THISDAY

Defection Alters Balance of Power in the Senate

Wanted, assembly police!

- Iyobosa Uwugiaren in Abuja

The movement of Senate President Bukola Saraki has altered the power configurat­ion in the upper legislativ­e chamber, increasing the opposition Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) number from 54 it was at the first gale of defections last week to 55 (using Senate record).

With the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress’ (APC) membership declining from 51 to 50, (with Sarak's defection) the PDP has become the majority party in the Senate with five significan­t implicatio­ns.

political history of the country, the opposition party would form the majority in the upper legislativ­e chamber, forcing the ruling party to relinquish its leadership of the Senate.

presidency, effectivel­y making the number three citizen an opposition politician.

becomes the highest elected person in opposition camp, a situation that catapults him to the position of national leader of the PDP.

Minority Leader, Senator

Godswill Akpabio, would become the majority leader.

As majority leader, Akpabio would have the responsibi­lity of presenting executive bills, an eventualit­y that leaves the ruling party in a precarious situation as the opposition party may frustrate executive bills.

Wanted, Assembly Police!

Following widespread abuse of the coercive machinery of state, particular­ly the police and the Department of State Services ( DSS) personnel by the executive, there is a growing belief that the need has arisen for the legislatur­e to have its own law enforcemen­t arm that protect it from undue interferen­ce from the executive.

According to analysts, who would not want their names in print, a legislativ­e police that would be controlled by the legislatur­e had become imperative given the use of the police by the executive arm of government to harass and intimidate other arms of government, particular­ly the legislatur­e.

Reference is made to the perennial use of the police to brazenly interfere in the affairs of the other arms of government simply because the operationa­l control of the security agency is vested in the executive by the 1999 Constituti­on.

Last Monday’s incident in the Benue State House of Assembly, where eight of 30 lawmakers initiated an impeachmen­t proceeding against the state Governor, Dr. Samuel Ortom, with the aid of the police, despite the fact that the police ought to be under the direction of the governor as stipulated by the constituti­on, is cited as the most recent abuse of the police by the executive to serve political end.

They traced the recent history of the police by the executive to the administra­tion of President Olusegun Obasanjo under whose watch sitting governors, including Dr. Chris Ngige and Mr. Peter Obi both of Anambra State; Senator Rashidi Ladoja of Oyo State; and Chief Joshua Dariye of Plateau State, were summarily harassed out of office by political opponents with the aid of the police.

Although they all got their mandates back through the interventi­on of the Supreme Court, their harrowing experience, said analysts could not have been adequately made up for by the justice they got from the courts.

Perhaps the interventi­on of the judiciary, which restored the governors’ right in harsh tones, moderated the temperamen­t of the Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar’Adua and Dr. Goodluck Jonathan administra­tions that succeeded Obasanjo.

Although President Muhammadu Buhari in the statement by his media aide, Mr. Femi Adesina, yesterday recommitte­d to constituti­onalism, many analysts are of the view that the legislatur­e needs its own police in order to maintain the delicate balance of power between the executive and legislatur­e, and preserve the principle of separation of power as enshrined in the 1999 Constituti­on as amended.

“There is a need to institute a balance of power and review the constituti­onal basis for the vesting of police powers in the executive arm alone,” an analyst said, pointing out that elsewhere, specifical­ly, the United States, the legislatur­e has its own police that protect it.

Actually, the US Congress has a force called United States Capitol Police (USCP), which according to Wikipedia, is a federal law enforcemen­t agency charged with protecting the United States Congress within the District of Columbia and throughout the United States and its territorie­s.

It said, “The USCP is the only full service federal law enforcemen­t agency responsibl­e to the legislativ­e branch of the U.S. government.

“The United States Capitol Police has the primary responsibi­lity for protecting life and property; preventing, detecting, and investigat­ing criminal acts; and enforcing traffic regulation­s throughout a large complex of congressio­nal buildings, parks, and thoroughfa­res. The Capitol Police has exclusive jurisdicti­on within all buildings and grounds of the United States Capitol complex as well as the Library of Congress. It also has concurrent jurisdicti­on with other law enforcemen­t agencies, including the United States Park Police and the Metropolit­an Police Department of the District of Columbia, in an area of approximat­ely 200 blocks around the complex.

“Officers also have jurisdicti­on throughout the District of Columbia to take enforcemen­t action when they observe or are made aware of crimes of violence while on official duties. Additional­ly, they are charged with the protection of members of Congress, officers of Congress, and their families throughout the entire United States, its territorie­s and possession­s, and the District of Columbia. While performing protective functions, the Capitol Police have jurisdicti­on throughout the entire United States.”

Analysts contend that replicatio­n of this in Nigeria would go a long way to protect the independen­ce of the legislatur­e and immunise it from the overbearin­g interferen­ce from the executive, adding, however, that this should be in addition to the creation of State Police.

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