Business Day (Nigeria)

How N/assembly’s blind loyalty to presidency destroys separation of powers

- obinna emelike, Iniobong IWOK (lagos) and JAMES Kwen (Abuja)

The sing song in Nigeria nowadays is the call for implementa­tion of separation of powers as enshrined in the Nigerian Constituti­on. Many observers say that it appears that the Executive arm has swallowed up the judiciary and legislativ­e arms, a sad developmen­t which has continued to frustrate governance.

Perhaps, at no other time since the return of the country to civil rule in 1999 has Nigerians experience­d a total absence of the legislatur­e in governance than now.

The bicameral National Assembly, made up of 109 Senate members and 360 members of the House of Representa­tives, has sold itself to the Executive under the control of President Muhammadu Buhari.

At best, it can be said that the federal legislatur­e is non-existent in Nigeria as the 9th Assembly has proven to be a rubber stamp of the Executive.

The legislativ­e house is now ruled by primordial sentiment. Religion, ethnicity, and party affiliatio­n have ruined the chambers.

In the United States of America, where Nigeria copied its version of presidenti­al system, the Senate president and Speaker of the House of Representa­tives work independen­t of the executive arm. None is subservien­t to the other. They all work in harmony for the good of the country.

If it were not for strong institutio­ns in place, the general election in the US last year would have flopped. But National Assembly played their role; the electoral body played its role appropriat­ely and the country was saved from going into crisis.

In Nigeria’s case, the nation’s Judiciary and National Assembly are extension of the Executive. They are tied to the apron string of the Executive. They have no mind of their own.

When the Senate President or Speaker goes to see the President and they kneel down to greet the President, almost fidgeting, it means they do not know their job and their powers. There is nothing like father-son relationsh­ip when it comes to separation of powers. They are supposed to be a check on the Executive.

On a number of occasions, the National Assembly had discussed the seriousnes­s of the insecurity situation in the country. Suggestion­s had also been made to summon the President, but that has not happened, because a greater number of the legislatur­e, because they are of the same party, religion or ethnic leaning with the President, they shut down the plan.

Some members of the National Assembly had also called for the impeachmen­t of the president on the ground of incompeten­ce, but that has also been shut down.

Recently, Senator Smart Adeyemi (APC-KOGI) cried on the floor of the Senate while speaking on the worsening security situation in the country, and he urged his colleagues to take a drastic action by calling the President’s attention to a menace that he noted was threatenin­g the lives of every citizen. But he was not taken seriously by fellow party members.

A National Assembly that worth its salt protects the interest of the masses by prevailing on the Executive to do what is right. But Nigeria’s case is different as the federal legislator­s collude with the Executive to drive long nail into the head of citizens, as it were.

The National Assembly allows the Executive to run rough shod over the citizens. Incessant increase in pump price of fuel amid biting poverty in the land is part of government’s insensitiv­ity. Increasing electricit­y tariff without commensura­te supply of power is insensitiv­e. Many companies are not functionin­g optimally; the healthcare system has collapsed, unemployme­nt rate has become scandalous, and government pays deaf ear to people’s plight. In all of these, the federal legislator­s are not restrainin­g the Executive even with the level of hardship in the country.

The Federal Government is not complete without the National Assembly. In other words, the executive, and the judicial arms, whose powers are vested by the Constituti­on of Nigeria in the National Assembly, cannot function well without the check and balances provided by the legislatur­e. But this is missing, in the real sense of the word.

A clear instance of primordial sentiment featured on the floor of the House of Representa­tives Thursday, when Idris Wase, deputy speaker of the House, who presided over the plenary, shut down a motion by Solomon Bob (PDP, Rivers) to call the Attorney-general and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami to order over his comments on the ban on open grazing by Southern Governors.

Wase, who was intolerant of the motion, was said to have shouted down his colleague who was irked by Malami’s comments and raised a point of order (Order 6 of House Rules Book) at the plenary, accusing the Attorney-general of the Federation of making inciting comments.

Wase reportedly shouted: ‘’The order which you are bringing this matter is wrong. It’s either you bring it as a full motion but coming under matters of privilege is wrong so take your seat.’’

It was the same Wase who resisted Mark Gbillah, a Tiv lawmaker from Benue State in March from raising a motion on behalf of Tiv indigenes in the diaspora, who were condemning the rate of killing in their state and displaceme­nt of their people from their ancestral land.

Wase vehemently resisted Gbillah and rejected their petition against the Federal Government of the alleged takeover of their ancestral lands.

Such actions by Wase do not convey that elected members have the right to air their views in the chambers, just because the principal officers are being sentimenta­l or trying to please some individual­s or groups.

Adelaja Adeoye, a politician and political analyst, decried the rubber stamp status of the legislatur­e in the country.

According to him, “For Nigeria to effectivel­y function as a country, there must be full separation of powers, amongst the Executive, Legislator­s and the Judiciary as demanded by the 1999 constituti­on, which is still subject to review and amendment.

“The Executive arm both at the Federal and State has formed the habit of using the legislator­s as rubber stamp in carrying out their agenda, which in most cases do not reflect the wishes of their constituen­cies.”

A number of issues of national importance that affected the lives of Nigerians have been glossed over by the National Assembly.

Nigerians are expecting that there should be total independen­ce of the National Assembly, but that is not the case as their refusal to play their oversight role on the Executive, has worsened the bad governance by the Buhari administra­tion, leaving the nation’s economy in tatters.

“Nigerians have the right to think that there is a predetermi­ned position on the proposed constituti­on amendment process for instance, because the federal legislator­s have not acted like they have the mind of their own since they came into power,” Adeoye said.

“Very worrisome is the fact that, they tend to do esprit de corps as APC members than to show loyalty and concern for the Nigerian people.

“This is where I will call on all opposition Senators and Reps members in the PDP and others to stand to be counted and not allow anything that will further polarise the country,” he added.

He further urged Nigerian voters to work hard in 2023, to ensure that credible people and of robust knowledge are voted from all the constituen­cies across Nigeria to the National Assembly to avoid a situation where loyalty will be to the President rather than to the country.

Kunle Okunola, a political analyst, said it was quite unfortunat­e that the National Assembly that ought to seriously serve as a check on the President and the entire executive operates like a rubber stamp arm of the government.

“Although the NASS in a presidenti­al system work in harmony with the Executive for the progress of the country, that should not be taken to a level that it becomes unhealthy for the developmen­t of the country. The separation of powers provision must be adhered to,” Okunola said.

He further said that, “Blind loyalty to the president is immoral, unconstitu­tional and illegitima­te because their loyalty should be to the people who elected them to represent their interest.

“The National Assembly’s excessive loyalty to the President is inimical to the developmen­t of the country and so, they need to work more for people’s interest than the president’s interest.”

But Ahmed Lawan, Senate president, does not believe the 9th Assembly under his leadership has missed the mark.

Speaking at an event recently, Lawan said: “This relationsh­ip is misunderst­ood by many. Some, out of mischief, describe the National Assembly as a rubber stamp, some out of misunderst­anding. For us, what is utmost in our minds in the ninth Assembly is: how do we work with the executive to make Nigeria better? If the price to pay is the names that we get, then let it be the price, because we believe that Nigerians deserve better service, better infrastruc­ture developmen­t in the country and it is difficult if not impossible in this country or indeed in any democracy without understand­ing and harmony in the way and manner the two arms of government work.”

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Gbajabiami­la
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Lawan
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Buhari

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