THISDAY

N’Assembly to Transmit Not-Too-Young-To-Run Bill, 11 Others for Presidenti­al Assent

- Damilola Oyedele in Abuja

The National Assembly has resolved to transmit the Not-Too-Young-To-Run bill and 11 other Constituti­on Alteration bills which have satisfied the provisions of Section 9(2) of the 1999 constituti­on to President Muhammadu Buhari for assent.

This followed the adoption of the bills by two-thirds of the 36 state Houses of Assembly as part of the fourth constituti­on amendment exercise, which has 33 bills seeking to alter various provisions of the constituti­on.

The Not-Too-Young-To-Run bill also known as the Reduction of Age for Election bill, allows the age qualificat­ion for the offices of the president and governor to be reduced from 40 to 35, and for Senate, House of Representa­tives and State Houses of Assembly seats to be reduced from 30 to 25 years.

Other alteration bills to be transmitte­d to the president are Authorisat­ion of Expenditur­e in Absence of Appropriat­ion, Financial Autonomy of State Legislatur­es, the Legislatur­e, Political Parties and Electoral Matters, the Nigerian Police Force, Restrictio­n of Tenure of President and Governor, and Submission from Judiciary bills.

The list also includes alteration bills on Determinat­ion of Pre-Election Matters, Consequent­ial Amendment on Civil Defence, Procedure for Overriding Presidenti­al Veto in Constituti­onal Alteration and Time Line for the Presentati­on of Appropriat­ion Bills.

The Majority Leader of the Senate, Senator Ahmed Lawan, presented the bills at plenary yesterday, and urged that they be transmitte­d, while awaiting the resolution of some state assemblies on five bills.

“While awaiting the resolution of some of the state Houses of Assembly on some of the bills, the bills that have met the requiremen­ts of the provisions of Section 9 of the constituti­on and passed, be processed in line with the Authentica­tion Act and transmitte­d to the president for his assent to enable institutio­ns of government prepare for immediate implementa­tion of policies and programmes pursuant to the provisions,” Lawan said.

He said 35 state assemblies, excluding Lagos, have forwarded their resolution­s on the bills to the National Assembly.

The 33 alteration bills had been voted on by both legislativ­e chambers in July 2017, with the Senate approving 29, while the House approved 21 bills. 17 of the bills had been approved by both chambers without difference­s and transmitte­d to the state assemblies, while four approved with amendments, were committed to a conference committee.

The Authorisat­ion of Expenditur­e in Absence of Appropriat­ion bill (No.2) alters Sections 82 and 122 of the constituti­on to reduce the period within which the president or governor of a state may authorise the withdrawal of monies from the Consolidat­ed Revenue Fund in the absence of an Appropriat­ion Act from six months to three months. The timeline for the presentati­on of Appropriat­ion Bill (No. 28) provides a timeframe within which the president or governor should lay the Appropriat­ion Bill before the legislatur­e.

Restrictio­n of Tenure of President and Governor bill (No. 16) restricts a person who was sworn in as president or governor to complete the term of his predecesso­r, from contesting for the same office more than once.

Procedure for Overriding Presidenti­al Veto in Constituti­onal Alteration bill (No. 24) provides that in the event executive assent is not granted in 30 days, the bill automatica­lly becomes law, and would eliminate the need for the legislatur­e to activate the process for a veto.

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