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• Ongoing primaries valid under existing laws, not affected by amendments, lawyers say
A Coalition of Election Monitors and Observers (CEMO) has warned President Muhammadu Buhari against assenting to the recent Electoral Act 2022 amendment bill because preparations for the 2023 general elections are already in full gears.
The coalition, made up of 24 election monitoring groups, gave this warning, yesterday, after a meeting in Abuja, adding that signing the bill now will cause disruption in the processes of primaries already commenced by political parties under the provisions of the extant law.
The group noted that as desirable as the amendment is, signing the bill after most political parties had already started implementing critical aspects of the electoral process under the current law is “dangerous, counter-productive, capable of triggering widespread political crisis and litigations that can derail the 2023 general elections.”
According to the National Convener of CEMO, Dr Idris Yabu, who presented the report of the election monitors to the media, the President must save the nation from needless political crisis by returning the Amendment Bill to the National Assembly for reprocessing for future elections.
The guidelines of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) require that parties submit the list of their delegates seven days to the convention.
In the amendment, Section 84(8) provides for automatic or statutory delegates. The section seeks to include as delegates the president, vice president, National Assembly members, governors and their deputies and other statutory delegates.
The provision is a sharp contrast to the section in the Electoral Act 2022 signed by the President, which states: “By virtue of Section 84(8) of the Electoral Act 2022, delegates to vote at the indirect primaries and national convention of political parties to elect candidates for elections shall be those democratically elected for that purpose.”
The coalition observed that President Buhari ought to have signed the bill earlier to give political parties a uniform direction for the nomination of candidates for the 2023 general elections.
It noted that any amendment to the existing law this time would amount to changing the rules in the middle of the game and disrupting the entire electoral process.