x

Senate Rejects Buhari’s Request To Amend Section 84 (12) In Electoral Act

The Senate has thrown out the request of President Muhammadu Buhari for amendment of section 84 (12) of the Electoral Act which prevents appointive political office holders from contesting for election from party primary level without resigning.

The request was rejected after the Senate Leader, Senator Yahaya Abdullahi (APC Kebbi North) made the lead debate for the second reading of the bill on Wednesday.

The Senators kicked against it and voted no when put to voice votes by the Senate President Ahmad Lawan.

President Buhari last week wrote the Senate seeking an amendment of section 84 (2) subsection 12 in the 2021 Electoral Act.

Specifically, President Buhari asked the National Assembly to amend section 84 (2) Subsection 12 which states that no political appointee shall be a voting delegate or be voted for at the convention or congress of any political party for the purpose of the nomination of any candidate for an election.

In the letter, he said the amendment is necessary as the clause constitutes a fundamental defect and leads to the disenfranchisement of political officeholders.

In his view, the section disenfranchises serving political office holders from voting or being voted for at conventions or congresses of any political party, for the purpose of the nomination of candidates for any election in cases where it holds earlier than 30 days to the national election.

President Buhari stressed that the provision introduced qualification and disqualification criteria that ultra vires the Constitution by way of importing blanket restrictions to serving political officeholders.

The Federal High Court in Abuja in a ruling on Monday, March 7 stopped President Buhari, the Attorney General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, and the Senate President, Ahmad Lawan, from tampering with the newly signed amended Electoral Act 2022.

Ruling on an ex-parte application by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Justice Inyang Ekwo agreed with the counsel to the party, James Onoja, that the Electoral Act has become a valid law and cannot be tampered with without following due process of law.

Hot this week

Wike Affirms Three Months Completion of Gwarinpa Interchange Road

By Joyce Remi-BabayejuThe FCT Minister, Barr. Nyesom Wike has...

Spendify Unveils Bukunmi “The Preacher” and Iffy Adelani as Lead Brand Ambassadors

By Noah OcheniSpendify, an African financial technology platform, has...

EFCC Appeals Court judgment On Release of 27 Properties

By Francis WilfredThe Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC,...

“So Disrespectful” — Bella Shmurda’s Hand Gesture to Annie Idibia Sparks Online Reactions

Afrobeats singer Bella Shmurda has stirred conversations online following...

Kogi L-PRES Engages Stakeholders to Strengthen One Health, Safety and Food Security Systems

By Noah Ocheni, LokojaThe Kogi Livestock Productivity and Resilience...

Ancelotti Names Club He Believes Will Stop Arsenal in the Champions League

Brazil head coach Carlo Ancelotti has predicted that Arsenal...

Van Dijk Addresses Salah–Slot Row After Inter Win

Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk has broken his silence...

Thousands March in Abuja as Middle Belt Groups Demand Official Regional Recognition

By Achadu Gabriel, KadunaTens of thousands of Middle Belt...

Sahel’s Jihadist Crisis Fuels Violence in Nigeria, Threatens West Africa

By Rachel Ndakotsu, Senior Researcher at the Institute for...

KGIRS Begins Sensitization on Nigeria Tax Act 2025 Ahead of 2026 Implementation

By Noah Ocheni, LokojaThe Kogi State Internal Revenue Service...

Dungurawa Reelected Kano NNPP Chairman, Pledges Fair and Strengthened Party Leadership

By Jabiru HassanDungurawa Reelected as Kano NNPP Chairman, Promises...

NYA Set to Sign Historic North–South Youth Alliance Accord at Arewa House Kaduna

By Jabiru HassanNYA to Sign North–South Youth Alliance...

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img