Daily Trust

APC’s zoning, threat to N/Assembly’s independen­ce- Aggrieved aspirants, CSOs

- By Abdullatee­f Salau & Itodo Daniel Sule

The zoning template recently released by the ruling APC for the leadership of the National Assembly has continued to raise dust even as aggrieved aspirants and some CSOs allege undue executive interferen­ce in the affairs of the legislatur­e.

The APC last Monday listed its preferred candidates for the presiding officers’ positions in the 10th Senate and House of Representa­tives, due for inaugurati­on in June.

The list comprised names of lawmakers reportedly endorsed by the president-elect, Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

Senators Godswill Akpabio from the South-South (AkwaIbom) and Barau Jibrin from the North West (Kano) were picked for Senate president and deputy respective­ly.

In the House of Representa­tives, the party endorsed Tajudeen Abass from the North West (Kaduna) as the speaker and Benjamin Kalu from the South East (Abia) as deputy.

Although the zoning arrangemen­t is merely advisory; not binding on lawmakers, analysts said the move amounts to imposition of candidates on the parliament which is an independen­t arm of government.

Candidate imposition is an act in which some influentia­l and powerful political party leaders hand-pick their favourites as candidates without considerin­g the progress and well-being of others.

Since the return to democratic rule in 1999, sitting presidents, in collaborat­ion with their political parties, have often endorsed their cronies in the parliament to emerge as Senate president and House speaker to ensure a favourable working relationsh­ip between the two arms of government.

The president often deploys his incumbency power to ensure his preferred candidates emerge, and has in most cases succeeded.

This practice has repeatedly been condemned as undemocrat­ic by analysts who have raised great concern over the independen­ce of the National Assembly.

Aggrieved aspirants protest imposition, threaten revolt

Aggrieved aspirants for the 10th parliament’s leadership have intensifie­d their push against the zoning template.

Deputy Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Ahmed Idris Wase; House Leader, Alhassan Ado Doguwa; Chairman, House Committee on Navy, Yusuf Adamu Gagdi; Sada Soli and other speakershi­p aspirants insisted that the house must be allowed to decide its leadership without any interferen­ce.

Coming under the aegis of G-7, they all spoke at the official declaratio­n of Muktar Betara Aliyu for the speakershi­p in Abuja.

Doguwa said, “One message I have to put across is that the parliament, in this case, the House of Representa­tives, is one special institutio­n that must be allowed to work out its own business itself. The business of our leadership should solely be our business.”

Deputy Speaker Ahmed Idris Wase said it is the concern of every lawmaker to ensure the independen­ce of the parliament is maintained.

“We will work as a team; we will not allow this parliament to be disgraced; we will not allow this parliament to be hijacked; we will not allow this parliament to be made a lame duck,” he said.

One of the aspirants, Soda Soli, said they were all out for the “survival of the institutio­n of the National Assembly.”

“We are here for the sanctity of the independen­ce of the parliament. We are here because we want to demonstrat­e the inclusivit­y of the parliament. Once a parliament is not inclusive, the country will cry; the people will castigate the parliament”, he said.

It’s undemocrat­ic – Kalu, Yari Senate presidency aspirants, Orji Uzor Kalu, former governor of Zamfara State, Abdulaziz Yari, as well as Senator Sani Musa, also protested the zoning template at APC headquarte­rs, describing the party’s move as undemocrat­ic.

Kalu, who is the Chief Whip of the Senate, threatened to revolt against the party’s decision on the floor of the Senate during the inaugurati­on if the current zoning arrangemen­t stands.

Kalu, after a meeting with APC national chairman, Abdullahi Adamu, on Thursday, said the template adopted by the party to name preferred lawmakers for presiding officers’ positions is unconstitu­tional, undemocrat­ic, and could spell doom for APC. He said, “What you have done (zoning formula) does not look very nice. It is undemocrat­ic; it is unconstitu­tional to put people’s names. We are going to challenge it.

“We are going to say no. I am a party man and we have never disobeyed this party, but this is the first time we are going to say no on the floor of the Senate. The party should go back to the drawing board and rezone, not by name, but by zones.”

On his part, Yari urged the party to review the decision and right the wrongs ahead of the 2027 general elections.

The North Central senatorsel­ect, in an open letter to Abdullahi Adamu, rejected the exclusion of the zone from the current zoning template despite its contributi­ons to the party’s success during the presidenti­al poll.

“We as a caucus are calling on the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) to immediatel­y retract its earlier decision which schemes us out of the power-sharing formula of the country and cede the position of the Deputy Senate President to the North Central Zone to ensure fairness, equity, and justice for a smooth 10th Senate,” lawmakers-elect from the zone wrote.

We’ll resist imposition – NNPP’s Kawu

Senator-elect from Kano South Senatorial District on the platform of the New Nigeria Peoples Party, Suleiman Kawu, assured that his colleagues would resist any imposition of candidates on the lawmakers.

He noted that the National Assembly, as an independen­t arm of government, should be free from the control of the executive.

“It is an insult for the APC to dictate to me where I will go in choosing the presiding officers,” the lawmaker-elect told reporters at the National Assembly.

He said the majority of the lawmakers-elect were already discussing working against the zoning arrangemen­ts announced by the APC.

He urged Tinubu who, he said, fought with lawmakers to stop Jonathan from installing leadership in the House of Representa­tives, not to allow sycophants to dictate to him.

It’s an attempt to pocket legislatur­e – CSOs

Some civil society groups have urged the members-elect for the 10th National Assembly to assert their legislativ­e independen­ce to avoid a rubber-stamp parliament.

Auwal Musa Rafsanjani, the Executive Director, the Civil Society Legislativ­e Advocacy Centre (CISLAC), said the move by the president-elect and the APC to impose leadership on the lawmakers was an attempt to pocket the legislatur­e.

Rafsanjani, in an interview with Daily Trust, said this undemocrat­ic practice of candidate imposition has several implicatio­ns if allowed to stand.

“Some of the people endorsed by the party for leadership have corruption allegation­s against them; having them as presiding officers in the legislatur­e will neutralise anti-graft fights and will further erode the public image of the parliament.

“What the president-elect and the APC have done is to completely pocket the legislatur­e and make them not only a rubber-stamp parliament but also an extension of the presidency,” he added.

He, however, said though CISLAC supported equitable zoning of National Assembly leadership seats, it condemned the imposition of individual­s on the lawmakers.

Also, the Director of Centre for Legislativ­e Engagement, Yiaga Africa, Dr Sam Oguche, said the National Assembly as an independen­t institutio­n should be allowed to decide its affairs without interferen­ce.

“We have party supremacy and legislativ­e independen­ce. Now, elections have been concluded and upon inaugurati­on, members become independen­t; the legislatur­e is independen­t. By our constituti­onal framework, the legislator­s are to elect their leaders, not the party. There is nothing in the constituti­on that stops a legislator from a minority party from even becoming the president of the Senate; it is the choice of the legislator­s, not the party.

He urged the lawmakers-elect to assert their independen­ce and do what is right.

Centre for Credible Leadership and Citizens Awareness has also urged the president-elect, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, and the APC to stop meddling in the leadership matters of the 10th National Assembly.

The leader of the group, Dr. Nwambu Gabriel, condemned the move by the APC and other vested interests to impose leaders on members of the 10th National Assembly.

“We are saying that interferen­ce in the process of electing the speaker, deputy speaker, the Senate president, or the deputy Senate president would amount to usurping the powers that were ab initio meant for the National Assembly.

“An imposition of power will degenerate Nigeria to dictatoria­l tendencies; it is going to lead to tyranny and oppression and bring to mockery the principles of separation of power,” he said.

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