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• Groups, others kick on the proposed amendment
• Urge National Assembly to ignore the president
• Constitutional lawyer backs presidency on the planned revision
• Passage is a landmark for the nation, says Garba Shehu
The lead up to President Muhammadu Buhari’s assent to the long-awaited Electoral Act 2022 was attended by protests. The aftermath doesn’t appear to have ushered in much quiet either.
CDD’s Director, Idayat Hassan, maintained there was no need to alter the Act since it was in tandem with tenets of democracy.
The rights activist argued that the extant provision of the law would ensure a level playing field for aspirants seeking party nominations for various elective seats in the country.
“In the All Progressives Congress convention, it means all these classes of people will not vote or use their incumbency to impose their will on the people and party.”
This was as two former senators from Kogi State, Dino Melaye and Alex Kadiri, asked the National Assembly to ignore President Muhammadu Buhari over his complaint on the Act
He said: “My take is that the National Assembly should disregard the suggestion of the President. If after they have amended the act to suit the Presidency, they do it a second time, then that means the National Assembly has confirmed itself to be a department of the Presidency.”
Kadiri, on his part, said: “I think he has signed what they wanted. They should just ignore him and continue with what they are doing.”
National coordinator, Emmanuel Onwubiko, enjoined the National Assembly not to heed the call by President Muhammadu Buhari to amend Section 84(12).
He maintained that the extant provision of the law is a safeguard to prevent the hijacking of the electoral process by incumbents, to the detriment of Nigerians.
“The National Assembly should let the newly signed Electoral Act 2022 be tested first before any amendments could be considered to avoid time-wasting.”
But a rights activist and constitutional lawyer, Chief Festus Oguche, threw his weight behind the call by Buhari for amendment of the Act.
Said he: “The President is correct on this point and I’m just wondering how the National Assembly thought it was possible to exclude political appointees from participating in the electoral process, including the conduct of primaries.
“I don’t think the legislators would have hesitated, one bit, if the President had returned the bill to them to enable that section be expunged legislatively, and that would have been a better and more elegant manner of doing it than enacting it into law wholesomely with the rest of the provisions.”
Meanwhile, Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the President, Garba Shehu, has praised the passage into law of the Electoral Act 2022.
In a statement, yesterday, titled, ‘Assent into Law of the Electoral Act 2022: Landmark moment for the Nation’, he said although “no democratic system of elections is perfect”, “the Electoral Act makes better and makes good on the circumstance in which citizens cast their ballot. It ensures that the ballot is fair and free and that every vote cast is equal, respected, and counts.”