The Guardian (Nigeria)

Election rescheduli­ng: beyond all doubts

- By Olubunmi Adetunmbi

SOME of the decision-making methods generally employed by parliament­s all over the world include voice voting, rising voting, show of hands, roll call, e-voting. All except for voice voting, provides a means to directly measure the voting pattern of individual members of parliament. Since inception of the 4th Assembly in 1999, the Senate has largely employed voice voting for practicall­y all of its decisions with the notable exception of constituti­on amendment bills and rare cases of call for division. Majorly, “Sayaye”and“saynay” have been the voting habit which sometime gets challenged and a call for division demanded by members who feel strongly that the Senate President, based on his discretion­ary interpreta­tion of the relative decibel level of response has not dispensed his judgement fairly.

In his epochal and widely publicized legislativ­e agenda, Senate President Bukola Saraki identified legislativ­e best practices as one of the pillars of a comprehens­ive agenda at reforming the legislativ­e business of government. Under this pillar, he promised an E-parliament “using ICT in the regular conduct of legislativ­e activities of the Senate, such that modern informatio­n communicat­ion tools will be used across the activities of the National Assembly” He went further to specifical­ly declare that “the Senate will make e-voting a regular feature of Senate legislativ­e business. The adoption of E-voting is to clear any iota of doubt on the credibilit­y of the voting process in the Senate. The method will ensure transparen­cy and accountabi­lity thereby restoring the credibilit­y of the voting activities in the system.” These are laudable initiative­s and Dr. Bukola Saraki should be commended for offering these radial steps at reforming the way the business of the Senate is conducted.

The recent passage of the harmonizat­ion report on the order of elections which led to a walk out by 10 Senators brings to the fore the issue of transparen­cy and public accountabi­lity in National assembly voting process. One wonders why despite the promised voting reforms of Senator President Bukola Saraki, some of the recent sensitive decisions of the Senate have been dogged with controvers­y and protests by aggrieved Senators that the Presiding Officer is undemocrat­ic and nursing a hidden agenda. This is a serious allegation that could have been addressed if the proposed e-parliament envisaged by Senator Saraki had been implemente­d.

Parliament­ary vote by roll call to enumerate those that say “yea”or“nay”, on specific issues provides verifiable and empirical record on how parliament voted. It enables the general public, constituen­ts and political parties to know how their representa­tives voted on issues of interest and concern to them. This form of transparen­t and open balloting system is considered the best for any deliberati­ve and parliament­ary assembly that is accountabl­e and responsibl­e to a constituen­cy. Although Rule 73 of the Senate Proceeding­s provides for dissenting members to call for division to call for recorded votes, but under the proposed e-voting reform of Senate President Saraki, this should have been the rule of voting rather than the exception. I believe this is the anomaly that the laudable declaratio­n of Senator Saraki intended to address and reverse at the onset of his Senate Presidency in June 2015. Unfortunat­ely, this is yet to happen in the eighth assembly.

There were many instances during the 7th Senate where I served, that I wished my choices on major issues were placed on record beyond the untraceabl­e “Yeasornays haveit” that characteri­zed most of the decisions of that era. Only during constituti­on amendments and a call for division by Senator Babajide Omoworare of Osun State did I recall the use of recorded voting during my four-year tenure of 2011-2015. Calling for voting history of representa­tives to know their positions on important parliament­ary debates is impossible as a result of this casual style of voting. This makes it practicall­y impossible to assess the quality of representa­tion and how much parliament­arians toe party lines on policies and electoral promises. Voice voting, in my view, should be limited to simple decisions such as adoption of record of proceeding­s and the likes. Other serious business of the parliament such as resolution of motions, passage of bills should be resolved through recorded voting

For a parliament­arian, the duty of representa­tion, in my view, is superior to that of law making because you have to be elected first as a representa­tive before being law maker, in other words, without being a representa­tive you cannot be a law maker. Therefore, as representa­tive of constituen­cies, Senators have the primary and sacred duty of advocating the priorities of their constituen­ts and constantly balancing local and national interests, and providing the constituen­ts feedback on the choices he or she makes on their behalf. This is the soft underbelly of democracy and can only be measured if voting records of representa­tives are recorded and open for scrutiny and compliance trail by those whose mandate he or she carries and the party that gave it expression. Part of the reasons for the current poor public perception of the National Assembly is largely due to poor understand­ing of their roles and the value attached to it. The e-voting reform initiative proposed by Senator Bukola Saraki, if implemente­d, will give the media more work to do by creating a wider agenda of issue-based discussion on the deliberati­ons of parliament and specific roles of individual parliament­arians and clusters of partisan and multiparty interest groups. This way, we can further build public confidence in the institutio­n and further demonstrat­e its value to our democracy as well as justify the cost of running parliament in a democracy.

This is why Senator Saraki’s e-voting re- form must be revisited to address a critical need for transparen­cy in our legislativ­e practice, boost the peoples’ confidence in the parliament and deepen our democratic culture. The public needs to be provided with relevant informatio­n to measure the quality of representa­tion in the legislativ­e chambers through transparen­t and responsibl­e accounting of parliament­ary votes. This is why, as much as practicabl­e, voice voting should never be allowed to become the popular method for serious decision making in the legislativ­e chambers. To the extent that it veils the voting identity of elected representa­tives, voice voting is fundamenta­lly flawed and is a form of political corruption that should be discourage­d in taking important decisions in the National Assembly. As it has played out in the current issue of the bill on the amendment of the timetable for the 2019 elections, e-voting would have establishe­d attendance, whether or not quorum was formed and how members wish to vote. Adoption of a voice call in such a sensitive issue is susceptibl­e to controvers­ies of the interpreta­tional judgement of the Presiding Officer with the undesirabl­e potential of promoting over time, the erosion of trust and confidence in the quality of decision emanating from leader of the deliberati­ve assembly. Worse still, it helps to mask the face, muffle the voice and veil the choice made by each representa­tive, this can promote indolence and non-transparen­t representa­tion. It reduces public accountabi­lity on parliament­ary decision to unacceptab­le minimum and provides undesirabl­e cover for truancy on the part of some representa­tives.

On the other hand, any other form of decisionma­king that maintains the record of individual choices provides transparen­t measure of the representa­tive’s quality of decision making. It becomes easy to know how the choices made by each representa­tive hurt or promote the interest of their constituen­ts, supports or undermines the policy preference­s of their political parties.

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