Confusion As Nigerian Senate, House Of Representatives Approve Different Versions Of Electoral Amendment Bill

A fresh controversy is lurking at the National Assembly as the Senate and the House of Representatives went ahead to approve different versions of the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill, 2021.

While the Senate offered the re-amended bill for direct, indirect primaries or consensus as the procedure for the nomination of candidates by political parties for various elective positions, the House only provided direct and indirect mode.

President Muhammadu Buhari had failed to sign the bill to law over the provision of direct primaries as the sole mode of conducting political parties’ primaries.

Also Read: NASS To Reintroduce Electoral Act Amendment Bill, Harps On The Direct Primaries

The bill earlier passed by the National Assembly on November 18, 2021, stipulates that “a political party seeking to nominate candidates for elections under this bill shall hold direct primaries for aspirants to all elective positions, which shall be monitored by the Commission (INEC).”

Buhari had disclosed he would assent the electoral bill if the lawmakers provided options for the conduct of political parties’ primaries.

At the Senate, the amendment followed a motion for the re-committal of the bill to the Committee of the Whole by Senate Leader Yahaya Abdullahi (APC, Kebbi) during plenary on Wednesday.

You May Like: Court Jails Four In Enugu Over Cyber Crime

The Red Chamber, in a motion for re-committal to the Committee of the Whole, amended Clause 84(2) of the bill to include direct, indirect primaries or consensus as methods of nominating candidates for elective positions.

Senator Abdullahi, in his presentation, explained that the motion for re-committal of the bill to the Committee on the Whole was against the backdrop of the need to address the observation by President Buhari over the mode of conducting party primaries.

At the House of Representatives, the lawmakers passed the bill with the provision of direct and indirect primaries. In their version, there was no consensus.

Also Read: Police Arrest Suspected Traffickers, Rescue Three Children

Its passage followed the introduction of the bill after a motion by the Chairman, House Committee on Rules and Business, Abubakar Hassan Fulata (APC, Jigawa).

Unlike at the Senate, the House of Representatives provided only two options – direct and indirect mode of primaries.

You May Like: Health: How To Protect Yourself From Covid-19 Delta Variant

Speaking on the amendment after the House reverted to plenary, the Speaker, Femi Gbajabiamila said, “For emphasis sake, what was considered and adopted by the House, was only one clause and that was Clause 84 (2), and that was the clause that has to do with direct primaries and indirect primaries. No other clause in the electoral act amendment was considered or adopted.

“So, the electoral act amendment that was sent “ab initio”, initially to the president remains as it is. The only change is 84 (2) wherein we have now included in addition, indirect primaries” which was not what was brought to us by the electoral committee.”

(Source: SaharaReporters)
2
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x