10th NASS: Our party, other leaders will decide speakership – Lawan

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The Senate President, Ahmad Lawan, said on Friday in Abuja that the opposition cannot predict who will win the top positions in the 10th National Assembly even if the All Progressives Congress no longer commands the same prominence that it once had.

In order to ensure parliamentary stability, he added, the ruling APC must include the opposition parties in its leadership structure.

“There is no way an opposition will decide who should be the senate president or who should be the speaker; it is our party and other leaders that will decide,” Lawan told State House, correspondents after joining residents of the Federal Capital Territory for a Sallah homage to the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

When asked about growing concerns that the opposition may bank on the reported division in the party and seize the process, he said: “I don’t think opposition parties are planning to usurp because it is presumptuous that the APC will not be a united party.

“The APC is a united party and the opposition party will simply work with the APC majority for us to have stability because there is no way an opposition will decide who should be the Senate President or who should be the speaker; it is our party and other leaders that will determine what zone or whoever, and the rest of us in the party will key in and of course, the opposition would have no option but to support.

“I don’t see anything wrong in the opposition talking to us, or we talking to the opposition to ensure that we’re on the same page, because we need the opposition to ensure that we get most of our constitutional amendments when the time is right, passed because we don’t have the 73 in the Senate. So, you need 73 senators at least for you to have any constitutional amendment. So, you would need the opposition.”

The Senate President indicated that it is crucial to cooperate with the opposition as a result.

“Don’t ever think the opposition should be pushed away. I don’t believe in that. I only believe in a bipartisan chamber because it is more productive, stable, calm and gives you the kind of outcome you will never get with a very rancourous chamber.”

However, Lawan avoided discussing his involvement in the senate presidency race, saying, “I’m not here to answer whether I’m running for senate president or not.”

He praised Buhari, whose regime he said, was “finishing strong.”

“The Buhari administration is closing on a very strong note. We have succeeded in reducing the insecurity that we met in 2015.

“This administration has provided so much infrastructure across the country like no other administration. It assented to legislation more than any previous president, especially in the last four years.

“Therefore, it is a thing of joy for all of us to come and celebrate with Mr. President on the Eid-el-Fitr today,” Lawan said.

The Senate President lamented that the ninth National Assembly’s members had opposed each of the five gender-related initiatives that attempted to increase the number of opportunities for women in politics and government.

He promoted alternate methods of interacting with the legislature, pushing newly elected and incumbent legislators to work to approve the pro-women laws in the 10th Assembly.

The NASS rejected a proposal in March 2022 to add more seats for women in order to raise their current five percent representation in the Assembly.

The second measure gave Nigerian males who were married to foreign spouses the ability to transfer citizenship to their spouses who were not Nigerian.

A bill to require at least 20% of ministerial or commissioner nominees to be women, a bill to allow women to become citizens of their husband’s state after five years of marriage, and a bill to require affirmative action of at least 35% in political party administration and appointment positions at the federal and state levels were also rejected by the NASS.

Pauline Tallen, the minister for women’s affairs at the time, called the denials “shameless.”

But Lawan said, “I felt bad we could not pass even one. But then, we shouldn’t lose hope; we should continue to campaign and talk to more members of the National Assembly. And we should also re-strategize.

“Maybe the kind of campaign that was undertaken may not necessarily be the one that will give you the kind of outcome that we needed. But I’m very confident that we should continue to campaign for issues that we have not been able to get right.

The lawmaker said he does not regret his actions as Senate President even though he acknowledged lapses in his performance.

“I can’t say we have regrets. We can only say there are things we have been unable to deal with satisfactorily. And this is natural because we don’t have sufficient funds.

“Two, as human beings, there are areas that naturally, whatever you do, you may not get it right. But it’s for us to identify those areas, go back and rework them and this administration, as it winds up a new one, an APC administration, will continue to work on those areas that we need to improve,” he explained.