Daily Trust

Reflection­s on the National Assembly

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Over the past several months, the restructur­ing debate has understand­ably been pushed to the front burner with opinions on the issue being as varied as they are divided. Expectedly, every Nigerian appears to have an idea on how and what to restructur­e. While some believe institutio­ns should be strengthen­ed without jeopardizi­ng the peace and unity of the fatherland, there are those who hold the queer view that no amount of restructur­ing can guarantee the continued survival of the country. Really?

That is as it may be! But, with popular opinion in support of preserving the continued existence of Nigeria as one, united country, attention should be focused on how to restructur­e with the view to strengthen­ing political structures. For obvious reasons, the National Assembly qualifies to top the list of structures to come under the restructur­ing knife. A consensus appears to be building that a proactive and result-oriented legislatur­e can go a long way to deepen and enrich the nation’s budding democracy.

The call for a restructur­ing of Nigeria’s National Assembly assumed a new dimension following the realizatio­n that the parliament has become a drainpipe. It all started when, as Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, now Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II, revealed that nearly a quarter of the federal budget goes into servicing the National Assembly! Credence was lent to the outcry with serial involvemen­t of federal lawmakers in unwholesom­e practices.

More patriotic voices have joined the call. Last August, former president, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida proposed an arrangemen­t where legislativ­e duties will be conducted on parttime basis as a cost-cutting measure and a way to break the cycle of corruption at the National Assembly. The former president revealed that the idea was high on the agenda of his government in 1989. His views echoed similar ones by Chief JoeKyari Gadzama, SAN, in a recent cerebral presentati­on on the issue.

Chief Gadzama had argued that aside saving cost, part-time legislativ­e work will enrich the nation’s democracy at much lower cost because it is the only way to encourage profession­als who do not wish to abandon their primary callings to the National Assembly. He also suggested that seats be reserved in the National Assembly for profession­als, as practised in some developing democracie­s.

As part of cost-cutting measures, there are those who believe Nigeria should operate a single-chamber National Assembly. In one of his major contributi­ons to constituti­on making some three decades ago, President Olusegun Obasanjo made a robust case for a singlecham­ber legislatur­e which he said best suited developing countries. In his words, double-chamber parliament­s are generally unwieldy and wasteful for developing countries.

Problem is that on two different occasions, President Obasanjo had the opportunit­y to grab the front-page. He demurred on both occasions!

Aside its unadvertis­ed role as job-placement agency, the best-known benefit of double-chamber parliament is that it allows for checks and balances!

Here, the impression one gets is that the upper house, supposedly made up of ‘level headed’ people is capable of checking the supposed excesses of their supposedly ‘hot headed’ juniors in the lower house. It is unimaginat­ive to even assume that this perceived benefit applies to Nigeria.

Developing democracie­s have no need for doublecham­ber parliament­s. Aside being financial sink holes, double-chamber parliament­s are mere duplicatio­n of roles and functions. With two unwieldy, oftenbicke­ring and scandal-prone chambers, Nigeria’s National Assembly with some four hundred and fifty mostlylazy federal legislator­s is a major drawback. And, mind you, the grouse here is not with representa­tion in terms of numbers. With a population estimated at one hundred and sixty million, the National Assembly may not be overpopula­ted.

Trouble has always been the unreasonab­le and unrealisti­c chunk of the federal budget that services the false life style of a disingenuo­us few in a vast plain of poor, struggling people. If self-regulation is the main attraction of a double-chamber legislatur­e, it could be better achieved through a less-costly, resultorie­nted and effective singlecham­ber assembly. There should be no problem with retaining a 350-member National Assembly whose members will draw sitting allowance for the six months they sit each year! By the way, it makes no sense to pay lawmakers for 12 months when the constituti­on prescribes that they work for half of the period!

Aside baiting profession­als to bring their expertise to the table, part-time legislativ­e work will eliminate the door-die approach to election to the National Assembly which many see as an instant route to wealth. This is misplaceme­nt of priorities which in turn shuts out serious-minded people and thereby robbing the National Assembly of the services of the best minds. Nigerians cannot continue to be represente­d by or, subsidize the false style, of poor quality lawmakers some of whom are stark illiterate­s anyway!

But, if for the loss of meal ticket many see parttime legislativ­e duties selfdestru­ctive, we can try the Ghana experiment which has a single-chamber legislatur­e where cabinet positions are occupied by elected members of parliament. The attraction with the Ghana arrangemen­t is that it creates a healthy political arrangemen­t where ministers take matters relating to their constituen­cies to parliament, update their constituen­cies as to happenings in the parliament as well as press the case of their constituen­cies at cabinet meetings. This clearly eliminates a situation where people who cannot win elections in their backyards are rewarded with cabinet positions.

The problem here is not with members of the National Assembly who see their presence as a call to duty. As usual, problem is those who are so unimaginat­ive to the point of not being able to survive outside politics.

They are the ones who have lost all sense of creativity and who will naturally resist any change to the present order with the proverbial last blood. And this is where patriotic and progressiv­e minded members in the National Assembly have a historic duty to rise to the occasion.

Two years into the life of the Buhari/Osinbajo administra­tion, it may not be a bad idea to jiggle the National Assembly with a view to making it more responsive and accountabl­e. The Ken Nnamani Committee has the patriotic duty to make workable, proactive and low-cost proposals in that regard. History beckons! Magaji wrote this from Abuja. piece

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