Daily Trust Saturday

BUHARI REJECTS6 ELECTORAL ACT FOR 3rd TIME

•...says it’ll disrupt 2019 polls

- Ismail Mudashir, Musa Abdullahi Krishi & Saawua Terzungwe

President Muhammadu Buhari has given reasons why he declined assent to the Electoral Act amendment bill for the third time, saying signing it now will disrupt the 2019 General Elections. He said in separate letters to Senate President Bukola Saraki and Speaker Yakubu Dogara that with only few months to the 2019 General Elections, if a new electoral law comes into being, there would be a lot of uncertaint­y.

The President twice rejected the amendment made to the 2010 Electoral Act. The first was on March 13 and the second time on September 3and requested that certain things be done on the proposal. “Any real or apparent change to the rules this close to election may provide an opportunit­y for disruption and confusion in respect to which law governs the electoral process. This leads me to believe that it is in the interest of the country and our democracy for the National Assembly to specifical­ly state in the Bill, that the Electoral Act will come into effect and be applicable to elections commencing after the 2019 General Elections, Buhari said in the letters dated December 6, 2018.”

The president also made observatio­ns on some technicali­ties contained in the bill, saying Section 5 of the bill, which seeks to amend Section 18 of the principal Act should indicate the subsection to which the substituti­on of the figure “30” or the figure ”60” is to be effected.

“Section 11 of the bill, amending Section 36, should indicate the subsection in which the proviso is to be introduced.

“Section 24 of the bill, which amends Section 85 (1) should be redrafted in full as the introducti­on of the “electing” to the sentence may be interprete­d to mean the political parties may give 21 days’ notice of the intention to merge, as opposed to the 90 days provided in Section 87 (2) of the Electoral Act, which provides the provision for merger of political parties.

“The definition of the term ‘Ward Collection Officer’ should be revised to reflect a more descriptiv­e definition than the capitalise­d and undefined term “Registrati­on Area Collation Officer.”’

Meanwhile, the Peoples Democratic Party Presidenti­al Campaign Organizati­on (PPCO) in a statement by its Director, Media and Publicity, Mr Kola Ologbondiy­a, has urged the National Assembly to save the nation’s democracy by overriding President Buhari’s refusal to sign the Electoral Act Amendment Bill into law.

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