Tag: Senate

  • Senate targets March 17 to pass N58.472trn 2026 budget, unveils tight review timetable

    Senate targets March 17 to pass N58.472trn 2026 budget, unveils tight review timetable

    The Senate yesterday fixed March 17, 2026, for the final consideration and passage of the N58.472 trillion 2026 Appropriation Bill, setting in motion an accelerated and detailed legislative timetable aimed at ensuring timely approval of the nation’s budget.

    The decision was taken in Abuja at a special session of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, which also rolled out a schedule for intensive scrutiny of the estimates by standing committees of the Red Chamber.

    Under the timetable, budget defence sessions by ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) at committee level will hold from February 2 to February 13.

    To deepen transparency and public participation, the committee scheduled a public hearing on the budget proposal for Monday, February 9, 2026.

    At the hearing, a Professor of Economics at the University of Lagos, Wasiu Adeoye, is expected to make a presentation on the macroeconomic projections and fiscal assumptions underlying the budget.

    READ ALSO: Tunji Olaopa, critical reforms and the Trump challenge (2)

    Chairman of the Appropriations Committee, Senator Solomon Olamilekan Adeola (APC – Ogun West), said the structured timeline was designed to guarantee a thorough but swift consideration process that would allow the National Assembly deliver the budget early in the year.

    He disclosed that February 16 to 23 had been set aside for submission of reports on budget defence by chairmen of standing committees, after which the Appropriations Committee would harmonise the inputs and lay its consolidated report before the Senate on March 17.

    As part of the review process, the committee also fixed Thursday, March 5, 2026, for an interactive session with key economic managers of the Federal Government.

    Those expected at the session include the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Dr Olawale Edun, and the Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Atiku Bagudu.

    Adeola told committee members that the Senate leadership had initially pushed for passage of the budget by March 12, but agreed to grant an additional one week to allow for more meticulous scrutiny.

    According to him, hard copies of the 2026 budget estimates have been printed and distributed to chairmen and members of the various standing committees to facilitate detailed examination of the proposals.

    The timetable was formally adopted by the committee following a motion moved by Senator Adamu Aliero (Kebbi Central) and seconded by Senator Orji Uzor Kalu (Abia North).

    With the schedule now in place, the Senate is set to commence a multi-layered review process involving committee-level defences, public input and high-level engagement with top government economic officials, all aimed at delivering a frontloaded and implementable 2026 budget.

  • Senate sets March 17 for passage of N58.472trn appropriation bill

    Senate sets March 17 for passage of N58.472trn appropriation bill

    • …unveils tight review timetable

    The Senate has scheduled March 17, 2026, for the final consideration and passage of the N58.472 trillion 2026 Appropriation Bill, unveiling an accelerated legislative timetable to ensure the timely approval of the national budget.

    The decision was reached in Abuja on Friday during a special session of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, which also outlined a rigorous review schedule for standing committees to scrutinise the budget estimates.

    According to the timetable, budget defence sessions by ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) at the committee level will run from February 2 to February 13.

    To promote transparency and public engagement, the committee has fixed a public hearing on the budget proposal for Monday, February 9, 2026. 

    At the session, Professor Wasiu Adeoye of the University of Lagos is expected to present an analysis of the macroeconomic projections and fiscal assumptions underpinning the budget.

    Chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, Senator Solomon Olamilekan Adeola (APC, Ogun West), said the structured timeline is aimed at ensuring a comprehensive yet efficient review process that would enable the National Assembly to pass the budget early in the year.

    Read Also: Senate takes steps to fast-track Electoral Act 2022 amendment

    He disclosed that February 16 to 23 has been designated for the submission of reports on budget defence by chairmen of standing committees. 

    The Appropriations Committee will thereafter harmonise the submissions and present a consolidated report to the Senate on March 17.

    As part of the review framework, the committee has also scheduled an interactive session with key Federal Government economic managers for Thursday, March 5, 2026.

    Expected to attend are the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Dr Olawale Edun, and the Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Atiku Bagudu.

    Adeola told committee members that the Senate leadership had initially pushed for passage of the budget by March 12, but agreed to grant an additional one week to allow for more meticulous scrutiny.

    According to him, hard copies of the 2026 budget estimates have been printed and distributed to chairmen and members of the various standing committees to facilitate detailed examination of the proposals.

    The timetable was formally adopted by the committee following a motion moved by Senator Adamu Aliero (Kebbi Central) and seconded by Senator Orji Uzor Kalu (Abia North).

    With the schedule now in place, the Senate is set to commence a multi-layered review process involving committee-level defences, public input and high-level engagement with top government economic officials, all aimed at delivering a frontloaded and implementable 2026 budget.

  • Senate takes steps to fast-track Electoral Act 2022 amendment

    Senate takes steps to fast-track Electoral Act 2022 amendment

    • Electronic transfer of results, BVAS use may be legalised

    The Senate moved swiftly yesterday to accelerate the passage of the Bill to amend the Electoral Act 2022.

    The Red Chamber drew flak from a cross-section of Nigerians, who accuse it of deliberately stalling the amendment process.

    Yesterday, after an executive session, the Senate constituted a committee to review the proposed amendment.

    It gave the panel a 48-hour deadline, after which the document would be ready for clause-by-clause consideration during plenary on Tuesday.

    The amendment of the Electoral Act is crucial to the commencement of preparations for next year’s general election.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is warming up to issue a notification for the presidential election next month, one year to the date, as stipulated in the extant Electoral Act 2022.

    Although the House of Representatives passed amendments to the Electoral Act in December, it remains to be seen whether the Senate will ensure concurrence and harmonisation of grey areas for a clean copy to be transmitted to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for assent before the end of next month.

    The seven-man ad hoc panel set up by the Senate has Senators Adamu Aliero, Aminu Tambuwal, Adams Oshiomhole, Danjuma Goje, Tony Nwoye and Titus Zam as members.

    The Clerk to the Senate, Emmanuel Odo, will serve as secretary.

    The panel will work with the Senate Committee on Judiciary and Legal Matters to re-examine contentious provisions in the report on amendments to the Electoral Act 2022.

    The Judiciary and Legal Matters Committee is chaired by Senator Adeniyi Adegbonmire.

    Read Also: Senate orders fresh review of Electoral Act amendments, sets up 48-hour ad hoc panel

    The House of Representatives passed its own version of the Electoral Act amendment in December.

    In it, a 10-year jail term is recommended for forgery of nomination papers and result sheets.

    The Judiciary and Legal Matters Committee, which is expected to work with the ad hoc panel, is chaired by Senator Adeniyi Adegbonmire.

    The original report under review was prepared by the Senate Committee on Electoral Matters, led by Senator Simon Lalong.

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio announced the decision to further scrutinise the bill after lawmakers emerged from a three-hour closed-door session where they undertook an extensive review of the Lalong committee’s report.

    The report had initially been scheduled for debate on Wednesday, but deliberation was stepped down due to the absence of Lalong at plenary.

    After the closed session, Akpabio said the report would undergo further scrutiny to harmonise contrasting views and address grey areas identified during deliberations.

    He explained that the ad hoc panel would sit for 48 hours and present its recommendations on the third legislative day for consideration at plenary.

    Following the announcement, the Senate adjourned plenary until Tuesday to await the panel’s report.

    Immediate result upload to IREV mandated

    A copy of the report obtained by The Nation shows that top among the amendments to be considered by the ad hoc committee is the provision for the electronic transmission of election results to the INEC Results Viewing Portal (IREV) after collation.

    One of the major proposals in the report is a provision mandating INEC to electronically transmit results from polling units to IREV immediately after vote counting.

    Also, a new Clause 3 has been introduced on page 45 of the Electoral Act 2022 (Amendment) Bill, 2025, aimed at curbing result manipulation and ballot box snatching.

    The proposed provision states: “INEC shall electronically transmit election results from each polling unit to the IREV portal in real time, and such transmission shall be done simultaneously with the physical collation of results.”

    The committee further introduced a new subsection (2) to Clause 71, making it an offence for presiding officers who fail to sign and stamp ballot papers and the results announced by them.

    Clauses 47(2) and (3) were amended to replace the term “smart card reader” with “Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS),” in line with current electoral practice.

    To address abuse of the voting process involving persons with disabilities, the report amended Clause 54(1) to bar political party agents, candidates or officials from accompanying visually impaired or incapacitated voters into the voting compartment.

    Stiffer penalties for vote- buying

    The committee also recommended stiffer penalties for vote trading and the buying and selling of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs), proposing an increase in the fine prescribed in Clause 22 from N500,000 to N5 million.

    On page 9 of the report, Clause 10 of the Bill was amended to include a new paragraph – “(c) National Identification Number (NIN)” – to check the registration of illegal immigrants during continuous voter registration.

    On the submission of lists of candidates and affidavits by political parties, Clause 29 on page 27 of the report was amended with the inclusion of sub-clauses (7) and (9).

    Sub-clause (7) states: “Notwithstanding the provisions of sub-clause (6), where the election has been held, the court shall direct the Commission to declare the candidate with the second highest number of valid votes who satisfies the constitutional requirement as the winner of the election.”

    Sub-clause (9) states: “A candidate who does not meet the qualification stipulated in this clause and presents himself to a political party commits an offence and is liable on conviction to a fine of not less than N5,000,000.”

    Clause 31 on withdrawal of candidates on page 29 was amended through a redraft of the entire provision to ensure that withdrawals are done by sworn affidavit to check arbitrariness.

    On the format of ballot papers on page 35, Clause 42(3) was amended by increasing the number of days within which a party is expected to inspect samples of relevant electoral materials from 20 days to 60 days.

    On polling agents on page 36, Clause 43, now Clause 42, was amended to empower candidates to nominate polling agents.

    It states: “Each candidate, in consultation with his political party, may by notice in writing addressed to the Resident Electoral Commissioner of the state, appoint a polling agent for each polling unit and collation centre in the Local Government Area or Area Council for which the candidate is contesting.”

    On post-election procedures and collation of results, new sub-clauses (3) to (9) were introduced to strengthen the credibility of result collation.

    On the decision of returning officers on ballot papers, declaration and return of candidates, the marginal note of Clause 65 was amended, while sub-clause (2) was substituted with new provisions.

    For political parties to become corporate bodies, new sub-clauses (2) to (7) were introduced to Section 77 to ensure proper record-keeping of party membership.

    On notice of conventions and congresses on page 65, Clause 82(2) was amended to make notices specific.

    It states: “The notice shall specify the date, time, venue and names of the members of the congress, convention or conference committee as spelt out in the party’s constitution.”

    On indirect primaries, new sub-clauses (2) to (9) were introduced to Clause 87 to ensure broad participation in candidate nominations.

    Appointees not eligible as voting delegates

    The committee recommended that political appointees should not be eligible as voting delegates or aspirants under Clause 89(3) and (4).

    Sub-clause (3) was repealed to state that where a court finds that a political party failed to comply with the provisions of the Bill in conducting its primaries, its candidate shall not be included in the election.

    Sub-clause (4) was also repealed to state that any person who financially or materially induces a delegate to influence conventions commits an offence and is liable on conviction to two years’ imprisonment without an option of fine.

    On election expenses, Clause 93 was amended to increase spending limits for elective offices, while Clause 94 was amended to enhance financial controls.

    On nomination offences under Clause 120(2), the penalty was increased from N50 million to N75 million.

    10-year jail term or N75m fine for forgery

    In the proposed amendment, the House of Representatives approved a 10-year jail term or a N75 million fine for forging nomination papers or result forms and increased penalties for voter card misuse.

    The House, however, rejected a proposed two-year jail term for the inducement of delegates during party primaries.

    It approved a provision stating that in cases of over-voting, excess votes should be deducted from all candidates’ scores, while the presiding officer should be prosecuted.

    Where election results are disputed, collation officers are to rely on original result sheets, BVAS data and accreditation records to determine accuracy.

    A Resident Electoral Commissioner who wilfully denies access to electoral materials commits an offence punishable by two years’ imprisonment without an option of fine.

    The House also approved a N50 million administrative fee for associations seeking registration as political parties, with fines for submission of false information.

    It further provided that only party members listed in registers submitted to INEC may vote or be voted for in party primaries.

    The House stated that no court should entertain suits relating to the internal affairs of political parties, with heavy costs imposed on violators.

    Campaign finance limits were increased, with the maximum presidential campaign spending raised to N10 billion, governorship to N3 billion, Senate to N500 million and House of Representatives to N250 million.

  • Senate probes ‘deplorable’, snail-speed train services

    Senate probes ‘deplorable’, snail-speed train services

    • Oshiomhole heads panel
    • NRC unveils expansion plans

    The Senate yesterday raised the alarm over the deteriorating state of Nigeria’s rail services, declaring that   Abuja–Kaduna-bound trains now move more slowly than bicycles.

    ‘’If you are using a bicycle, you will get to Kaduna from Abuja faster than the train,’’ said Senate President   Godswill Akpabio.

    He made the remark while inaugurating an ad hoc committee to conduct a comprehensive investigation into the railway system.

    The Adams Oshiomhole-led committee, which has six weeks to submit its report, will look into rail operations in the country,  equipment quality and management efficiency.

     Other members are  Senators Hussaini Babangida, Enyinnaya Abaribe,   Adamu Aliero,  Wasiu Eshinlokun, Osita Ngwu,   Solomon Adeola,   Ibrahim Dankwambo,   Ireti Kingibe,   Ede Dafinone, Sahabi Yau and Abdul Ningi.  

    The constitution of the committee followed a robust debate by Senators on what they considered a sharp decline in operations along the Abuja–Kaduna–Kano rail corridor, once reputed as a flagship transport project.

    Moved by the revelations, Akpabio said: “At a time, the train used to take about one and a half hours from Abuja to Kaduna, but passengers now spend more than three hours. ‘’We even gathered that Keke NAPEP from Abuja  will arrive in Kaduna  earlier.”

     The state of the rail corridor was raised at the plenary by  Senator  Ningi, who, after citing order 42 of the Senate Standing Orders,  narrated his recent ordeal on the route.  

    Ningi recalled that when operations commenced in 2015, the rail line ran 10 daily trips – five each way – conveying about 10,000 passengers every day. He said those figures have plummeted sharply.

    “Two weeks ago, I travelled to Kaduna by train as I usually do, and what I discovered was disturbing,” he said. “The manager told me that from about 10,000 passengers daily, the number had dropped to between 800 and 900.”He added that daily shuttles had been reduced to just two – one from Abuja to Kaduna at 7 am and another from Kaduna to Abuja at 1.30 pm.

    According to the Senator, when the railway operated at full capacity, it generated about N1.8 billion monthly. He warned that the current situation had eroded revenue and public confidence.

    Read Also:Senate orders fresh review of Electoral Act amendments, sets up 48-hour ad hoc panel

    Ningi said passengers spent more than three and a half hours on a journey that once took 90 minutes, with the train crawling for long stretches.

    “When the railway started, it was one and a half hours to Kaduna. Last week, we spent three and a half hours,” he said. “People had no alternative. This situation is deeply disturbing and should worry the Senate and Nigerians.”

    The lawmaker also alleged that some equipment installed during the execution of the rail contract was second-hand, suggesting the country may have been short-changed.

    The route recorded two tragic  incidents in less than three years.

    On 28 March 2022, a Kaduna-bound train with was attacked in Katari, with approximately 970 passengers on board was attacked by terrorists who arrived on motorbikes.  

    The second was on August 26, 2025, when another train derailed following the vandalisation of some tracks.

    The 186.5-kilometre Abuja–Kaduna standard gauge rail line was inaugurated in 2016, after being initiated under the late President Umar Yar’Adua and completed by former President Goodluck Jonathan. Former President Muhammadu Buhari inaugurated it.

    The $1.64 billion project was executed by China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC), with $500 million financed through a loan from China’s Exim Bank and the balance provided by the Federal Government.

    *NRC targets 10,000km rail network in five years

    While the Senate ordered a probe of the deplorable train services, the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC)  unveiled an ambitious plan to expand its rail network from about 4,000 kilometres to 10,000 kilometres within the next five years and another  10,000 kilometres in 20 years.

    The corporation’s  Managing Director, Kayode Opeifa, made this known while outlining the direction of the rail sector and the scale of investment required to reposition it as a major driver of national growth.

    Opeifa said Nigeria currently operates about 4,000 kilometres of rail lines, a figure he described as inadequate for a country of its size and economic ambition.

    “In the next five years, we hope to increase the length of tracks to about 10,000 kilometres. By another 10 years after that, we want to move Nigeria to about 20,000 kilometres of rail lines,” he said.

    Opeifa stated that achieving the target would depend largely on private sector participation.

    According to him, the Federal Government remains open to concessioning arrangements and other partnership models.

    He assured that sovereign guarantees would be provided to investors in line with global best practices.

    “Our doors are open to the private sector for concessioning and partnerships. Government budgets alone cannot fund rail expansion at this scale, which is why we are encouraging private investment,” the NRC boss said.

    He added that the expansion plan is part of a larger national rail roadmap that would soon be unveiled.

    Opeifa noted that the corporation was working towards completing key rail corridors, including the Lagos-Kano, the Port Harcourt-Maiduguri and the Ajaokuta-Abuja routes to enable seamless movement of people and goods between the South and the North.

    He added that both narrow gauge and standard gauge rail lines were operational, with the corporation embarking on aggressive recovery of locomotives, wagons and other rolling stock to improve efficiency and capacity utilisation.

      Opeifa said that despite security challenges,  rail services have continued nationwide. He attributed that to the commitment of railway engineers and artisans. 

    He called for community ownership of railway assets as a critical response to vandalism, particularly along the Warri-Itakpe corridor, where he said repeated attacks had forced the corporation to replace almost every section of track.

    The NRC boss also said the corporation was collaborating with    Lagos, Zamfara, Plateau, Niger and Ogun governments to increase rail usage and maximise existing assets.

    Opeifa revealed that private operators were already participating in rail operations, with about 28 logistics companies licensed to move goods from Apapa Port to locations, including Oyingbo, Papalanto, Kajola, Omi Adio, Moniya and Osogbo.

    “If you have the resources to bring in locomotives and rolling stock, we will give you access to our tracks because once the tracks are in use, the economy benefits,” he said.

  • Senate orders fresh review of Electoral Act amendments, sets up 48-hour ad hoc panel

    Senate orders fresh review of Electoral Act amendments, sets up 48-hour ad hoc panel

    The Senate on Thursday constituted an ad-hoc panel to work with its Committee on Judiciary and Legal Matters to re-examine contentious provisions in the report on amendments to the Electoral Act 2022.

    The Judiciary and Legal Matters Committee is chaired by Senator Adeniyi Adegbonmire while the original report under review was prepared by the Senate Committee on Electoral Matters led by Senator Simon Lalong.

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio announced the decision after lawmakers emerged from a three-hour closed-door session where they undertook an extensive review of the Lalong committee’s report.

    The report had initially been scheduled for debate on Wednesday, but deliberation was stepped down due to the absence of the committee chairman, Lalong, a former governor of Plateau State.

    At the close of plenary on Wednesday, Akpabio informed senators that copies of the report would be circulated to enable them study it ahead of deliberations the following day.

    However, proceedings took a different turn at the start of plenary on Thursday when the Senate President called for an executive session to allow members discuss the document privately.

    Briefing senators after the closed session, Akpabio said the report would undergo further scrutiny to harmonise differing views and address grey areas identified during the deliberations.

    He disclosed that the newly constituted adhoc panel would sit for 48 hours and present its recommendations on the third legislative day for consideration at plenary.

    Members of the panel, drawn from ranking senators, include Adamu Aliero, Aminu Tambuwal, Adams Oshiomhole, Danjuma Goje, Tony Nwoye and Titus Zam. The Clerk to the Senate, Emmanuel Odo, would serve as secretary to the panel.

    Following the announcement, the Senate adjourned plenary till Tuesday next week to await the panel’s report.

    Meanwhile, a copy of the report obtained by The Nation shows that top on the amendments to be considered by the Adhoc committee is the provision for the electronic transmission of election results to the Independent National Electoral Commission Results Viewing Portal (IREV) after collation.

    One of the major proposals in the report is a provision mandating the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to electronically transmit results from polling units to the INEC Result Viewing Portal (IREV) immediately after vote counting.

    Read Also: Senate to hold closed-door briefing on US airstrikes in Sokoto

    Also a new clause  3 has been introduced on page 45 of the Electoral Act 2022 (Amendment) Bill, 2025, aimed at curbing result manipulation and ballot box snatching.

    The proposed provision states: “INEC shall electronically transmit election results from each polling unit to the IREV portal in real time, and such transmission shall be done simultaneously with the physical collation of results.”

    The committee further introduced a new subsection (2) to clause 71, making it an offence for presiding officers to fail to sign and stamp ballot papers and the results announced by them.

    In addition, clauses 47(2) and (3) were amended to replace the term “smart card reader” with “Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS),” in line with current electoral practice.

    To address abuse of the voting process involving persons with disabilities, the report amended Clause 54(1) to bar political party agents, candidates or officials from accompanying visually impaired or incapacitated voters into the voting compartment.

    The committee also recommended stiffer penalties for vote trading or the buying and selling of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs), proposing an increase in the fine prescribed in clause 22 from N500,000 to N5 million.

    On page 9 of the report, clause 10 of the Bill was amended for inclusion of new paragraph “(c) National Identification Number (NIN)” to check registration of illegal immigrants in the continuous voter registration exercise.

    On submission of list candidates and their affidavits by political parties, Clause 29 on page 27 of the report was amended with the inclusion of sub clause

    (7) and (9) as follows:

    “(7) Notwithstanding the provisions of subclause (6), where the election has been held, the court shall direct the Commission to declare the candidate with the second highest number of valid votes who satisfies the constitutional requirement, as the winner of the election.

    “(9) A candidate who does not meet the qualification stipulated in this clause, and presents himself to a political party, commits an offence and is liable on conviction to a fine of not less than N5,000,000.

    Clause 31 on withdrawal of candidate contained in page 29, was amended by the redraft of the entire provision to ensure that withdrawal of candidates is done with sworn affidavit in order to check arbitrariness.

    On format of ballot papers contained in page 35, clause  42 (3) was amended by increasing the number of days within which a party is expected to inspect its identity appearing on samples of relevant electoral materials proposed for an election from 20 days to 60 days.

    On the provision for Polling Agents in page 36, clause 43 now 42 was amended to give candidates power to nominate polling agents: “Each candidate in consultation with his political party may, by notice in writing addressed to the Resident Electoral Commissioner of the state, appoint a polling agent for each polling unit and collation centre in the Local Government Area or Area Council for which it has candidate and the notice.”

    On post-election procedure and collation of election results new subclauses (3) – (9) were introduced to ensure the credibility of collation of results.

    Also decision of returning officer on ballot paper/declaration and return of candidate, the marginal note of clause 65 was amended and subclause (2) was substituted with new provisions.

    For political parties to be bodies corporate, a new subclauses (2) –  (7) were introduced to section 77 to ensure that proper records of memberships of political parties are kept.

    Also on notice of convention and congress contained on

    page 65, Clause 82(2) was amended to make notices very specific.

    “The notice shall specify the date, time, venue and names of the members of the congress, convention or conference committee as spelt out in the party’s constitution,” the committee said.

    On indirect primaries, new subclauses (2) – (9) were introduced to Clause 87 in order to ensure that all the political actors participate in the nominations of candidates, in line with global standards.

    The committee recommended that political appointees will not be eligible as a voting delegate or aspirant in Clause  89 (3) and (4).

    Sub Clause (3) was repealed to say “where court finds that a political party failed to comply with the provisions of this Bill in the conduct of its primaries, its candidate for election shall not be included in the election for the particular position in issue.

    Subsection (4) was also repealed to say, “A person that financially or materially induces a delegate for the purpose of influencing the conventions commits an offence and is liable on conviction to imprisonment to a term of two years without an option of fine.”

    On limit of election expenses

    Clause 93 was amended by increasing expenses to be incurred while vying for different electoral positions and by placing a limit on such expenses.

    Also Clause 94 was amended to control election expenses of political parties.

    In addition, on offences in respect of nomination contained in Clause 120 (2) on page 115, the punishment for the offences of nomination has been increased from N50,000,000 to N75,000,000 to deter perpetrators.

  • Senate orders fresh review of Electoral Act amendments, sets up 48-hour ad hoc panel

    Senate orders fresh review of Electoral Act amendments, sets up 48-hour ad hoc panel

    The Senate on Thursday constituted an ad hoc panel to work with its Committee on Judiciary and Legal Matters to re-examine contentious provisions in the report on amendments to the Electoral Act 2022.

    The Judiciary and Legal Matters Committee is chaired by Senator Adeniyi Adegbonmire, while the original report under review was prepared by the Senate Committee on Electoral Matters led by Senator Simon Lalong.

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio announced the decision after lawmakers emerged from a three-hour closed-door session where they undertook an extensive review of the Lalong committee’s report.

    The report had initially been scheduled for debate on Wednesday, but deliberation was stepped down due to the absence of the committee chairman, Lalong, a former governor of Plateau State.

    At the close of plenary on Wednesday, Akpabio informed senators that copies of the report would be circulated to enable them study it ahead of deliberations the following day.

    However, proceedings took a different turn at the start of plenary on Thursday when the Senate President called for an executive session to allow members discuss the document privately.

    Read Also: U.S. airstrikes: Senate to hold security briefing

    Briefing senators after the closed session, Akpabio said the report would undergo further scrutiny to harmonise differing views and address grey areas identified during the deliberations.

    He disclosed that the newly constituted ad hoc panel would sit for 48 hours and present its recommendations on the third legislative day for consideration at plenary.

    Members of the panel, drawn from ranking senators, include Adamu Aliero, Aminu Tambuwal, Adams Oshiomhole, Danjuma Goje, Tony Nwoye, and Titus Zam. The Clerk to the Senate, Emmanuel Odo, would serve as secretary to the panel.

    Following the announcement, the Senate adjourned plenary till Tuesday next week to await the panel’s report.

  • U.S. airstrikes: Senate to hold security briefing

    U.S. airstrikes: Senate to hold security briefing

    The Senate yesterday resolved to hold an executive, closed-door briefing on the December 25 United States airstrikes on terrorist targets in Sokoto State.

    This followed concerns raised by Bauchi Central Senator Abdul Ningi over Nigeria’s sovereignty and alleged exclusion of the National Assembly.

    Ningi, a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) lawmaker, faulted the military operation, arguing that it amounted to a breach of Nigeria’s territorial integrity.

    Ningi contended that the National Assembly, constitutionally empowered to be involved in discussions leading to foreign military interventions, was not consulted before the strikes were carried out.

    Raising the issue during plenary presided over by Senate President  Godswill Akpabio, Ningi cautioned the executive arm to avoid unilaterally taking decisions on sensitive security matters without legislative input.

    He warned that if such actions were left unchecked, other global powers could also undertake military operations within Nigeria without recourse to the National Assembly.

    “It is not right. The leadership of the National Assembly should take a briefing from the security agencies on what happened. This is a violation of our territorial integrity,” Ningi said.

    Responding, Akpabio intervened to calm the situation, explaining that the Senate leadership had already scheduled an in-camera briefing for members after resumption from the Christmas and New Year recess.

    He said the planned briefing could not hold on Tuesday, January 27, because legislative activities were suspended in honour of the late Senator Godiya Akwashiki, who died on December 31, last year.

    Akpabio stressed that the matter was a sensitive security issue that should not be discussed in open plenary.

    “We really should not discuss it in the open. We wanted to do it behind closed doors yesterday, but because of Senator Akwashiki, we couldn’t,” he said.

    Read Also: Nigeria’s Back-to-Farm initiative

    Assuring senators, Akpabio announced that the closed-door briefing will hold today to fully brief members on the circumstances surrounding the airstrikes.

    “So, your point of order is noted. We need to brief you behind closed doors,” he added.

    The United States conducted the airstrikes on December 25, last year, in coordination with Nigerian authorities, targeting camps linked to the Islamic State in West Africa and the Sahel region.

    The U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) confirmed that multiple ISIS terrorists were killed in the operation, which involved 16 munitions deployed from MQ-9 Reaper drones and Tomahawk missiles fired from a U.S. Navy destroyer in the Gulf of Guinea.

    The strikes were aimed at disrupting terrorist training, planning and logistics hubs amid rising threats from ISIS Sahel Province and affiliated groups, including Lakurawa elements infiltrating from the Sahel.

    The operation came against the backdrop of former U.S. President Donald Trump’s designation of Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern,” following claims of widespread persecution of Christians in the country.

  • Tax Reform Acts not tampered with says Senate, distributes certified copies

    Tax Reform Acts not tampered with says Senate, distributes certified copies

    The Senate on Wednesday put to rest lingering controversy over the Tax Reform Acts, declaring that none of the four laws has been adulterated.

    President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio, gave the clean bill of health during plenary, insisting that the Acts currently in the custody of the National Assembly are exactly the versions passed by both chambers and signed into law by President Bola Tinubu.

    The Red Chamber had passed the tax reform bills as separate legislations in May last year, with concurrence from the House of Representatives. President Tinubu assented to them in June.

    Akpabio dismissed claims in some quarters that the bills were altered after passage, stressing that certified true copies of the Acts held by the Senate and the House accurately reflect what lawmakers approved.

    To reinforce transparency, he directed the Clerk of the Senate, Emmanuel Odo, to distribute certified copies of the Acts to all senators for scrutiny.

    “Copies of the Acts will be made available to all senators by the Clerk of the Senate,” Akpabio said.

    “The copies of the Acts are totally in compliance with what happened in the two chambers. No adulteration, nothing.

    “At this stage, you can feel bold enough to discard anything to the contrary, knowing that it is not what the President signed and does not represent what you passed.”

    President Tinubu signed the four Tax Reform Bills into law on June 26, 2025. They are the Nigeria Tax Act (NTA), Nigeria Tax Administration Act (NTAA), Nigeria Revenue Service Act (NRSA) and the Joint Revenue Board Act (JRBA).

    The Acts aim to comprehensively overhaul Nigeria’s tax system, drive economic growth, boost revenue generation, improve the business environment and strengthen tax administration across federal, state and local governments.

  • Senate to hold closed-door briefing on US airstrikes in Sokoto

    Senate to hold closed-door briefing on US airstrikes in Sokoto

    The Senate on Wednesday resolved to conduct an executive, closed-door briefing on the December 25 United States airstrikes on terrorist targets in Sokoto State, following concerns over Nigeria’s sovereignty and the alleged sidelining of the National Assembly.

    The decision followed a motion raised by Senator Abdul Ningi (PDP, Bauchi Central), who criticised the military operation, describing it as a potential breach of Nigeria’s territorial integrity.

    Ningi argued that the National Assembly, which is constitutionally empowered to participate in deliberations on foreign military interventions, was not consulted before the strikes were carried out.

    Raising the matter during plenary presided over by Senate President Godswill Akpabio, the lawmaker cautioned against allowing the executive arm to unilaterally make far-reaching decisions on sensitive security issues without legislative oversight.

    He warned that failure to assert the National Assembly’s authority could open the door for other foreign powers to conduct military operations within Nigeria without parliamentary approval.

    “It is not right. The leadership of the National Assembly should take a briefing from the security agencies on what happened. This is a violation of our territorial integrity,” Ningi said.

    Responding, Akpabio intervened to calm the situation, explaining that the Senate leadership had already scheduled an in-camera briefing for members after resumption from the Christmas and New Year recess.

    He said the planned briefing could not hold on Tuesday, January 27, because legislative activities were suspended in honour of the late Senator Godiya Akwashiki, who died on December 31, 2025.

    Akpabio stressed that the matter was a sensitive security issue that should not be discussed in open plenary.

    “We really should not discuss it in the open. We wanted to do it behind closed doors yesterday, but because of Senator Akwashiki, we couldn’t,” he said.

    Assuring senators, Akpabio disclosed that the closed-door briefing would hold on Thursday, January 29, to fully brief members on the circumstances surrounding the airstrikes.

    “So, your point of order is noted. We need to brief you behind closed doors,” he added.

    The United States conducted the airstrikes on December 25, 2025, in coordination with Nigerian authorities, targeting camps linked to the Islamic State in West Africa and Sahel region.

    The U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) confirmed that multiple ISIS terrorists were killed in the operation, which involved 16 munitions deployed from MQ-9 Reaper drones and Tomahawk missiles fired from a U.S. Navy destroyer in the Gulf of Guinea.

    The strikes were aimed at disrupting terrorist training, planning and logistics hubs amid rising threats from ISIS Sahel Province and affiliated groups, including Lakurawa elements infiltrating from the Sahel.

    The operation came against the backdrop of former U.S. President Donald Trump’s designation of Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern,” following claims of widespread persecution of Christians in the country.

  • Senate to debate Electoral Act report Thursday, backs electronic transmission of results

    Senate to debate Electoral Act report Thursday, backs electronic transmission of results

    The Senate will on Thursday consider and debate, clause by clause, the report of its committee on electoral matters, with electronic transmission of election results topping key recommendations ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    One of the major proposals in the report is a provision mandating the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to electronically transmit results from polling units to the INEC Result Viewing Portal (IREV) immediately after vote counting.

    The decision to schedule the report for consideration was taken at plenary on Wednesday following a motion by the Senate Leader, Senator Opeyemi Bamidele (Ekiti North), who informed lawmakers that copies of the report would be circulated in advance to allow for detailed scrutiny.

    Bamidele, with the approval of the President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio, also disclosed that a brief closed-door session would precede the general consideration of the report at the Committee of the Whole.

    A copy of the report obtained by The Nation shows that a new subsection (3) has been introduced on page 45 of the Electoral Act 2022 (Amendment) Bill, 2025, aimed at curbing result manipulation and ballot box snatching.

    The proposed provision states: “INEC shall electronically transmit election results from each polling unit to the IREV portal in real time, and such transmission shall be done simultaneously with the physical collation of results.”

    The committee further introduced a new subsection (2) to Section 77, making it an offence for presiding officers to fail to sign and stamp ballot papers and the results announced by them.

    In addition, Sections 47(2) and (3) were amended to replace the term “smart card reader” with “Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS),” in line with current electoral practice.

    To address abuse of the voting process involving persons with disabilities, the report amended Section 54(1) to bar political party agents, candidates or officials from accompanying visually impaired or incapacitated voters into the voting compartment.

    The committee also recommended stiffer penalties for the buying and selling of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs), proposing an increase in the fine prescribed in Section 22 from N500,000 to N5 million.

    Describing the Electoral Act amendment as a sensitive and far-reaching legislation, Senate President Akpabio urged lawmakers to study the report thoroughly ahead of its final consideration.

    “Distinguished colleagues, as suggested by the Leader, please study the report very well ahead of tomorrow’s final consideration, first at the closed-door session and then at the Committee of the Whole,” Akpabio said.