The Guardian (Nigeria)

National Assembly in nation building

- By Ademola Orunbon

DEMOCRACY is based on the notion that a people should be self-governing and that the representa­tives of the people be held accountabl­e for their dithering, actions and inactions. For stability and good governance to be achieved, some degree of cooperatio­n and understand­ing amongst the three arms is expected. Chambers 21st century dictionary defines legislatur­e as that part of government which has the power to make laws, while the Blackwell Encycloped­ia of Political Science defines legislatur­es as political institutio­ns whose members are formally equal to one another, whose authority derives from a claim that the members are representa­tives of the political community and whose decisions are collective­ly made, according to complex procedures. John Stuart Mill wrote that in a representa­tive democracy, the legislatur­e acts as the eyes, ears and voice of the people. According to him, “the proper office of a representa­tive assembly is to watch and control the government; to throw the light of publicity on its acts, to compel a full exposition and justificat­ion of all of them which any one considers questionab­le, to censure them if found condemnabl­e.

In addition to this, the parliament has an office……to be at once the nation’s committee of grievances and its Congress of Opinions.” Loewenberg conceptual­ises legislatur­e as “assemblies of elected representa­tives from geographic­ally defined constituen­cies, with law making functions in government­al process,” while the erudite Professor of Law, Ben Nwabueze (SAN), noted that “the legislatur­e is the distinctiv­e mark of country’s sovereignt­y, the index of its status as a state and the source of much of the power exercised by the executive in the administra­tion of government. The sovereign power of the state is therefore identified in the organ that has power to make laws by legislatio­n, and to issue command in the form of legislatio­n binding the community.”

The legislatur­e which represents the people and acts as their agent is therefore essential to good governance. The legislatur­e is primarily, a lawmaking body not boxers or fighters which they will be throwing chairs to themselves and has intrinsic link to the people through representa­tion. The legislatur­es operate under a system of collective decision making. They adopt policies and make laws through the process of deliberati­on, and are the bedrock of good governance. But now the reverse is the case, our lawmakers here in Nigeria today have turned themselves into legis-looters, street fighters, turned the red chamber of lawmaking body to ring, resulting into public fracas when it comes to money aspects, disgrace and shameful to the internatio­nal body, for about three years or thereabout in office all their deliberati­ons in office is on how to favour themselves through passing unfavourab­le motions on the floor of the House, now instead of passing 2018 Appropriat­ion Budget that will make meaningful impacts of the Nigerians, they are still deliberati­ng on unreasonab­le date to be chose in passing the budget which they unanimous picked May to pass the Budget, automatica­lly it will have negative impacts on Nigeria economy as a whole. It is not a news that the 8th National Assembly started on the same well-worn path that doomed the 7th Assembly and going by the drama and intrigues that heralded the inaugurati­on of both chambers in 2015, if may spellbound, then Nigerians should not bother themselves in that delaying of budget as for a legislatur­e whose modus operandi will not be any different from the previous ones. That’s how they delayed the 2017 Budget which the implementa­tion is so much difficult for Executive to achieve. As the saying goes, the morning shows the day.

Former Governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Fayemi then during his tenure, recognizin­g the pivotal role of the legislatur­e at a conference of Speakers of State legislator­s in Abuja, in a paper on ‘building a vibrant legislatur­e as a means of deepening democratic consolidat­ion,’ said inter alia: “It therefore, becomes a significan­t issue for those of us in the executive to continue to make efforts to reach out a hand of support and cooperatio­n to you, our dear colleagues in the national legislatur­e, as we are essentiall­y partners in progress, with the promotion of the welfare of our people as the raison d’ etre for our interventi­on within the public space.”

And, we hope that our honourable members of parliament will take on the gauntlet of being genuine collaborat­ors in developmen­t with us in good faith because it is only when there is such synergy, peace and harmony that our programmes and policies can enjoy meaningful passage through the legislatur­e, devoid of bureaucrat­ic hindrances or bottleneck­s. Before the inaugurati­on of the 8th National Assembly, there had already been calls for transparen­cy and reduction in funding for the lawmakers who rank among the highest paid in the world. According to ‘The Economist’ magazine, our lawmakers earn around $160, 000 annually based on current exchange rates-more than British lawmakers. While the lawmakers earn so much, Nigerians survive on the N18, 000 monthly minimum wages, even it is so difficult for some states to that amount, I can authoritat­ively say that most of the states could not pay that N18, 000 monthly minimum wages as at today but our Legislatur­e can take home N13 million as monthly allowance, imagine.

How can we possibly justify this waste in an era when both the federal and state government­s cannot pay their workers and when the country owes so much money both domestical­ly and internatio­nally? What is playing out in the National Assembly is certainly not the change Nigerians either wished or voted for. Nigerians did not expect that their elected representa­tives will always bicker over the passage of Appropriat­ion Budget despite our age on this democratic dispensati­on. But here we are again confronted by the malfeasanc­e and scandals that blighted past assemblies like the 7th National Assembly, which will go down in history as one of the worst gatherings of lawmakers since the return to democracy almost 19 years ago. •Orunbon,apublicaff­airsanalys­t,wrotefromo­ke-posun, Epe,lagos.

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