of the election of the President of the Senate by 57 Senators, the Speaker and other principal officers of the National Assembly. Prof. Auwalu Yadudu, who was a former Special Adviser on Legal Matters to the late Head of State, Gen. Sani Abacha, said the election of Saraki was illegal and unconstitutional. The Clerk to the National Assembly, Salisu Maikasuwa, however, said “37 Senators were needed to form a quorum.” The Constitution says any member of the National Assembly can lead any of the chambers with votes from one-third of members.

    For a National Assembly that has been bankrolled from its first assignment, President Buhari may as well forget his anti-corruption agenda. A case of “money for hand, back for ground cannot be ruled out.”

    But the APC raised moral issue on the emergence of Saraki.

    In a statement by its spokesman Mohammed, the APC said: “APC decried a situation in which some people, based on nothing but inordinate ambition and lack of discipline and loyalty, will enter into an unholy alliance with the very same people whom the party and indeed the entire country worked hard to replace and sell out the hard won victory of the party.

    ‘’There can be no higher level of treachery, disloyalty and insincerity within any party,’’ the party said, vowing to resolve the matter using all constitutional and legal means available to it.”

    Although the APC has directed the ‘dribbled’ 51 Senators to go to the Senate for inauguration, the nation might have not heard the last word on Saraki’s emergence and others. The PDP coup might lead to a change of leadership or distress in the Senate and House of Representatives. The extent to which Saraki is able to manage the aftermath of the election will determine his political altitude. But certainly, a counter-plot against his presidency is not unlikely by the PDP or even APC.

     

    Is APC’s future bleak?

     

    The tone of the reaction of APC suggested a looming crisis ahead. The APC is already threatening sanctions against some of its chieftains.

    It said: “Senator Bukola and Hon. Dogara are not the candidates of the APC and a majority of its National Assembly members-elect for the positions of Senate President and House Speaker. The party duly met and conducted a straw poll and clear candidates emerged for the posts of Senate President, Deputy Senate President and Speaker of the House of Representatives, supported by a majority of all Senators-elect and members-elect of the House of Representatives. All National Assembly members-elect who emerged on the platform of the party are bound by that decision.

    ‘’The party is supreme and its interest is superior to that of its individual members. ‘Consequently, the APC leadership is meeting in a bid to re-establish discipline in the party and to mete out the necessary sanctions to all those involved in what is nothing but a monumental act of indiscipline and betrayal to subject the party to ridicule and create obstacles for the new administration.”

    Unless an urgent reconciliation is put in place, the anti-party activities which led to Saraki’s Senate Presidency might cause a prolong crisis in the party. And with plans by the APC leadership to enforce discipline, some leaders might call it quit with the party.

    Will Buhari now assert himself?

    Even if President Buhari is not interested in a second term, he owes the APC a duty to keep the party intact. The coup in the National Assembly by PDP is a litmus test for his leadership prowess. The President may need to assert himself by playing a fatherly role to reunite his political platform that is in tatters. When some leaders met with the President after the coup in the Senate, he was said to “be hollow” without a solution to the crisis at hand. The time to act is now.

     

  • Senate presidency: How senators may vote

    Senate presidency: How senators may vote

    This week, the Senate  will choose its leadership. The race has witnessed a lot of intrigues. In this report, Assistant Editor, Onyedi Ojiabor and Sanni Onogu in Abuja report on how the senators are likely to vote for the senate president’s position

    This week, the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria will chose its leadership. The race has witnessed a lot of intrigues. In this report, Assistant Editor, Onyedi Ojiabor and Sanni Onogu in Abuja report on how the senators are likely to vote for the senate president’s position

    The race for the President of the Eight Senate in Nigeria, which has witnessed a lot of intrigues, entered the final curve on Thursday with the adjournment of the Seventh Senate sine die.

    Maneuvering and horse-trading for the exalted position heightened even at the valedictory session that the upper chamber conducted to mark the end of the Seventh Senate.

    The out-going Senate President, David Mark, however ruled out Senators from the fold of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) from the race.

    Mark tactically reminded PDP Senators that the leadership of the Eight Senate would be composed mainly of Senators from the All Progressives Congress (APC) platform as members of the majority party in the Senate.

    Mark’s remarks may have foreclosed the clandestine moves by some PDP Senators to form part of the Body of Principal Officers in the Eight Senate.

    PDP Senators angling for prominent positions in the Eight Senate are said to have been unhappy with the unexpected pronouncement by Mark that they should perish the idea of becoming part of the leadership of the Eight Senate.

    Senator Ahmed Ibrahim Lawan who represents Yobe North Senatorial District and Senator Abubakar Bukola Saraki of Kwara Central Senatorial District have already emerged as front runners for the plum position of President of the Senate.

    Two groups, Senate Unity Forum, led by Senator Barnabas Gemade and Like Minds Senators with Senator-elect Dino Melaye as its spokesperson, have also emerged to champion the aspiration of Lawan and Saraki respectively.

    While Gemade’s Senate Unity Forum has thrown its weight behind Lawan’s aspiration, Melaye’s Like Minds Senators proclaimed Saraki as its choice for Senate President.

    With the inauguration of President Muhammadu Buhari’s government on May 29, the question in political circles across the country is who will succeed David Mark as President of the Eight Senate?

    There have been claims and counter claims by the Senate Unity Forum and the Like Minds Senators about who, between Lawan and Sakari, has greater number of APC senators backing him.

    While the Senate Unity Forum projected the necessity for unity in the upper chamber even after the election of principal officers of the Eight Senate and to ensure that the rising standard of the Senate is sustained, Like Minds Senators on the other hand have been harping on being independent minded in choosing the presiding officers of the Senate.

    Gemade made bold to state in Abuja that the Senate Unity Forum is made up of many Senators from all geo-political zones of the country united in one common course to actualise the Senate Presidency of Senator Ahmed Lawan and Deputy Senate Presidency of Senator George Akume.

    Like Minds Senators on the other hand, claimed to be prepared to fight what they called “imposition from outside” and vowed to ensure the actualisation of Saraki’s Senate Presidency with an unnamed Deputy Senate President from the North-East geopolitical zone.

    What is not clear is whether the group of Like Minds Senators wanted to go it all alone without the slightest input from the party that gave them the platform to emerge as Senators.

    It is also not obvious what the relationship of the APC senators and their party would look like if the lawmakers are left to completely dictate what happens in the Senate chamber without the party’s guidance.

    An insider source, apparently worried by the development, wondered aloud, “Where in the world, maybe in a wonder land like ours, will the parliament work without contribution from the ruling party?”

    PDP senators-elect are also not left out of the unfolding frenzy. The opposition lawmakers are known to have been working covertly to actualise the election of their preferred candidate.

    Top on the agenda of PDP senators-elect retreat in Port-Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, was said to be how to ensure that the opposition lawmakers voted as a bloc during the election of the Senate President.

    Observers believe that with 49 Senators in its fold, PDP senators are determined to play a pivotal role in deciding who will be the next President of the Senate.

    The unpredictable scenario may have informed the covert and overt scheming by the front runners in the Senate Presidency race to gain the support of greater number of PDP lawmakers.

    Although PDP Senators are considered the beautiful brides in the race, APC senators with their simple majority of 59 senators, have the ace.

    APC as a political party is also fully aware of the scheming and is not sleeping over the matter. The leadership has therefore been meeting with the contestants or their supporters within the party.

    Parts of the outcome of such meetings are the arguments of both the Lawan group and that of Saraki. For example, the Lawan group is believed to have convinced the APC leadership that the choice of the next Senate President should be primarily based on the highest ranking senator amongst the contestants. They also argued that the zone that garnered the highest number of votes for APC, aside the North-West, which has already produced the country’s president, should be favoured to produce the Senate President. Added to these, they argued, is the need to compensate the North-East, which has never produced a top legislative officer like Senate President since 1999.

    If these issues are finally adopted as the deciding factors, Lawan will emerge the Senate President.

    However, supporters of Senator Saraki, are arguing that if the issue of ranking was such a primary factor, where was Lawan when Senator George Akume became the Minority Leader in the out-going senate? A source however confided to The Nation that when that question was asked in one of the crucial meetings with the party leadership, the Saraki group was informed that Akume emerged the Minority Leader then because he was an ACN senator as his party (ACN) has more senators in the Red Chamber than Lawan’s ANPP.

    Also, the Lawan and Saraki’s groups are not agreed on the mode of the primary election that should be adopted. While Saraki’s group wanted secret balloting, Lawan’s group preferred open balloting.

    Besides the mode of the primaries and other areas of disagreement, the Saraki supporters are said to have demanded that the Kwara State senator should be preferred as a way of compensating the New-PDP members that merged with others to form APC. That suggestion, according to our source, was roundly criticized when it got to the hearing of the APC leadership. It was said that the leaders of the party unanimously frowned at such suggestions, as they admonished and pointed out to the canvassers that APC is now a family, a single political party and not one made up of segments.

    While these debates are ongoing and supporters of the two leading contestants are wooing senators to file behind their candidates, we gathered that one of the groups has been spending money lavishly with the hope of inducing senators to vote for their candidate.

    We gathered that President Muhammadu Buhari is not happy with the monetary dimension of this contest. Our source said the president’s attitude is that the contest for the Senate President is an intra-party affair; “so he wondered why people should go to that length in such a family affair.”

     

    Voting pattern

    State-by-state findings of the likely voting pattern of the senators showed that the race for the position of senate president is still too close-to-call.

     

    South-East

    In the South-East geopolitical zone, Abia State with three PDP senators, only one, Senator-elect, Mao Ohuabunwa, is said to have decided to back Saraki.

    The other two Senators, Theodore Orji and Enyinnaya Abaribe are said to be undecided. Observers however say that Abaribe’s closeness to Lawan may push him to vote for the Yobe lawmaker.

    In Imo State also with three PDP Senators, Senators Hope Uzodinma, Samuel Anyanwu and Achonu Athanasius Nneji are said to be undecided and may vote according to their party’s dictate.

    In Enugu State with three PDP Senators, Ike Ekweremadu, Gilbert Nnaji and Utazi Chukwuka are said to be undecided but Ekweremadu is said to have sympathy for Saraki.

    Anambra State with three PDP senators, Andy Uba, Uche Ekwunife and Stella Adaeze Oduah; only Andy Uba is likely to vote for Saraki due to his closeness to the Kwara Central Senator.

    Senators Ekwunife and Oduah are said to be undecided and may vote according to PDP’s dictate.

    In Ebonyi State also with three PDP Senators: Samuel Egwu, Ogba Joseph Obinna and Sunday Ogbuoji, only Egwu is likely to vote for Saraki while the other two are said to be undecided.

     

    South-South

    In the South-South geopolitical zone, Akwa Ibom State with three PDP Senators, namely Godswill Akpabio, Nelson Effiong and Bassey Albert Akpan are said to be undecided on who to vote for.

    Akpabio who played a major role in the election of the other two senators from Akwa Ibom State is likely to decide how they will vote.

    Bayelsa State senators, Emmanuel Paulker, Murray Bruce Ben and Ogola Foster, all PDP senators, are said to be for Lawan.

    In Rivers State with three PDP senators.

    In Edo State with two PDP senators and one APC senator, Clifford Ordia (PDP), Mathew Urhoghide (PDP) and Francis Alimikhena (APC), the two PDP Senators are said to be undecided while the only APC senator is likely to vote for Lawan. However, Alimikhena is said to be close to Saraki, closeness which may inform how he votes.

    In Cross River State with three PDP senators, John Owan Enoh, Rose Okoji Oko and Gershom Henry Bassey, the senators are said to be undecided.

    In Delta State with three PDP Senators, while Senator Peter Nwaoboshi, Delta North Senatorial District, has openly opted to vote for Saraki, the other two senators, James Manager and Ighoyota Amori are said to be undecided.

     

    South-West

    Majority of senators from the South-West geopolitical zone are overtly rooting for Lawan as Senate President.

    In Lagos State, the three APC Senators, Oluremi Tinubu, Olugbenga Ashafa and Senator-elect Adeola Solomon Olamilekan have not hidden their preference and support for Lawan.

    The same scenario is also playing out in Osun State where the three APC Senators, Olusola Adeyeye, Babajide Christopher Omoworare and Isiaka Adetunji Adeleke are said to have decided to vote for Lawan.

    In Ogun State with two APC senators, Olanrewaju Tejuose and Joseph Dada and one PDP Senator, Buruji Kashamu, the votes are likely to be divided.

    The two APC Senators are likely to vote for Lawan while the PDP Senator may go for Saraki.

    In Ondo State, the coast is not quite clear though Senator Robert Ajayi Borofice (APC) has openly shown support for Lawan’s Senate Presidency.

    The other two senators from the state, Senator Donald Alasoadura (APC)was seen in company with Saraki supporters while the only PDP senator from the state, Yele Omogunwa, is said to be undecided.

    In Oyo State with three APC senators, Monsurat  Sunmonu, Buhari Adulfatai and Rilwan Akanbi, the coast is also not quite clear. The senators are said to be undecided.

    In Ekiti State with three PDP Senators, Duro Samuel Faseyi, Fatimat Olufunke Raji-Rasaki and Biodun Olujimi, the three senators are likely to vote according to the position of PDP.

     

    North-West

    North-West geopolitical zone with APC senators will play a major role in who becomes the Senate President if the zone decides to vote in bloc.

    In Sokoto State with three APC senators, Ibrahim Gobir, Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko and Ibrahim Abdullahi, the three senators are said to have identified with Saraki.

    In Kano State with three APC senators, Barau Jibrin, Mohammed Rabiu Musa and Kabiru Gaya, are likely to vote for Lawan.

    Kabiru Gaya, a former governor of Kano State and Jibrin Barau were among the senators who met APC leaders to push for the use of the principle of ranking as one the major criteria for the election of the Senate President.

    In Katsina State with three APC senators, Mustapher Bukar, Abu Ibrahim and Umaru Ibrahim Kurfi, the three senators are also likely to vote for Lawan. Abu Ibrahim for instance is one of those who are pushing that the principle of ranking should be embraced as one of the criteria for the election of the Senate President.

    The vote in Kebbi State with three APC senators is likely to be divided. Former governor of the state, Senator Mohammed Adamu Aliero, has been fully identified as ready to vote for Lawan. Senator-elect Bala Ibn Na’Allah is also said to be for Lawan but the other Senator-elect, Yahaya Abdullahi, is said to be undecided.

    In Zamfara State with three APC senators, Kabiru Marafa is likely to vote for Lawan while former governor, Ahmed Yerima Sani, is one of the campaign directors of Saraki. The third senator from the state, Senator-elect Tajjani Yahaya Kaura, is said to be undecided.

    In Jigawa State with three APC senators, Muhammad Ubali Shitu, Sabo Mohammed and Abdullahi Gumel, the senators are said to be undecided.

    Gumel is one of the senators-elect who met APC leaders to canvass the use of the principle of ranking for the election of the Senate President and the Deputy Senate President.

    In Kaduna State with two APC senators, Suleiman Othman Hunkuyi, Shehu Sani and one PDP Senator Danjuma La’ah, only Senator Sani is known to have openly identified with Saraki. The other two senators are said to have been undecided.

     

    North-Central

    North Central geopolitical zone with a mixed bag of senators will be a battle ground for the two top contenders.

    In Kogi State with three APC senators, two, Dino Melaye and Abdulrahman  Abubakar, are openly supporting Saraki while the third senator, Mohammed  Abdulsalami Ohiare is said to be undecided.

    In Kwara State there are three APC senators. The two remaining senators apart from Saraki, Mohammed Shaaba Lafiagi and Rafiu Adebayo Ibrahim are likely to vote for Saraki.

    In Plateau State with three PDP Senators, Jeremiah Useni, Joshua Dariye and Jonah David Jang, the coast is not quite clear but insiders said that Jang and Useni may go for Lawan.

    In Benue State with two APC senators, George Akume and Gemade and one PDP Senator, David Mark, Lawan is sure of securing the three vital votes.

    Akume has been slated as the Deputy Senate President if Lawan wins. Mark and Lawan are said to be close. Gemade on the other hand is the arrow head of Lawan’s Senate Presidency.

    In Nasarawa State, Senator Abdullahi Adamu is also one of those insisting that the principle of ranking should be the basis for the election of the Senate President and Deputy Senate President. Adamu is one of the front campaigners for Lawan’s Senate Presidency. On the other hand, Senators Philip Aruwa Oyunka (PDP) and Salihu Hussain Egye (APC) are said to be undecided on who to vote for.

    In Niger State with three APC Senators, Senator David Umaru (Niger-East) is known to have identified with Saraki. The other two senators, Mohammed Garba and Aliyu Abdullahi are said to be rooting for Lawan.

    In the Federal Capital Territory, Senator Philip Aduda, the only FCT Senator is likely to vote for Saraki.

     

    North-East

    The North East geopolitical zone is another interesting case. Senator Lawan comes from the zone. Ordinarily one would have concluded that the zone is a done deal for Lawan but that is far from the situation on the ground. Senators from the zone are sharply divided between Lawan and Saraki.

    Insiders attributed this development to the alleged influence of a money bag politician who has been spending lavishly to favour one of the two leading contestants.

    In Borno State for instance with two APC senators, while Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume is solidly backing Saraki, Senator Abubakar Kyari is said to be for Lawan.

    The third elected senator from the state, Ahmed Zannah, gave the ghost recently.

    In Gombe State with two APC senators, former Deputy Speaker House of Representatives, Senator Bayero Usman Nafada and former governor of the state, Senator Mohammed Danjuma Goje, have not hidden their support for Saraki.

    The third Senator from the state, Joshua Lidani (PDP), is said to be undecided and may likely vote in line with the party’s dictate.

    In Taraba State with three PDP Senators, Lawan may likel secure two vital votes from Senators Emmanuel Bwacha and Marafa Bashir Abba while Saraki may receive the remaining one.

    In Adamawa State, Senator Binta Masi Garba has openly indicated resolve to vote for Saraki while the two other APC senators, Ahmadu Abubakar and Abdul Azziz Murtala Nyoko, are said to be undecided.

    In Bauchi State, Suleiman Mohammed Nazif (APC) is one of the strong backers of of Lawan while Malam Ali Wakili (APC) and Isa Hamma Misau are said to be waiting on the wings.

    In Yobe State, it is certain that Lawan will receive the three vital votes at stake from Senators Bukar Abba Ibrahim, Mohammed Hassan of the PDP and his own vote.

    The remaining days before the election are crucial. The gladiators for the plum job are on the move to swing the senators to their side. Money is also said to be changing hands in a manner that will shame even money bags outside the National Assembly. That influence notwithstanding, it seems the lawmakers will answer their names this week when the senators will finally decide who leads them.

     

  • Senate presidency: Why Lawan is a better candidate

    Senate presidency: Why Lawan is a better candidate

    As we earnestly look forward to the positive changes in all spheres of Nigeria as promised by the President, Muhhamadu Buhari under the platform of APC, there is conscious need to critically analyze his inaugural speech as it relates to the tripod upon which our democracy stands on. He affirmed in his reassuring words to allow independence of the other two arms of government; legislative and judiciary, without interfering in the smooth running of their constitutional activities.

    Upon this premise, the executive arm of government will optimally and fundamentally perform to the yearning of Nigerians who desire a monumental shift from the old ways which the previous PDP government have led us when we amend existing laws which may serve as impediment to functional application, give accelerated hearing and passage to sponsored bills as presented by the Buhari led executives in key sectors of the economy such as petroleum, power, agriculture, financial and educational sectors. All these aspirations will only materialize if there is a vibrant legislature which is in tune with the philosophy of the Commander in Chief.

    A close look at the numerical structure of the new Senate shows the APC with 59 senators elected on their platform with exception to the re-elected senator of borno central who died recently   and the remaining figures going to the minority party which is now the PDP. Ordinarily, a nominated or anointed Senator from the APC camp will automatically become the Senate President as they are expected to form the executive position but present political calculation have yielded two different and distinct camps: The Ahmad Lawan and Bukola Saraki camp. The former is from a North Eastern state of Yobe while the latter is from the North Central axis of our country. Both are qualified and are ranking Senators in accordance with the Senate rules although Ahmad Lawan is the most ranking of all the APC Senators elect.

    Historically, the PDP controlled Senate between 1999 and 2007 were changing the arrow head of the Senate because of so many factors ranging from inexperience, financial impropriety and high-headedness on the part of the leadership which necessitated in their abysmal failure, instability and focusless as rated by former Senate President in the 2nd republic , as at the last count before the emergence of David Mark in 2007, five other Senators have sat on the exalted seat namely  (Evan Enwerem 1999 – 1999, Chuba Okadigbo 1999-2000 , Anyim Pius Anyim 2000-2003 ,Adolphus Wabara 2003-2005 ,Ken Nnamani 2005-2007  ) . Mark succeeded due to his team spirit, relative accommodation, vibrancy, experience spanning two terms and well managed prudence in financial management. As such, the APC as a party in power needs to painstakingly emulate the good qualities of the Mark administration in selecting one of the major contenders to lead the 8th Senate, which is now the lens to which Nigerians will judge this administration. They should also take a direct cue from advanced democracy of the world where cognate legislative is crucial in the emergence of an officer of the Senate. Considering that over the years, our 109 Senators are not in the good books of the ordinary man struggling to earn a living worth $2 a day. The Senate Leadership that will serve alongside PMB must be decisive, transparent, incorruptible and above all earn public trust via their legislative oversight functions.

    Specifically, the Senator Ahmad Ibrahim Lawan profile is intimidating, a thorough-bred legislature with 16years articulated experience in the National Assembly, 8years of productive representation at the Federal House of Representative between 1999 and 2007, at various stages he has chaired sensitive and pivotal committees of education and agriculture which facilitated bills of national impact. Serving in the Red chambers for 8years, he is the present Chairman of the Committee on Public account. Lawan is an academician, few of the doctorate holder in GIS which the country can boast of, Please NOTE, not a GEJ kind of PhD but a doctorate from a world leading technology based institution Cranfield University . He has placed his card on the table on the basis of integrity, competence and robust experience which will guarantee sanity in the 8th senate.

    While Dr. Bukola Abubakar Saraki, a former 2terms Governor of Kwara State and the pioneer Chairman of the Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF). Saraki, a cool headed man is returning to the Senate for the 2nd time is basking in the zoning arrangement of the APC, which he claimed ceded the seat to the North Central zone of the country. One of the undoing of his aspiration is his desperation for the number 3 seat which guided his public conduct on the social media specifically his twitter handle where he misinformed his close to 200,000 followers of a non-existent meeting of the NWC zoning the Senate Presidency to his zone which was immediately rebuffed by the party hierarchy. In the same manner, he committed a political blunder when he raised a letter claiming 35 Senators elect of the APC extraction have endorsed his candidature. Till date, Saraki is yet to release the signatures of his loyalists or the video as claimed. And lastly, the driver for his agenda is a pointer that the Senate leadership under Saraki may be a weakling and dramatic one, Dino Melaye (Senator Elect) from Kogi State who is seen in the public sphere as controversial in directing the scene of unrealistic ambition. All that said and done, we must also consider the good qualities of Distinguished Senator Bukola Saraki who’s an astute politician, a trained Medical Doctor, an administrator of resources who demonstrated his love for his country by championing and exposing the massive fraud perpetuated in the petroleum downstream sector, a cause to which he has volunteered to dedicate his time and resources to unbundle the $32bn subsidy claims spent in the last 16years. We admonish ABS as fondly called by his admirers to collaborate with President Muhhamadu Buhari as The Chairman of Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream) to bring about the sanitization and total cleansing of the sector using his exposure that has brought rot and mismanagement over the years.

    –Engr Oluremi Omowaiye   writes from Ilesa, Osun State

  • We have no candidate for Senate Presidency – PDP

    We have no candidate for Senate Presidency – PDP

    The leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on Wednesday said the party has no candidate for the position of Senate President or Deputy Senate President.

    Rising from its weekly National Working Committee (NWC) meeting at its national secretariat, the party denied alleged plots to take the position from the All Progressives Congress (APC) which has a majority of the members.

    Addressing reporters shortly after the meeting, the National Publicity Secretary of the PDP, Chief Olisa Metuh, said, “We have decided to inform Nigerians that the PDP has no candidate for the position of Senate President or Deputy Senate President.”

    He said the senators are mature and experienced enough to conduct their affairs, adding that they are capable of taking decisions on their own without interference from the party.

    “We have decided not to dabble into leadership selection process in the National Assembly because we have learnt our lessons from past experiences,” Metuh stated.

    He said the meeting of PDP senators and senators-elect held with the leadership of the party in Port Harcourt on Monday did not discuss the election of Senate President and the deputy.

    According to him, what is paramount in the agenda of the PDP is how to organise itself and strategise for the role of credible opposition and offering alternative policy suggestions.

    The party expressed fears that the APC might influence decisions in ongoing election cases at the various tribunals.

  • Arewa youths back Saraki for Senate Presidency

    Northern youths under the aegis of Arewa Youth Consultative Forum (AYCF) have thrown their weight behind Senator Bukola Saraki’s bid for the Senate President.

    Its President, Alhaji Shettima Yerima, said: “Saraki’s leadership traits make him eminently qualified to lead the Upper Legislative Chamber and deliver democratic good to the Nigerian citizens”.

    He added: “We admitted that in both the Senate and House of Representatives, we have vibrant and amiable personalities bubbling with energy to embark on duty to turn around Nigeria for the better. In this vein, I would want to digress and go personal to call on personalities such as Senator Abubakar Bukola Saraki, to avail himself to provide leadership in the Senate. This call has become imperative when we look at track records and capacity to deliver which leaves no one in doubt about his capability and competence.”

    According to Yerima, the incoming administration must hire capable hands to help translate the resolve of and determination of the humble General, Muhammadu Buhari to bring about the much desired and anticipated change in all ramifications.

    He added: “We wish to call on committed patriots and genuine lovers of our nation to present themselves for leadership positions in both the Senate and House of Representatives.  As we all know, the legislature plays a vital and significant role in a democracy, it is indeed a citadel. That is why we must do everything possible to ensure that we have not only capable hands but those that can deliver.”

    While noting that Nigerians were full of desire for the government to deliver the much anticipated change in a short time possible, Yerima said, “what is on ground clearly shows that Nigerians must give time, exercise some patience or even moderate the high expectations because we are sure people are aware of the level of decay and rot in the system.”

    This, Yerima said, “it may require utmost circumspection and careful approach to issues which will obviously require time, patience and understanding.”

  • Senate Presidency: How the contest may be won, lost

    Senate Presidency: How the contest may be won, lost

    The race for the Senate President’s seat in the 8th Senate has been hot in the past month, since after the March National Assembly election. Assistant Editor, Dare Odufowokan, reports on the latest permutations few days before the inauguration of the next senate

    Warring last minute changes in the various alliances currently subsisting in the ranks of Senators-elect ahead of the election of the next leadership of the 8th session of the National Assembly, there are indications of how the contest for the Senate Presidency could be won and lost.

    The Nation learnt that the decision of the All Progressives Congress (APC) caucus in the next senate to select Senator Ahmed Lawan, a senator representing Yobe-Central, as the party’s consensus candidate for senate presidency, may be the major deciding factor in who emerges as the leader of the next senate.

    Consequently, the aspirations of other contenders, including senators Bukola Saraki from Kwara State and George Akume from Benue State, may remain unfulfilled at the end of voting by the legislators. However, Akume, according to reports, may emerge as the Deputy Senate President following his alleged adoption for that position by the APC caucus.

    The Nation learnt that although Saraki and his supporters are still kicking against the decision of the party caucus to adopt the Lawan/Akume ticket, the party’s leadership may have thrown its weight behind the senators’ choice, citing the need to allow the lawmakers a free hand in deciding who leads them, as its reason.

    Speaking on the development, a national officer of the party from Lagos State said the party is in agreement with the decision of the caucus. We are in a democracy and we are talking about distinguished senators elected by the people. We are of the opinion that they must have the biggest say in their own affairs. The caucus has decided and the party is in support of the decision.”

    On the objection by some senators loyal to Senator Saraki, the party chieftain said it is not unlikely that the matters will be resolved before the election proper. According to him, the party is urging all stakeholders to ensure that the unity of the party is upheld at all times.

    “The objection by some senators is expected in a democracy. There was a contest and the majority took a decision. The minority of course will have their say. But once the majority decision is taken, the process of getting others to comply with the decision will commence.

    That is the stage we are in now and I want to tell you that before the inauguration of 8th Assembly, all issues surrounding the matter will be resolved. APC will not go into the process divided. We are optimistic that the senators are capable of resolving the matter amicably,” he added.

    Announcing the choices of Lawan and Akume for Senate President and Deputy Senate President respectively, Barnabas Gemade, serving senator and senator-elect from Benue State, said a large majority of the senators elected on the platform of the APC are solidly behind the choices.

    “We, the Senate Unity Forum, comprising senators-elect from various zones of Nigeria, have met, held extensive discussions and resolved to support Senator Ahmed Lawan as Senate President and Senator George Akume as Deputy Senate President of the 8th Senate.”

    Explaining that the decision was taken after very serious consideration of both party and national interest, Gemade said Lawan emerged as the consensus candidate of the party caucus after hours of deliberations amongst senators. “Kindly take this to be our collective decision in the best interest of our party, APC, and our dear nation, Nigeria,” he said.

    It would be recalled that the APC had stated that it would opt for merit, instead of zoning in the selection of a consensus candidate for Senate President. Both the National Leader of the APC, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, and former National Chairman, Bisi Akande, separately stated that the party would favour merit above zoning.

    Thus, while the Saraki camp is insisting on zoning as the leading factor in the selection of the leadership of the senate, the APC caucus said it is determined to ensure that merit is not sacrificed on the altar of zoning. “We cannot afford to ignore the stability and competence we stand to benefit from the Lawan/Akume leadership of the next senate,” our source said.

    And to ensure the success of the adopted candidates, the various geo-political caucuses of the senate have been activated to get their senators to back the decision. According to sources, Senators Robert Ajayi from Ondo State is coordinating the Lawan/Akume campaign in the South-West; Senator Bukar Abba Ibrahim from Yobe-State is in charge of the North-East; Senator Barnabas Gemade is for North -Central while Abu Ibrahim holds forth in the North-West.

    Speaking on the activities of the caucus and his assurance that their choices will emerge as leaders of the senate, Senator Ahmad said, “the members of the Unity Forum, comprising of senators from the North-East, North-Central, North-West and South-West reached a resolution to support the Senator Lawan Ahmad and Senator George Akume ticket for the Senate President and Deputy Senate President respectively.

    This collaboration is encompassing and accommodating of all the tendencies within the party in the overall interest of the party and Nigeria.”

    “What we are trying to do is to make things easy for the party by putting the interest of Nigeria first. In the light of the above, we wish to state expressly that the effort to convince more senators to participate in the consensus building within our party is ongoing. We recognise the discretion of each senator to vote any candidate.”

    Speaking further on how the leadership of the senate will emerge, Gemade said, “We affirm the supremacy of the party while the interest of the country must be paramount. We cannot blame anyone for personal ambition but such ambition cannot be superior to the stability, credibility and cohesiveness of the National Assembly.

    Thus, we subscribe to the notion that we must work with and within our party, APC to resolve any contentious issue. The alliance forged by Senators Lawan and Akume alongside other members offers the APC the best window of opportunity to resolve the issue of the Senate Presidency and take to a higher standard from the legacy left by the 7th Senate of the Federal Republic.”

    The Nation also learnt that the Lawan candidacy has received the support of majority PDP senators, especially from the northern geo-political zones and the west. But most PDP senators from the South-South and the South-East are said to be non-committal on the matter.

    “Even majority of the PDP senators from the northern geo-political zones and the west are supportive of the Lawan candidacy. But the same cannot be said of those from the South-South and South-East. With the current situation, should Saraki decide to go all the way, it is unlikely he will garner much votes.

    Except the permutations change suddenly, either by consensus or outright election, it appears Lawan is the most likely to emerge as the Senate President of the 8th Assembly. And all things being equal too, Akume will be elected as the Deputy Senate President at the end of proceedings,” our source, a Senator -elect from Ogun State, said.

  • Senate Presidency: Saraki unfolds agenda

    Senate Presidency: Saraki unfolds agenda

    THE Chairman of Senate Committee on Environment and Ecology, Senator Abubakar Bukola Saraki, yesterday unfolded his agenda for the 8th Senate, if elected its president.

    Saraki spoke during an interactive session with reporters in Abuja.

    He said one of his cardinal objective would be to make the ordinary man on the streets know and feel the impact of the work of the upper chamber.

    The Senator representing Kwara Central said it was necessary for the red chamber to reconnect with the citizenry for the legislature to be representative of all.

    He insisted that some Nigerians still ask what legislators are doing at the National Assembly because they have not been made to understand the nature of their assignments.

    Saraki said: “What I am hoping to be able to contribute is to be able to see at the legislative arm of government that we can begin to have an impact on how the country improves.

    “I think one of the major concerns by the Nigerian people is that they don’t really feel the impact of those of us in the National Assembly, whether in the House of Representatives or in the Senate.

    “That is why people will begin to ask you what are they doing there? How do they affect my daily life? I think that is what we should begin to do.

    “We have to begin to reconnect with the Nigerian people and to reconnect in the sense that we have a National Assembly that Nigerians can begin to see its value and they can now know the reason why they are there.

    “If you ask a lot of Nigerians today, they will just tell you that those are just 400 – 500 legislators that they really can’t see what they are doing either back in their constituencies or impact nationally.”

    He added that it was time for the legislature to begin to play active roles on how major issues that affect the people are being solved.

    He argued that even though the Senate had played stabilising roles in moments of dire crisis in the nation, it was time for it to go beyond its past achievements to fashion out a national agenda and laws that transcend party lines.

    He said: “If we are to address unemployment, I don’t think we will have any differences. If we are to address diversification of the economy – talking about agriculture or mining – I think both the APC and the PDP will be on the same page.

    “If you are talking about transparent management of a central account for our revenue, we will be on the same page.

    “So, these are major policy issues that the National Assembly must be seen  to be playing a key role in supporting.”

    He said Senate and the House of Representatives needed enhanced collaboration to effectively legislate in the interest of Nigerians.

    “I think there has to be a better cooperation between the House and the Senate because it is a bicameral house that we run and if one House passes a law and then the other chamber has to wait up to two years to pass the same law, the essence of that law would already have been defeated,” Saraki said.

    On the perceived delay by the leadership of the All Progressives Congress (APC) to done the National Assembly leadership positions, Saraki said it was a non-issue.

    He said Nigerians bought into the change promised by the party because they believed they would do things differently.

    The senator said allowing due process in the choice of the Senate President would make it easier for unity and progress when the lawmakers are allowed to choose their leaders.

    He said those spreading information that he should not be supported for the Senate President because he has ambition to contest the 2019 presidential ticket of the APC were mere propagandists.

    He said they were only out to unduly tarnish his image.