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Monday, 2 April 2018

APC senators, Reps backs Buhari's withdrawal support for Oyegun’s tenure elongation

- Members of the Senate and House of Representatives have endorsed President Buhari’s withdrawal of support for the extension of the tenure of the NWC of the APC

- By making an open pronouncement backing out of tenure elongation, the lawmakers argued that the President had helped to salvage the party from an “impending doom

- Senator Ahmad Lawan said the APC must consider Buhari’s position on the party’s NWC to prevent the dire consequences that would follow its dismissal

Members of the Senate and House of Representatives endorsed President Muhammadu Buhari’s withdrawal of support for the extension of the tenure of the APC National Working Committee (NWC) led by Chief John Odigie-Oyegun

Punch reports that the lawmakers on Sunday, April 1, said President Buhari simply did what most party faithful had expected him and other national leaders of the APC to have done long before.

According to them, the APC has not been in order since the National Executive Committee meeting, which extended the tenure of the National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, and other members of the NWC, was held.

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By making an open pronouncement backing out of tenure elongation, the lawmakers argued that the President had helped to salvage the party from an “impending doom.”

The members, who spoke both on and off the record, insisted that as a political party in government under a constitutional democracy, it must lead by example in applying the tenets of democracy while conducting its affairs.

The majority leader of the Senate, Senator Ahmad Lawan, said the APC must consider Buhari’s position on the party’s NWC to prevent the dire consequences that would follow its dismissal.

Lawan said: ''The President, no doubt, is the supreme leader of the APC and there is no doubt that he always has the utmost interest of the party at heart. Therefore, if the President presented such a thing to the APC, it is very important for the stakeholders to look at it because there is no room for frivolities when it comes to this kind of a very dire situation, which has its consequences.

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''If we don’t heed the advice of the President and then go ahead to elongate the tenure, it could lead to very undesirable consequences. The President is right for taking that position. The President is not used to talking all the time. So, when he talks we must listen.''

Also, the Majority Whip of the Senate, Senator Sola Adeyeye, said the constitutional issues raised by Buhari against the tenure elongation were valid.

“I agree with him. I am not a lawyer but my lawyers have told me that the action taken by the NEC (to elongate the NWC’s tenure) contravened the law; it contravened the spirit of the law of the party and the stipulations of the constitution concerning registered political parties.

“So, if anything borders on illegality, I do not want my party to commit it as it will have serious, adverse consequences later on,” Adeyeye stated.

At the House of Representatives, the Chief Whip, Alhassan Ado-Doguwa, said the tenure extension idea was a big mistake in the first place.

According to Ado-Doguwa, ''My view on this was unequivocally clear right from the day we held the NEC meeting, which I am a member. The president, as the supreme leader of the party, has always propagated the exercise of transparent internal party democracy.

''He has consistently been a proponent of respect of the rule of law, through compliance with the relevant provisions of the constitution of the party and that of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

''In my opinion, president’s recommendations on the matter must be allowed to hold. After all, his pronouncement as the leader of the party should be taken as an irreversible order. The APC as a party will head for doom if it dares to undermine the true position of the law in this respect.''

Ado-Doguwa, who is from Kano state and the leader of the majority North-West Caucus, clarified that jettisoning tenure elongation did not mean that Oyegun and the other NWC members could not contest their seats again.

He added: ''We can of course, if the people so desire, bring back whoever may want to re-contest his or her position at all levels.

“But, we will have no alternative whatsoever to holding a democratically-organised congresses at the moment. Already, the party had designed a schedule for these congresses. I wonder why the NWC at a point derailed from doing the right thing.''

A former Kogi state governorship James Faleke, amon others other that spoke held the same views.

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Faleke, who is the chairman, House Committee on Customs and Excise, noted that there would be credibility questions for the APC if it could not comply with its own constitution.

According to him, “The President’s decision was apt and right. He based his reasons on the constitution of the party and the supreme constitution of the land; the Nigerian constitution. Anyone who wishes to re-contest should follow the rules.”

Faleke, who represents the Ikeja Federal Constituency of Lagos state, added that this was the right time to address any wrongs in the APC.

Meanwhile, NAIJ.com had reported that northern governors in the APC were said to have withdrawn their support for the elongation of the tenure of the party NWC led by Chief Odigie-Oyegun.

A highly-placed party leader, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media on the issue, said the President’s move during last Tuesday’s National Executive Council meeting was akin to a “checkmate in a game of chess.”

Should President Buhari seek reelection in 2019? (Nigerian Street Interview) - on NAIJ.com TV:

Source: Naija.ng



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