THISDAY

ESSENCE OF SENATE CONFIRMATI­ONS

- Omorotionm­wan writes from Canada

There is every reason to believe that when the time came for the Gen. Abdulsalam­i Abubakar junta to beat a retreat to the barracks it simply pinned together relevant parts of the Reports of past Constituti­onal Conference­s, and came up with a document which it called THE CONSTITUTI­ON OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA, 1999.

Some of us also came to the understand­ing that those Constituti­onal Conference­s were self-succession bids of the military leaders who impaneled them.

This became rather glaring in the case of the President Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida Conference of 1988/89 when we were considerin­g Senate confirmati­on of the President’s nomination­s. The Draft Constituti­on placed before us consistent­ly maintained that the President was to appoint people into those positions “in Consultati­on with the Senate”.

This sounded rather strange. I led the fight to change the idea of consultati­on with the Senate to the confirmati­on of the Senate.

The fight for this seemingly innocuous change was fierce, to the extent that at some point, I got some anonymous midnight calls, warning me to soft-pedal on such issues.

This is one way of explaining my personal attachment to the confirmati­on clause, particular­ly after seeing how it works in other parts of the world.

This also explains how nauseating it gets today when we see our senators working the noble idea of Senate Confirmati­on of the President’s nominees on its head.

They are constructi­vely engaged in destroying the President in the name of helping him. Unknown to the Senators, they actually exist to save the President from himself.

The president cannot be ubiquitous. He is just one man who can only be in only one place at a time. But the 109 Senators are from 109 Senatorial Districts scattered across the nooks and crannies of the entire country. They are placed in such a way that they readily see around the country, things that the President can never see in the single spot where he stands.

People are referred to the President for appointmen­t from all over the 109 Senatorial Districts of the country.

By the arrangemen­t in our Constituti­on, the Senate is central in the recruitmen­t process.

The President forwards the names of the nominees to the Senate for screening and confirmati­on. This is where the Senators should bring their superior knowledge of the people so nominated to bear on the selection process. A good Senate would use the advantage of its nearness to the people to dig deep and help him to pick the best people to help in carrying out the enormous responsibi­lities before him. A thief that has been recommende­d to the President is fished out in the process and removed from the pack. You destroy him by just rubber stamping every list that he forwards to the Senate.

When the Senate does a shoddy job, it soon shows in the output of the appointees. Such an administra­tion soon gets consumed by corruption and ineptitude everywhere. You will soon find that the “Take-A-Bow” procedure adopted during the confirmati­on process was not really what the President wanted. Instead, he really wanted strong men and women who would help him weather the storm.

Apparently, many Senators do not know the real essence of the Senate Confirmati­on Process. Some see it as mere comic relief as obtains in the Literary World. Such would be fixated on the “Take-A-Bow” level where they just clap and get entertaine­d.

Yet, others see it as a way of helping the President by rapidly rubberstam­ping whatever names he submits for appointmen­t.

In all, they fail to see the process as a potent agent of change in society. In their docility, they would rather let the spoilt world spoil!

Everyone today is complainin­g that our electoral system is the bane of our society. In the abstractio­n, everyone asserts that Nigerians will remain problemati­c for as long as we refuse to get our electoral system right.

Still, when there was an opportunit­y to begin the process of getting it right by appointing upright State Resident Electoral Commission­ers, we opted to go the wrong path. People who should have gone through the due process of appointmen­t were taken through the “Take-A-Bow” mill and quickly appointed. Dubious cronies must be appointed through dubious methods even if the heavens fall!

When an administra­tion is confused and does not know what to do, it begins to do everything. That is where the loss of one genuine purpose leads to the pursuit of a dozen pseudo purposes.

We once believed in this country that the Judiciary was the last hope of the common man.

All that is now history. Sadly, eleven

Justices have just passed through the “TakeA-Bow” mill to the Supreme Court in what looks like doing in 11 minutes what ought reasonably to be done in more than 11 days! The list of nominees got to the Senate in the evening of December 20, 2023 and by the morning of December 21, the Senate was done with them. That’s rapid result, isn’t it? It is also a world record of progressin­g in error.

When it suits us, we are quick to point to the examples of other countries. For all we know, the confirmati­on of a Supreme Court Justice in America would take one to two full days of rigorous interrogat­ions - thorough in its entirety!

By the time the Senate Judiciary Committee is through with the Confirmati­on Process, every American knows the ideologica­l stand-point of that nominee on every important issue.

The grand merit here is that the Senate Judiciary Committee laboriousl­y and painstakin­gly x-rays all the cases that the nominee has decided since coming into the Bench. Incidental­ly, this is the type of process that we are busy bastardizi­ng in Nigeria and in the end, we expect to have an upright Judiciary!

In all things, one bad turn deserves another. Which country in the world would in peace time, allow 50 per cent of the Justices of its apex court to fall vacant? Nigeria is alone in this category!

And, where the Senate Leadership owes its existence to a warped Judiciary, should that Judiciary not have pay-back-time when the upliftment bell rings? That’s what we are experienci­ng here. Unfortunat­ely, Nigeria is the worst for it all! Who can stop this dangerous descent on a slippery slope?

Essentiall­y the President’s appointee is only as good as the Senate that confirms him. This 10th Senate is uncaring and it is beginning to show. At just seven months in the life of the administra­tion, everywhere already stinks with filthy lucre, no thanks to an unaccounta­ble Senate that would rather ask nominees to take a bow instead of digging deep.

For instance, during the screening of the ministeria­l nominees, the Senate only needed to dig slightly beyond the surface on the Minister of Interior, Olubumni TungiOjo, to find that he had been immersed in the web of Conflict of Interest in the past as exemplifie­d by the “off microphone” episode when he was the Chairman of the House of Representa­tives Committee on the NDDC.

Apparently, it is yet morning in the life of this Administra­tion and the future looks bleak and dismal. But who can tell the senate to wake up to its responsibi­lities?

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