THISDAY

Falana: Court Never Ruled N’Assembly Had Power to Increase Budget

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Gboyega Akinsanmi

A human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana, yesterday said a Federal High Court presided over by Justice Gabriel Kolawole never granted the National Assembly the power to review upward the budget proposal laid before it by the executive arm of government.

Under the 2007 Fiscal Responsibi­lity Act, however, Falana noted that the members of National Assembly “may influence the introducti­on of new items or inclusion of projects to be executed in their constituen­cies” only at the stage of preparing the Medium Term Expenditur­e Framework (MTEF).

He made this clarificat­ion in a statement he issued yesterday, faulting a position espoused by the Senate through its spokespers­on, Senator Aliyu Abdullahi, last week that the National Assembly had power to insert or include new projects into the budget proposal.

The Senate had in a statement by its spokespers­on defended its decision to include over 4,000 new projects into the 2017 budget, noting that the federal high court had ruled that the National Assembly had the power to increase the budget estimates laid before it by the executive arm of government.

In a statement he personally signed yesterday, Falana faulted the position of the National Assembly, saying the interpreta­tion of the court decision by the legislativ­e arm “is grossly misleading.”

He admitted that Kolawole, the trial judge, stated that the legislativ­e arm “is not a rubber stamp parliament on the grounds that it is empowered by the 1999 Constituti­on to debate and make its informed inputs into the budget proposals submitted to it by the president.”

He, however, said nowhere in the judgment did the court say that the National Assembly “has the power to increase or insert new items like constituen­cy projects into the budget estimates contained in any Appropriat­ion Bill or Supplement­ary Bill prepared and submitted to it by the President.”

Falana, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), therefore cited the court decision in Suit No: FHC/ ABJ/CS/295/2014 in which the trial judge ruled against the power of the legislativ­e arm to increase or review upward the budget estimate laid before it.

As indicated in Falana’s statement, the trial judge ruled that the National Assembly was created by the 1999 Constituti­on and imbued with the powers “to receive budget estimates which the president is constituti­onally empowered to prepare and lay before it as a rubber stamp parliament.

“The whole essence of the budget estimates being required to be laid before the National Assembly, is to enable it as the assembly of the representa­tives of the people, to debate the said ‘budget proposals’ and to make its own well informed legislativ­e inputs into it.

“What the National Assembly cannot do is to prepare ‘budget estimates’ for the president or to disregard the proposals laid before it and substitute it with its own estimates.

“The rationale for this is simple: It is the executive arm under the leadership of the president that controls and superinten­ds all agencies, corporatio­ns and commission­s that generate the revenue for the running of the government...”

However, the human rights lawyer pointed out that the seeming lacuna in section 81 of the 1999 Constituti­on has been sufficient­ly addressed by the Fiscal Responsibi­lity Act No 31 of 2007.

He noted that section 13 of the Act “has imposed a mandatory duty on the Minister of Finance to seek inputs from the National Assembly and other relevant statutory bodies in the preparatio­n of the MTEF which shall be approved by the Federal Executive Council.”

In line with the section 18 of the Act, Falana argued that the MTEF “shall be the basis for the preparatio­n of the estimates of revenue and expenditur­e to be prepared and laid before the National Assembly under section 81 of the Constituti­on.”

According to him, it is at the stage of preparing the MTEF that the members National Assembly may influence the introducti­on of new items or inclusion of projects to be executed in their constituen­cies.

He, therefore, noted that the National Assembly “cannot prepare any aspect of the budget estimates, lay it before itself, pass same and then request the president to sign it into law.”

 ?? Ibrahim Shuaibu ?? Emir of Kano, Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi II (left), and Governor Abdullahi Ganduje, during a Sallah homage by the Emir to Government House in Kano...yesterday.
Ibrahim Shuaibu Emir of Kano, Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi II (left), and Governor Abdullahi Ganduje, during a Sallah homage by the Emir to Government House in Kano...yesterday.

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