let The Lawmakers Move On and Work for Nigeria
By Yusuph Olaniyonu
Tuesday resumption of the two chambers of the federal legislature
resumed after five weeks suspension of plenary. The recess scheduled for
July 21 had been postponed by one week, obviously to allow more time
for the reconciliatory process going on then among the legislators in
both chambers of the National Assembly.
As a result of the media
hype and sensationalism surrounding the crisis, obviously fuelled from
outside the parliament, many had believed that the resumption day was
going to be the real day of trouble in both the Senate and the House of
Representatives. They expected the lawmakers to freely break the law by
resorting to fighting. Some others talked about the possible collapse of
the leadership in both chambers. The ground for this latter belief was
laid by a Senator, Kabiru Marafa who kept on making incendiary
statements. One would have thought that based on the Senator's
statements, the Senate Chambers would collapse on the resumption date.
All these negative expectations were against the background of the
efforts by the Governors elected on the platform of the All Progressives
Congress (APC) to mend fences between the groups in the National
Assembly. The Governors met with the various groups but no solution seem
to have been found, at least as presented by those using the division
in the legislature to underscore their own importance and relevance.
However, what happened in the chambers of the National Assembly last
Tuesday was a positive anti-climax. First, in the Senate where members
sat before their colleagues in the House of Representatives, the plenary
was devoid of any problem. Members came in and exchange banters and
greetings in a manner which suggested the holiday had cooled tempers.
Then, the legislative debates began.
The icing on the cake was a
motion sponsored by 81 Senators expressing a vote of confidence on the
leadership of Senator Abubakar Bukola Saraki. With 81 Senators which
when added to the duo of the Senate President and his deputy, Ike
Ekweremadu, both of whom could not vote, the motion enjoyed the support
of clearly more than two-third of the legislative house. It therefore,
should require no need for voting. Yet, the Senate President still gave
the nay sayers the opportunity to express themselves. Surprisingly, no
single voice said no. This then made the vote of confidence on Saraki
and the rest of the Senate leadership, a unanimous decision of the 108
members presently in the Senate.
With that symbolic signal that
peace has finally returned, the Senate was able to return to normal
legislative transactions in which two main motions that could solve the
problem of bad roads and environmental degradation across the country
were rigorously debated.
Also, in the House of Representatives,
Speaker Yakubu Dogara successfully announced names of principal officers
and the choice seemed to have finally settled all the hitherto
prevailing differences. The Representatives also went on to discuss
motions of relevance to their constituents. In settling the issues in
the House of Representatives, the meeting President Muhammadu Buhari had
with all the legislators the previous day is widely believed to have
played a key role. the President's intervention made possible the shift
of positions which led to the return of peace.
Now, where do we
go from here? With the return of peace, the legislators have no option
than to get cracking. They need to start working for Nigeria. They need
to start coming out with legislations, embark on oversight functions,
debate policies and programmes which can form the basis for advocacy
work. They must start making creative, out of the ordinary and ingenuous
suggestions which can help the executive to change the landscape of the
entire country for the better. Our people have suffered from want in
the midst of plenty for too long.
This time around, the people
voted for change, positive and progressive one for that matter. That is
why the legislators represent not only the diversity of Nigeria, but
also the rich nature of her human capital. They represented the
different professions, men and women with varied experiences and world
views. Fortunately, they have the fortune of working with an executive
led by a determined, courageous and popular retired army General, Buhari
as the chief executive of our state.
What is now required is
for the legislators to support President Buhari in finding solutions to
all the problems keeping Nigeria down. This is where Buhari has a role
to play in consolidating and utilising the newly achieved peace in the
National Assembly. The President should maintain his earlier position
not to get involved in legislative politics. He should immediately send
out the right signals and body language that he is ready to encourage
the new initiative by the legislators to resolve their internal
differences on their own. The President should make it known to those
who use the legislative chambers as a front for shadow boxing to steer
clear and allow the lawmakers to do their work.
A way to send the
right signal that he is ready to help the National Assembly build on
the new found unity is for the President to now openly meet and relate
with the leadership of both chambers. He should be ready to gainfully
engage with them on how to prosecute his war against insecurity,
unemployment, corruption and economic recession. The President should
immediately create a platform for exchange of ideas on the role he
expects the legislative houses to play in backing up his multifarious
programmes, policies and projects aimed at addressing the four-point
agenda he has set up for himself.
We need to put behind us the
past experience in which the President travelled to the United States
for crucial bi-lateral discussions on several issues without any member
of the legislature. That was on opportunity missed to give legislative
backing to executive engagements. Buhari was obviously trying to avoid
getting involved in the problems in the National Assembly. However, the
gaffe will not be lost on the host President Barrack Obama who on his
last trip to Kenya and Ethiopia went with over 20 Congressmen.
My
advice therefore is for all Nigerians to let the legislature work. If
we give them all the co-operation they need, it becomes easy to access
them as an institution and as individuals on how far they have gone in
fulfilling the aspiration of their electors.
Olaniyonu is Special Adviser to Senate President.

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