Reps to override Buhari on Peace Corps bill, nine others
Peace Corps
John Ameh, Abuja
The House of Representatives has said it
will override President Muhammadu Buhari’s veto on the Peace Corps Bill
he had earlier rejected.
The implication of this is that the
lawmakers will pass the bill into law without Buhari’s assent if the
Upper Chamber of the National Assembly tread the same path with the
House.
The Chairman, House Committee on Media
and Public Affairs, Mr. Abdulrazak Namdas, who said this on Wednesday,
added that the House would override Buhari on nine other bills.
He said the National Assembly had begun the process of overriding Buhari’s veto on the 10 bills.
According to Namdas, apart from the
Peace Corps Bill, a Bill for an Act to Establish the Chartered Institute
of Treasury Management; a Bill for an Act to Establish the Nigerian
Council for Social Work; and a Bill for an Act to Amend the Currency
Conversation of Prison Orders are some of the bills.
Others are “A Bill for an Act to
Establish Police Procurement Fund, a Bill for an Act to Amend the
Environmental Health Officers Registration, a Bill for an Act to
Establish the Chartered Institute of Loan and Risk Management of Nigeria
and a Bill for an Act to Establish the Chartered Institute of Public
Management of Nigeria.”
This will, however, require securing two-thirds majority vote of both chambers to pass the bills.
This means that at least 72 senators and 240 Reps must vote to override the President.
The procedure for overriding the President’s veto on a bill is spelt out in Section 58 of the constitution, particularly 58 (5).
Section 58 (5) reads, “Where a bill is
presented to the President for assent, he shall within thirty days
thereof signify that he assents or that he withholds assent.
“(5) Where the President withholds his
assent and the bill is again passed by each House by two-thirds
majority, the bill shall become law and the assent of the President
shall not be required.”
The House, Namdas added, insisted that
it would override the President’s veto in the controversial electoral
bill to ensure that the 2019 presidential poll would be conducted last
in the sequence by the Independent National Electoral Commission.
It gave clear signals to override the
President’s veto by saying that the electoral bill would be sent to
Buhari again for his signature.
However, this will come after two of the
three reasons Buhari gave for withholding his assent would have been
deleted from the bill and passed afresh.
Namdas, who spoke on the latest decision
of the legislature, explained that the lawmakers had accepted two of
the reasons advanced by Buhari for rejecting the bill.
He said those accepted were the second and third reasons given by the President.
Namdas, a member of the All Progressives
Congress from Adamawa State, said, “We agreed with the first one that
the amendment of Section 138 of the Principal Act (Electoral Act) to
delay crucial grounds upon which an election may be challenged by a
candidate, unduly limits the right of candidates in election to a free
and fair electoral review process. This, we have agreed with the
President.
“We have also agreed with the reason
advanced that the amendment of Section 152 of the Principal Act raises
constitutional issues over the competence of the National Assembly to
legislate over local government elections.
“This too, we have agreed with the President. So, it is true that we don’t have powers on the two.”
But, on the first reason, which was on
the reordering of the elections, Namdas said the legislature insisted
that it retained the power under the 1999 Constitution to decide the
order of elections and not INEC.
He noted that Section 4 of the
constitution empowered the National Assembly to legislate over
elections, particularly item 22 of the provision.
Namdas added, “It means that we have the
power to work on the order of elections as it is stated. INEC has the
power to fix electoral dates in accordance with the Electoral Act. The
entire Electoral Act talks about organising elections. If we do not have
powers on how to organise elections, that means we do not even have the
power to even pass the Electoral Act itself. That means it’s an illegal
thing (Act) because it was passed by the National Assembly.”
Namdas disclosed that the National
Assembly stood by the new bill that the presidential poll would be held
last, but excluding the two reasons it was in agreement with Buhari.
He stated that the National Assembly
would expunge the two portions from the bill, pass it again and send it
to Buhari for his assent on the reordered elections sequence.
“In view of this, we will re-gazette the
Electoral Act (amendment bill) and expunge the areas that we are in
agreement with the President. In line with the constitution, we will
bring it back for debate and follow the procedure of first and second
reading, pass it and re-transmit it to the President for his assent.”
The implication is that the bill will
begin a fresh journey of first, second and third reading before it is
sent to Buhari again for his assent.
Namdas added that should he withhold his assent again to the bill, the process of overriding his veto would commence in earnest.
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