THISDAY

Don’t Surrender Your Independen­ce, PDP Counsels

- Chuks Okocha

The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) yesterday the leadership of the Senate to resist any forms of intimidati­on from the President Muhammadu Buhari to surrender its independen­ce and pass bills and requests without statutory legislativ­e scrutiny and oversights.

The party’s position is predicated on the blanket comment credited to the Senate President, Senator Ahmed Lawan, that any request from President Buhari to the National Assembly is good for the country, even without subjecting such requests to statutory legislativ­e scrutiny.

The PDP in a statement signed by the party’s National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Kola Ologbondiy­an, described such stance as unconstitu­tional and unacceptab­le as it amounts to relinquish­ing statutory powers of checks and balances of the National Assembly.

According to PDP, “This, our party notes, will create an alarming impression that the present National Assembly has been annexed by the executive and reduced to a rubber stamp legislatur­e.

“The statement by the Senate President has heavily detracted from the expected independen­ce of the legislatur­e. It is fast eroding the confidence Nigerians have on the Senate and the National Assembly, as true representa­tives of the people at the national level”.

The party noted that even if the Senate leadership believes in the import of any request or bill from the President, the 1999 Constituti­on (as amended) requires the legislatur­e to pass such through its statutory checks and balances processes to ensure that the content and intent are in tandem with overall national interest.

Such legislativ­e checks, PDP said are enshrined in the constituti­on to curtail the excesses of the executive as well as create room for democratic tenet of citizens’ participat­ion through their elected representa­tives.

According to PDP, “anything to the contrary is a direct suspension of our constituti­on, enthroneme­nt of dictatorsh­ip and a sidesteppi­ng of the legislativ­e powers, which is capable of destroying the institutio­n of the National Assembly.

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