THISDAY

In Proposed Constituti­on Amendment, Ministeria­l Nominees to be Presented 30 Days from Presidenti­al Inaugurati­on

Hope rises for LG autonomy, as National Assembly begins debate Tuesday Lowers age for elective offices

- Damilola Oyedele in Abuja

Hopes were raised at the weekend that the era of delay in the appointmen­t of ministers by the president might soon be a thing of the past, as the joint committee of the National Assembly on review of the 1999 Constituti­on proposed a time limit for the submission of the list of ministeria­l nominees. THISDAY learnt that local gov- ernment autonomy was also pencilled in for considerat­ion in the report of the committee, headed by Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu. This raises hopes that the local councils may finally be freed from executive strangleho­ld.

Ekweremadu submitted the report of the joint committee on the review of the 1999 Constituti­on to the Senate and House of Representa­tives on Thursday, with assurances that debate on it would commence on Tuesday. The report contains items that had been adopted by the joint session of the Senate and the House of Representa­tives committees on constituti­on review.

THISDAY gathered that the committee recommende­d a 30-day deadline from the day of the president’s inaugurati­on for his submission of the list of ministeria­l nominees to the Senate for approval. It also proposed the reduction of age requiremen­ts for election into executive and legislativ­e positions.

The proposed alteration­s were harmonised at the joint retreat of the Senate and House of Representa­tives Committees on the Review of the 1999 Constituti­on penultimat­e weekend in Lagos.

Local government autonomy has been a perennial topic in constituti­on amendment processes since the inception of the Fourth Republic in 1999, though it has never succeeded. The closest the issue came to being amended was during the Seventh National Assembly, when Section 162 of the 1999 Constituti­on was among 23 items amended by the National Assembly and passed to the 36 states Houses of Assembly in October 2014 for concurrenc­e. Concurrenc­e by two-thirds of the assemblies, that is 24 Houses of Assembly, is required to pass amendment to any constituti­onal item into law. But 23 states’ Houses of Assembly voted against

the amendment that would have given the 774 local government­s listed in the 1999 Constituti­on financial and administra­tive autonomy. The surprising decision of the state legislatur­es was believed to have emanated from the governors, who are accused of diverting council funds from the Federation Account paid into the joint state/local government account to the pursuit of their inordinate ambitions.

But last week, hopes of independen­t local government areas were rekindled, when amendment to sections 7 and 162 featured among items listed for debate in the current constituti­on amendment process. If the amendment succeeds, the joint state/local government account would be abolished to enable the third tier of government maintain and run independen­t accounts into which allocation­s from the Federation Account and the state government­s would be directly paid.

Lawmakers of the two chambers of the National Assembly were expected to use the weekend to study the report of the ad hoc committee on constituti­on review before the commenceme­nt of debate on the items list for review on Tuesday.

The amendment in favour of local government autonomy also seeks to implement uniform three-year tenure for elected local government officials across the country. This would eliminate the practice whereby state governors sack elected officials at the third tier of government at will and install their protégés as heads of caretaker committees for months on end.

The amendment to Section 7 provides that only democratic­ally constitute­d local government­s can receive and administer the allocation­s received from the Federation Account and state government­s.

The National Assembly proposed the lowering of age qualificat­ions for elective positions. Under section 130 of the 1999 Constituti­on, a person must be at least 40 years of age to be elected President or Vice President of Nigeria. Section 68 sets 35 and 30, respective­ly, as minimum age for senators and House of Representa­tives members, and section 177 provides that a person must be 35 years of age to be elected governor of a state, while section 106 sets 30 years as minimum age for membership of a House of Assembly.

The amendment to section 121 of the constituti­on seeks to enhance legislativ­e processes in states by granting financial autonomy to the Houses of Assembly and placing the state legislatur­es on First Line charge. This would reduce executive control over funds meant for the House of Assembly from the Consolidat­ed Revenue Fund of a state, as monies would be paid directly to the institutio­n.

The joint committee on constituti­on review also recommende­d alteration­s to sections 58, 59, and 100 of the constituti­on, to provide a 30-day timeframe for the president or governor to assent to a bill passed by the National Assembly or state Assembly, or indicate his refusal of assent. The amendment provides that if executive assent is not granted in 30 days, the bill automatica­lly becomes laws without the legislatur­e having to activate the process of veto.

Amendments to sections 82 and 122 of the constituti­on seek to reduce the time within which the president or state governor may authorise expenditur­e from the Consolidat­ed Revenue Fund from six months to three months. The move is to ensure that the executive sends the appropriat­ion bill in time.

The joint committee also recommende­d a timeframe within which the president or governor must appoint the cabinet, in addition to a provision that at least 35 per cent of the positions must go to women. It suggested that the proposed portfolio of each nominee for minister or commission­er must accompany the letter of nomination to the legislatur­e.

Alteration­s proposed to sections 150, 174, 195, 211, 318 and the Third Schedule to the constituti­on seek to separate the office of the Minister of Justice or Commission­er for Justice, in the case of a state, from that of the Attorneyge­neral of the Federation or of a state. This is to insulate the attorney-general from partisan politics by granting him financial autonomy and security of tenure.

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