The Guardian (Nigeria)

The constituti­on and amendments

- By Ebun- Olu Adegboruwa Adegboruwa is a senior advocate of Nigeria ( SAN).

CONSTITUTI­ON of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 ( as Amended), sections 4 ( 1) & ( 2):

( 1) “The legislativ­e powers of the Federal Republic of Nigeria shall be vested in a National Assembly for the Federation which shall consist of a Senate and a House of Representa­tives.

( 2) The National Assembly shall have power to make laws for the peace, order and good government of the Federation or any part thereof with respect to any matter included in the Exclusive Legislativ­e List set out in Part 1 of the Second Schedule to this Constituti­on.”

The Constituti­on establishe­d the Legislatur­e as the First Arm of government, because law is needed to define all other aspects of human existence. It is thus expected that through the powers granted to it under the Constituti­on, the legislatur­e will work to enact good laws for the good of Nigeria. The most important of these laws is of course the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 as amended. There has been lots of hue and cry over the nature and effect of this document on our nationhood. Thus, over the years, virtually every legislativ­e arm has attempted to amend the document as a way of placating the people of Nigeria whose input was not sought or obtained by the military before it was forced down on them.

Section 9 of the said Constituti­on deals with the detailed procedure for the amendment of the Constituti­on. It is rather cumbersome and laborious. Let me dwell on the process of amendment of the Constituti­on a little more in detail as adopted from Policy and Legal Advocacy Centre, with minor modificati­ons, in paragraphs 1 to 9 hereunder.

1. Proposed amendment to the Constituti­on usually comes by way of Bills, which originate either from the Executive or a Member of the National Assembly as a Private Member Bill. While Executive Bills are initiated by the President, the Chief Justice of Nigeria or other Government officials, Private Member’s Bills are initiated by interest groups and sponsored by members of either the Senate or the House of Representa­tives. The procedure for this presentati­on is to submit it to the President of the Senate or Speaker of the House of Representa­tives as the case may be and sent to their respective Rules and Business Committees for scheduling on the Order Papers for an introducti­on into the Houses.

2. The National Assembly may organise a public hearing and other consultati­ons on the bill. At this stage, Bills are not only critically examined by the Committee but by identified stakeholde­rs of the public who are often required to make written submission­s of their views through a Memorandum to propose further amendments where necessary. The Committee is at liberty to develop new amendment proposals based on received submission­s and outside of those committed to it.

3. The amendment proposals are presented as one Constituti­on Amendment Bill or as several Bills touching on different subject matters in a report to plenary. The 8th Assembly for instance, adopted a piecemeal approach where constituti­onal amendment proposals were brought as separate bills rather than a single Constituti­onal Amendment Bill. This was done to avoid the 7th Assembly’s experience with presenting multiple proposals in a single amendment bill, which were all jettisoned when the President refused to sign the bill. If the report and bill( s) as presented is adopted at this stage, it progresses to Third Reading. Before the Bill progresses to Third Reading, every member of the legislatur­e votes either in support or against each specific item in the Bill. Here, the proposals to the Constituti­on are often presented in the form of a clause.

A two third majority of all the members of each House is needed for each clause to be deemed as passed except where the proposal borders on the creation of new states, boundary adjustment­s, new local government areas, fundamenta­l rights and on the mode for altering the Constituti­on. In such cases, a four- fifth majority is needed.

4. The Votes are then collated and counted, usually after electronic voting. The reason for this is two fold. Firstly, it is to ensure that the total number of Senators or House of Representa­tives Members in attendance are not below the minimum number required to pass a proposed clause. Secondly, this is to ensure that any proposal that is passed meets the stipulated requiremen­t of an approval by a twothird majority. Once two- thirds of the total number of Senators or Members voting in each chamber is achieved in any of the proposals of the Committee, the process moves to the next stage.

5. If an amendment occurs at either of the Houses on the bill or each House passes the bill with difference­s, a Conference Committee will be set up to harmonise the difference­s. This is because the two chambers are required to pass every bill, including constituti­on amendment bills in identical format. If both Houses are not able to harmonise positions, the Bill will be returned to the respective chambers of the National Assembly for fresh voting. Two- thirds of the numerical strength of each House will still be required to pass it at this stage. This would mean a minimum of seventy- two Senators and two hundred and forty Members of the House adopting an identical bill for transmissi­on to the States. Where the bill is however adopted or passed in identical format by the two chambers i. e. without amendments, there would be no need for a conference or harmonizat­ion as described above as it is deemed that they have passed a single uniform bill. The bill is then transmitte­d to the State Houses of Assembly by the Clerk of the National Assembly for their concurrenc­e.

To be continued tomorrow

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